Assassin's Creed Wiki
Register
Advertisement
Assassin's Creed Wiki


"We work in the dark, to serve the light. We are Assassins."
Niccolò Machiavelli.[src]


The Assassin Order or Assassin Brotherhood (also known as Liberalis Circulum (Circle of Liberals) during Roman times[8] or Hashshashin during the High Middle Ages) was an organized order of assassins and sworn enemies of the Templars, against whom they fought a continuous, secret war, throughout the entirety of recorded history.

Whereas the Templars strove for the power to save humanity from itself by controlling free will, the Assassin Order fought to ensure the survival of free will, as it allowed for the progression of new ideas and the growth of individuality.

The Assassins, if not the order itself, had existed since at least 456 B.C.E., throughout the Roman era, the Middle Ages, the Italian Renaissance, and into the 21st Century.

The Creed

"Laa shay'a waqi'un mutlaq bale kouloun mumkin.
("Nothing is true, everything is permitted" in Arabic)
"
The Assassin's Creed[src]

The order believed in a strong set of values that strictly governed their way of life. This Creed consisted of three tenets:

  1. "Stay your blade from the flesh of an innocent."
  2. "Hide in plain sight, be one with the crowd."
  3. "Never compromise the Brotherhood."[4]

These tenets permeated every aspect of the Assassins' daily life, as well as their fight for "peace in all things." The Assassins carried out their duties through political, strategic assassination, in the hope that killing one individual would lead to the salvation of thousands. The Assassins believed that they fought on the behalf of those who did not possess the abilities, resources, or knowledge to speak out against those who abused their power.[1]

Despite their service to those who would otherwise suffer, the Assassins were still feared by the general populace, due mainly to their method of ensuring peace. The Assassins were most feared due to their terrifying reputation for taking life in public before many witnesses - so as to bring fear into the hearts of those who might abuse their power or corrupt the innocent - before vanishing into the crowd without a trace.[4] To aid in this, the Assassins used a particularly efficient weapon for assassinations: the Hidden Blade,[1] a single thrust from which could end the life of its victim. They were however forbidden from using poison as it was considered "A coward's tool".

However, in order to ascertain which death might best assist the Assassins' goals, extensive political knowledge was required for target selection. Thus, the Assassins endeavored to remain in tune with the ever-changing politics surrounding them. Obtaining information on this was the job of low-level members of the Order, who would be stationed throughout the cities of the world. These spies would watch the local nobles and rulers, looking for signs of corruption, or for membership in the Templars. Once gathered, any information was passed on to the Assassins responsible for the actual assassination.[4]

Entrance

Main article: Initiation to the Assassin Order
Zw-acb-ceremony-5

Claudia Auditore being inducted into the Assassin Order in 1503.

There are two ways of entering the order: being born into it, like Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad, Ezio Auditore da Firenze, and Desmond Miles,[1][4] or being recruited, like the Assassin Apprentices and Shaun Hastings.[1][7] After declaring oneself an Assassin under The Creed, a trainee would be tested to prove his or her worth over an unspecified period of time; for example, Ezio had to hunt down the Templar conspirators over a multitude of years before he was officially inducted,[1] and the Assassin Apprentices had to gain enough experience in their contract missions across the World before they were ready to join the Assassins Guild as true Assassins.[7]

Training

File:AssassinGuard.png

Rauf, a combat instructor, wearing similar robes to other high ranked Assassin guards in Masyaf.

The Assassins spent their entire lifetime training to kill.[4] From an early age, they were taught to observe their surroundings and plan ahead. Combat skills were essential, and training was continuous, with a focus on bladed weapons of all sorts. However, despite such a concentration on combat, the most important consideration in the Assassins' training was concealment. Stealth was the greatest weapon of the Assassin, and everything about their life emphasized a devotion to it.[1][4] It was essential for an Assassin to be able to reach their target unnoticed, and then slip back into the crowd after they had struck.[4] As such, they always wore clothing that allowed them to blend into the crowd. Even their weapons were identical to what was available locally, aside from the hidden blade.

