Wind of Victoria

The Wind of Venezia was a T-96 turboprop training aircraft captured by the  on  during the coup in. The aircraft was originally built in by, and shipped to the 7th Training Wing on the outskirts of ,.

In, as the launched their coup, the training aircraft of the 7th were hastily converted into combat aircraft. Due to the rebels' fast takeover of and the  at which the unit was based, the aircraft were never used in combat, but, before the rebels could take the T-96s,  ground technicians managed to destroy twenty-eight out of the thirty aircraft, with the remaining two being taken as spoils of war by rebel forces.

Until, the Wind of Venezia was used by rebel soldier-turned farmer Robert Tawdron for cropdusting his fields. In, Tawdron's farm became stricken with a drought, and, with no use for the aircraft, he sold it to the government, who made it part of the Bomber Brigade of the New Tyne Air Militia.

During the Fall of Venezia in, the Wind of Venezia took part in nighttime harassment raids and forward reconnaissance missions during the campaign in support of the Army of New Tyne, before it crash landed in a field outside near the end of the campaign as its crew attempted to escape the capture of the city.

In, the wreckage of the aircraft, still partially intact, was discovered by a group of historians who were researching the post-war colonial reclamation campaigns. After shipping the wreck back to, it was restored, and eventually was placed as an exhibit in the as the final surviving aircraft of the  forces on