However, not all Assassins within the order were able to train from birth. This was the case of many Assassins that weren't born into the Order and were recruited later in life, as teenagers or young adults. For example, by the time of Renaissance Italy, after the order had gone underground and out of public view to follow the lead of the Templars, traditional lifelong training could not be done as it had in the past.[1] Once brought into the Order, trainees, like Ezio and later his own Apprentices, had to learn the ways of their craft through personal experience and the personal teachings from other Assassins in the field. At the time of the murders of his father Giovanni and two brothers Federico and Petruccio, Ezio had only been skilled in Free Running, fistfighting, and some swordsmanship.[1] Throughout his life, he learnt several Assassin skills from other Assassins and allies like Paola, his uncle Mario Auditore and the thief Rosa, as well as several fundamental Assassination Techniques through reading the Codex of Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad.[1] Later, the Apprentices within the Roman Assassins Guild at the Tiber Island headquarters would be trained in the Assassin ways by Ezio himself, as well as learning through their own experiences during Contracts they were sent to fulfil across Europe and Asia.[7]

Unlike certain other factions, the Assassins did not have a specific style of fighting, especially after they went underground. Aside from their signature hidden blade, each branch simply used whatever weapons and fighting styles that were locally available. For example, the Turkish Assassins favored curved daggers and the Chinese Assassins were trained in kung fu.

Another significant focus of an Assassins' training was maneuverability. By the time an Assassin reached the rank of Master Assassin, he was also a master of an early form of parkour, or "free running", extensively utilized by the Assassins. Widely seen as alien by the general populace, this method of movement allowed the Assassins to reach areas not normally accessible to man. From scaling a wall, to climbing to one of a city's many view points, free running gave the Assassins a significant advantage over nearly all their enemies and city guards and can be used to get anywhere in the city, quickly, at any time.

Burial

Historically, Assassins always showed great respect for the dead. Their own were buried in crypts or large tombs when time permitted. Those given a proper burial were wrapped in a cloth shroud, their red sash spread across the body. The greatest Assassins were venerated in large tombs and contained within sarcophagi, their likeness emblazoned on the lid and their symbol venerated in the flags of the tomb.[1]

History

Formation

The bloodline of the original Assassins was formed centuries ago, after various members of Those Who Came Before conceived children with members of the human race. These children had the visual appearance of humans, but were gifted with several extra senses from Those Who Came Before, such as Eagle Sense.[1]

Roman era

During the Roman era, the Assassin Order was a secret enemy of the SPQR (Senatus Populusque Romanus) - the ruling body of the Roman Empire - which was in fact a precursor to the Templar organization.[1]

Assassination of Julius Caesar

The Assassins killing Julius Caesar.

Little is known of the Order's hierarchy and activities this time, except for a few major assassinations. In 44 BC, forty Assassins, who had previously acted as senators in the Roman senate, plotted the assassination of the recently declared dictator of the Roman Empire, Gaius Julius Caesar. Marcus Junius Brutus which tasked with planning the plot by Gaius Cassius Longinus, and after Brutus was shown visions by Those Who Came Before in the Colosseum Vault, twenty-three of the forty Assassins stabbed Caesar to death at the Roman senate.[7] Following this event, the Assassins went their separate ways, but most were killed by Caesar's allies. Brutus committed suicide before he would lose the Battle of Philippi, after which his Brothers unsuccessfully tried to revive him with the Shroud of Eden.[6]

Not many years afterwards, Cleopatra, Caesar's former lover and Queen of Egypt, was killed by the Egyptian Assassin Amunet with a venomous snake, in 30 BC. Later still, on 24 January, 41 AD, the 3rd Emperor of the Roman Empire Caligula was stabbed to death by the Assassin Leonius, under unknown circumstances.[1]

In 259 CE, the Assassins Accipiter and Aquilus safeguarded an Ankh for the Assassin Order, which was operating under the name the Liberalis Circulum. Aquilus's father, Lucius, initially held the Ankh. When the Ankh was stolen by the Templar and Roman Senator Caïus Fulvus Vultur and Lucius killed, Aquilus fought to retrieve it. He found and eliminated a Templar traitor, Faustin, who pointed to Vultur as the ringleader. Though he was able to retrieve the Ankh from Vultur and kill him, Aquilus died as the captive of the soldiers of the prefect of Lugndunum. Accipiter, Aquilus's cousin, had once saved him from death on the battlefield by Gracchuss betrayal—on hearing of Aquilus's capture, he rushed to the rescue too late. He managed to save Aquilus's wife, Valeria, who told him of the work they were doing. The two of them recovered the Ankh from the bodies of the soldiers, and Valeria interred it in a shrine to Aquilus's memory.

High Middle Ages

During the Middle Ages, the Templars had become a public knightly order under the name "Knights Templar". In the year 1090, control of the Assassins fell to Hassan-i Sabbah, who in turn also changed the Assassin Order into a public organization. Under his command, public assassinations occurred much more often and the people were encouraged to stand up to their oppressors, realizing that they weren't on their own.[9]

During the 1170s, the Assassins were at odds with the Saracens.[10] In 1174, thirteen Assassins were sent to the Sultan Salah Al'din's camp close to Damascus and were successful in infiltrating his tent, but were detected; one was killed by a Saracen general and the others were killed upon trying to escape.[11]

In 1176, Salah Al'din led a siege on the Assassins' fortress of Masyaf. After the location of Salah Al'din's tent was revealed by the Assassin spy Ahmad Sofian, Umar Ibn-La'Ahad was sent to infiltrate the tent and leave a feather and a dagger with a threatening message attached to it. Umar evaded the chalk and cinders that were strewed around the tent and successfully left the objects, but was detected by the Sultan himself. Umar had to kill a noble to make his escape, and the Assassins managed to make a truce with the Saracens; though Umar's life had to be taken in the process.[10]

Almualimassassins

Al Mualim and the Assassins in the fortress of Masyaf.

By 1191, the Assassins were still in a secret battle with the Templars and their leader, Robert de Sable. It was during the Third Crusade that the Assassins learned of a Templar interest in an ancient artifact, hidden within the catacombs of Solomon's Temple. It was decided to liberate the treasure from them, and the mission was a success, although a costly one. With the death of one Assassin, the severe injury of another, and the arrival of the Templar army at the gates of Masyaf, the Assassins were nearly overwhelmed by the following battle. However, by crushing most of the Templar army under a concealed onslaught of rolling logs, they were able to drive the Templars from the fortress and village below.[4]

Following the assault, the Assassin blamed for the loss of life that day – Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad – was severely reprimanded, and tasked with removing nine influential individuals, who plagued the Holy Land with their corrupt rule. As Altaïr made his way down the list made up of both Crusader and Saracen individuals, he was greatly unsettled by the realization that their goal to bring peace to the people of the Holy Land was just, as he that felt his victims were "misguided perhaps, but pure in motive." This was a view shared by Al Mualim, who agreed with their goals, but felt that their attitude of "the end justifies the means" undermined the good they sought to ensure. As his mission progressed, Altaïr sought to know what bound his victims together, and the discovery that they were all Templars only served to reinforce the Assassin's determination to bring an end to the Templar plot.[4]

By Fall of 1191, the Assassins were victorious over their Templar enemies. Robert de Sable, Grand Master of the Templar Order, was dead, however the treachery of one of their own had also hit the Assassin Order hard. Al Mualim, secretly a former member of a coalition of ten Templar leaders, was revealed to be a traitor, and was killed by the very man he had sent to eliminate his fellow Templar conspirators. With Al Mualim dead, Altaïr took over as Grand Master of the Order, leading the Assassins in their attempts to rebuild their strength after the costly conflict.[4]

Codex

Altaïr writing the Codex.

With full control over the Assassins, Altaïr immediately set out on a one-man quest to liberate the island of Cyprus from the Templars, who had recently bought it from King Richard. After successfully having done so, killing the Templar Grand Master Armand Bouchart and discovering the Templar Archive in the process,[12] Altaïr continued to write the Codex: a book detailing the secrets he had managed to uncover from the Apple of Eden,[1] which he started writing on during his journey to Cyprus.[12] In the end, those secrets had a profound effect on the Order, as new assassination techniques and world secrets had been uncovered.[1]
In 1209, Altaïr started to send his Assassins to various cities spread throughout the world, after he was made aware of their existence by the Apple of Eden.[9]

Eventually, it was decided that the Piece of Eden was too great a threat to keep in Masyaf, and the decision was made to store it on the island of Cyprus, in the Limassol archives.[12] However, the Piece was kept by Altaïr until he had at least completed his fabled Codex.[1]

Late Middle Ages

"In this modern age, we are not as literal as our ancestors; but our seal is no less permanent…"
―Mario Auditore at Ezio's official induction into the Assassin Order[src]
Asslogorenaissance

Italian Renaissance variation of the Assassins' emblem.

During the Late Middle Ages, the Order continued to thrive, despite being forced to adopt an even more secretive and isolated existence. When the Renaissance, a cultural movement, started in Italy, the Assassin Order had apparently "gone underground" and primarily focused themselves in Italy, where the headquarters of the Templar Order were also located. As the Templar Order survived in more inconspicuous ways, Altaïr believed that the Assassins too had to change tactics so as to live on and made the Order a secret organization once again.[1]

By 1321, various members of the Assassin Order had successfully integrated themselves into modern day life of middle Italy, widely unknown to the average folk. That same year, a young sailor by the name of Domenico, the son of an Assassin, was apprenticed to the poet and Assassin Dante Alighieri, who had been tasked with transporting the Codex of Altaïr from Venice to Spain.[13] Upon his death, however, the undertaking fell instead to Domenico. During the voyage, pirates under the employ of the Templars ambushed the ship looking for the Codex, consequently killing Domenico's wife. Fortunately for the Assassins, Domenico managed to break apart the Codex and hide its pages from the pirates before he and his son were forced overboard.[13]

Eventually returning to Venice, Domenico found his father and his patron, Marco Polo, an ally of the Assassins, dead. Thus, Domenico emptied the bank accounts of Messer Polo, and traveled to the city of Florence under the assumed name of Auditore. He eventually constructed the Villa Auditore in the city of Monteriggioni, which became the center of the Assassin Order in Italy up to the year 1500.[13]

Despite the order "modernizing" since the 12th Century, they still retained many of the rituals and practices, albeit altered. The practice of removing one's ring finger had been stopped, although the seal of the Order was branded upon the finger instead with hot iron. Although significantly fewer in number, the Assassins were supported by the courtesans, thieves and condottieri of Florence and Venice; the guilds of which were each run by a member of the Order.[1]

During this time period, the Assassins entered another period of increased hostilities with the Templars, who were attempting to overthrow the ruling House of Medici in Florence, and the Doge of Venice. Having already killed the Duke of Milan[14] in 1476, Rodrigo Borgia, the Grand Master of the Templar Order, brought the noble families of Pazzi and Barbarigo together[14] to accomplish his goals. Entering into conflict with the Assassins, Borgia dealt a crippling blow to the Order in 1476, when he executed the experienced Assassin Giovanni Auditore and his two sons, Federico and Petruccio, although a third son, Ezio, managed to escape. With the aid of Ezio, the Assassins were able to counter Borgia's plot over a twenty-three year campaign, defeating him at every turn.[1]

In 1487, the Order of Assassins learned that the Templars had retrieved another Apple of Eden from the island of Cyprus, and deemed its capture necessary. Following the artifact from L'Arsenale di Venezia, Ezio managed to overpower and replace the Templar guard carrying the artifact. Under this guise, Ezio met with Borgia himself, and the two engaged in battle. Borgia fled upon the arrival of other Assassins, and the artifact fell once again into the hands of the Assassins. The Assassins of this age, however, were unaware of the nature of the artifact, although they did recognize it as one of the Pieces of Eden mentioned within Altaïr's Codex.[1]

File:Vlcsnap-2010-11-12-17h45m54s20.jpg

The Assassins in Rome.

By 1500, right after Cesare Borgia besieged the city of Monteriggioni, murdering Mario Auditore and once again claiming the Apple for the Templars, Ezio Auditore had moved to Rome, meeting up with Niccolò Machiavelli and laying the foundations of a new "brotherhood" of Assassins. Utilizing the mercenaries, thieves and courtesans of Bartolomeo d'Alviano, La Volpe and Claudia Auditore respectively, Ezio's brotherhood worked to combat the influence and power of the Borgia family, and by extension the Papacy itself. Headquartered in an underground store-room owned by Fabio Orsini, on Tiber Island in the center of Rome, the Assassins begun to spread their influence throughout the city, recruiting Rome's own citizens as Assassin Apprentices under Ezio, eventually becoming inducted and branded into the order as Assassins themselves. Under the instruction of Ezio, many Assassin recruits undertook a variety of missions across Europe and Asia in cities such as London, Paris, Barcelona, Lisbon, Moscow and Calicut, killing and sabotaging Templars, their allies, and corrupt men in power, and defending and aiding their Assassin brothers and sisters, as well as anyone willing to stand against the Borgia and The Church.[7]

Over a period of three years, Ezio's brotherhood whittled away the Borgia family's power, and with the murder of Rodrigo Borgia at the hands of his own son, and the arrest of Cesare by the Papal Guard of Julius II, the Templars' influence over the city of Rome was shattered.[7]

Three years after Siege of Viana in 1507, when Ezio ended the threat of Cesare Borgia, the Assassin Grand Master traveled to the ancient Assassin fortress of Masyaf, on a pilgrimage to learn the origins of the Order. When he arrived, he discovered that the fortress had been overrun by the Templars, who were searching the five Seals of Altaïr, which would combine to unlock a secret weapon hidden by Altaïr. With one seal already in Masyaf, Ezio learned that the remaining four were hidden throughout the city of Constantinople. He made his way to the city, in the hopes of obtaining the remaining seals.[2]

Modern times

"In the old days, that usually meant killing anyone who became too powerful or greedy. […] These days, it means subversion of established regimes. […] Countries. Corporations. We change the system from within."
"The Mentor", in 2000, on the Assassin Order.[src]

By the late 19th century, the Russian sect of the Assassin Order, the Narodnaya Volya (People's Will), played a vital role in overthrowing the Tsarist rule over Russia. The Assassins strongly assisted their close ally, Vladimir Lenin, the leader of the Bolsheviks – Lenin's brother was an Assassin himself. Due to the efforts of the Assassin Nikolai Orelov, the Templar Tsar Alexander III died of kidney failure and the Staff of Eden was destroyed in the Tunguska explosion.

Tungaska Explod v

One of the Pieces of Eden, the Staff, was destroyed by the Assassins in the Tunguska Explosion

Without power, Tsarevich Nicholas II was removed from the throne and Russia became communistic.

By the 20th Century, the tactics and practices of the Assassin Order had changed greatly.[5] Whilst the Order of Assassins had kept to their policy of remote camps and isolation,[4] the Templars had begun to infiltrate society further; taking the form of many publicly known corporations such as NASA[1] and Kraft,[7] which all secretly fell under the shadow corporation Abstergo Industries.

The Assassins relied less upon killing powerful or greedy individuals, and more on changing the "established regime" from within, using politics as well as the blade to achieve their aims, such as rigging elections to keep Templars out of office.
The American presidential election of 2000 was one such election, with the Templars attempting to place their puppet George W. Bush into power, and the Assassins backing Al Gore.[5]

By the year 2000, the hidden blade had become a largely ceremonial weapon.[5] In the meantime however, the Templars continued to search for and investigate the various Pieces of Eden they discovered throughout this period,[1][4] whilst the Assassins continued their war against them; notably being responsible for the destruction of at least one Templar-controlled base in Siberia in 1908, known in public as the Tunguska explosion.[1] However, by the year 1985, the Templars, under the guise of their front company Abstergo Industries, had begun kidnapping Assassins or those related to them in an attempt to locate even more Pieces of Eden.[7]

File:The Mentor die.jpg

The Mentor's death at Cross' hands.

That same year, a child codenamed Daniel Cross, a descendant of the Assassin Nikolai Orelov, was kidnapped by Abstergo's Lineage Research and Acquisition department and entered into the Animus project.[3] Years later, in 1998, Daniel joined the Order as a prospective, but with a mission to find the then-current Mentor. Two years later, he was granted his wish and inducted into the Order by the Mentor himself; Cross subsequently murdered the Mentor with the very hidden blade he had been bequeathed by his victim just moments before, a result of brainwashing instilled in him by Warren Vidic during his time as an Abstergo captive.[5] Cross's actions directly led to the fall of the Assassin order, as he compromised virtually all of the Assassin camps around the world he had visited in search for the Mentor upon returning to Abstergo Industries, which forced the Assassins even further into hiding. Other notable Assassins held captive by Abstergo included the mysterious Clay Kaczmarek and Desmond Miles – descendants of both Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad and Ezio Auditore.[4]

"We lost two more teams last night. That's eight more of us just… gone."
―Lucy Stillman, 2012.[src]

Using Desmond, Abstergo managed to obtain a map of the locations of the Pieces of Eden across the globe, and subsequently begun their attempts to claim them. Not long after, the Assassins were able to free Desmond[1] with the aid of Lucy Stillman (an Assassin who had been working undercover at Abstergo for at least seven years by 2012)[1] as well as obtain their own copy of the map.[4] Following this, Desmond agreed to aid the Assassins in their quest to defeat Abstergo, mostly for revenge, but also for closure. Utilizing the Animus 2.0, a copy of the machine used by Abstergo to explore his genetic memories previously,[1][4] Desmond followed the memories of Ezio Auditore, adopting his skills in combat and free-running, while the rest of the Order concentrated to locating the Pieces of Eden before their Templar counterparts. Despite this, however, the war with the Templars had taken a turn for the worse. With their numbers dwindling, the Order of Assassins was in danger of losing the war.[1]

As technology progressed, so did the weapons used against the Assassins. By 2012, the Templars were using cell phone towers and satellites to track down the Assassins. As a result, Desmond and his group had to take refuge within the Sanctuary, deep beneath the city of Monteriggioni. By this point the Order was using at least one e-mail network, known as the Hephaestus Email Network, to facilitate communications.[7]

File:Modern Assassins Inside the Vault.JPG

The Assassins in the Colosseum Vault.

In the later half of 2012, an Assassin team made up of Lucy Stillman, Rebecca Crane, Shaun Hastings and Desmond Miles discovered Colosseum Vault – after Desmond relived Ezio's memories through the Animus – and infiltrated it, securing the Apple of Eden that Ezio had hidden there centuries before. Desmond's body was taken over by the ancient being Juno, who forced him to stab and kill Lucy. The team and the Apple were brought to William Miles and the Order had thus secured one of the ancient artifacts.[7]

Known Assassins

Zw-renaissance-assassins

Ezio's initiation into the Brotherhood.

"The seeds were planted as two worlds became one. Behold, the Assassins, the children of two worlds!"
―Subject 16[src]

The Assassins had existed since before the turn of the first millennium; several known figures included Darius, Iltani, Wei Yu,[1] Gaius Cassius Longinus, Marcus Junius Brutus and their co-conspirators,[6] Amunet and Leonius.[1] Historically however, the fore-bearers of the Assassins have existed since before recorded time, possibly reaching as far back as Adam and Eve.[1]

Medieval and Renaissance periods

During the Third Crusade, the Syrian sect of the Order of Assassins was mainly made up of native, Syrian-born individuals; although some, like Altaïr, were born to parents of both religions. Led by Al Mualim,[4] and later Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad himself,[1] other members included Harash,[12] Malik and Kadar Al-Sayf, Rauf, Abbas, Masun, Jamal,[4] and Qulan Gal, the death-bringer of Genghis Khan.[1] Allies also included various individuals, such as Adha,[15] and even former Templars like Maria Thorpe.[1][12] Others included Dante Alighieri and Domenico Auditore,[1] founder of the Auditore Villa.

Later on, during the Renaissance, the Order's numbers had dwindled significantly. Having become much more secretive, members of the Order often had occupations and lives outside of the Order, ranging from artists[16] to thieves[1] to royal treasurers.[17] They included the Florentine banker Giovanni Auditore da Firenze;[1][14] his brother Mario Auditore, caretaker of the Auditore Villa and condottieri leader; Federico Auditore da Firenze and his brother Ezio Auditore da Firenze; Paola and Teodora, the heads of the Florentine and Venetian courtesans respectively; Antonio, the head of the Venetian Thieves Guild; La Volpe, the head of the Florentine Thieves Guild; Niccolò Machiavelli, a writer and head of the Florentine Mercenaries; Bartolomeo d'Alviano,[1] condottiero of Venice; Perotto Calderon, undercover in the employ of the Borgia. Others included Giovanni Borgia, the illegitimate son of Calderon and Lucrezia Borgia; Paracelcus, Swiss scientist and alchemist; Francesco Vecellio, Renaissance painter,[6] Tessa Varzi and Cipriano Enu,[6] Rinaldo Vitturi, the keeper of the Shroud,[6] Ridolfo Fioravant and Pietro Antonio Solari, spies working undercover as architects on the Kremlin[7] and Luis de Santángel and Raphael Sanchez, finance minister to Ferdinand II and treasurer of Queen Isabella I respectively.[17]

Once again, the Order had many allies amongst the common folk of Italy, as well as amongst the nobility. Foremost among them was Leonardo da Vinci, Ezio's closest friend and a genius of invention. Others included Caterina Sforza,[18] the Countess of Forlì;[1] Lorenzo de' Medici, the ruler of Florence;[1] Agostino Barbarigo, the Doge of Venice from 1486;[1] and the famed explorer Christoffa Corombo.[17]

By 1501, Ezio Auditore and Niccolò Machiavelli had begun training new Assassin recruits in the Order from their Tiber Island Base in Rome. In 1503, Claudia Auditore, sister of Ezio, also joined the Order.[7]

Modern times

At the turn of the 20th Century, the Assassins' Order had spread as far the Russian Empire, with a strong presence in and around Petrograd. Members of the Narodnaya Volya were in fact members of the Assassin Order. Some known Assassins include Nikolai Orelov and Aleksandr Ulyanov, the older brother of Vladimir Lenin.[3]

Swap

The medic and his target.

During World War I, there was an Assassin on the Western Front, an unidentified medic fighting for the British on the front line. The medic assassinated Erich Albert, a German general and member of the Templars.[6]

During the late 20th and 21st Century, however, the Order seemed to have sunk further into hiding, with their numbers fewer than ever.[1] Although it is evident that more existed, only a few were known to be in the Order: Clay Kaczmarek, Desmond Miles, Lucy Stillman,[4] Rebecca Crane, Shaun Hastings,[1] Hannah Mueller, Paul Bellamy, Daniel Cross,[19] and William Miles. There were also known groups of Assassins based in São Paulo, Brazil; Moscow, Russia; Osaka, Japan and Denver, Colorado, US.[7]

Known victims

"Find them, kill them. In doing so, you will sow the seeds of peace."
―Al Mualim to Altaïr[src]

Over the centuries, the Order of Assassins killed hundreds, if not thousands of individuals who they saw to be corrupt in their ways and a danger to humanity. Their intense rivalry with the Templars also ensured that many underlings who served their Templar masters often shared the same fate.[4]

Below is a chronological list of notable victims of Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad:


Below is a chronological list of notable victims of Ezio Auditore da Firenze:


Below is a chronological list of the known victims of other Assassins:[1]


See also

Appearances

Notes and references

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 1.18 1.19 1.20 1.21 1.22 1.23 1.24 1.25 1.26 1.27 1.28 1.29 1.30 1.31 1.32 1.33 1.34 1.35 1.36 1.37 1.38 1.39 1.40 1.41 1.42 1.43 1.44 1.45 1.46 1.47 1.48 1.49 1.50 1.51 1.52 1.53 1.54 1.55 1.56 1.57 1.58 1.59 1.60 1.61 1.62 1.63 1.64 1.65 1.66 1.67 1.68 1.69 1.70 1.71 1.72 1.73 1.74 1.75 1.76 1.77 1.78 1.79 1.80 1.81 1.82 Assassin's Creed II
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15 Assassin's Creed: Revelations
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Assassin's Creed: The Fall - Issue #1 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Assassin's Creed: The Fall - Issue #1" defined multiple times with different content
  4. 4.00 4.01 4.02 4.03 4.04 4.05 4.06 4.07 4.08 4.09 4.10 4.11 4.12 4.13 4.14 4.15 4.16 4.17 4.18 4.19 4.20 4.21 4.22 4.23 4.24 4.25 4.26 4.27 4.28 4.29 4.30 Assassin's Creed
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 Assassin's Creed: The Fall - Issue #3
  6. 6.00 6.01 6.02 6.03 6.04 6.05 6.06 6.07 6.08 6.09 6.10 6.11 6.12 Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy
  7. 7.00 7.01 7.02 7.03 7.04 7.05 7.06 7.07 7.08 7.09 7.10 7.11 7.12 7.13 7.14 7.15 7.16 7.17 7.18 7.19 7.20 7.21 7.22 7.23 7.24 7.25 7.26 7.27 7.28 7.29 Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood
  8. Assassin's Creed (French comic): Tome 3, Accipiter
  9. 9.0 9.1 Assassin's Creed Timeline
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 Assassin's Creed: The Secret Crusade
  11. Wikipedia: Saladin
  12. 12.00 12.01 12.02 12.03 12.04 12.05 12.06 12.07 12.08 12.09 12.10 12.11 Assassin's Creed: Bloodlines
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 Uplay Content - Assassin's Creed II: Auditore Family Crypt
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 Assassin's Creed: Lineage
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 15.4 15.5 15.6 15.7 Assassin's Creed: Altaïr's Chronicles
  16. Assassin's Creed: Renaissance
  17. 17.0 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.4 17.5 Assassin's Creed II: Discovery
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 Assassin's Creed II: Battle of Forlì
  19. Assassin's Creed: The Fall - Issue #2
  20. Assassin's Creed II: Bonfire of the Vanities
  21. Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood - The Da Vinci Disappearance
  22. Assassin's Creed (French comic): Tome 2, Aquilus
  23. 23.0 23.1 Assassin's Creed: Discover Your Legacy
  24. Assassin's Creed: Revelations novel

Advertisement