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This article is about the Assassin. You may be looking for the Persian king.

Darius,[1] was the Persian assassin of his father King Xerxes I of Persia.

A proponent of free will, he is considered to be one of the very first proto-Assassins, active several centuries before the order's formal establishment. His assassination of the Persian king was the first recorded usage of the Hidden Blade, which went on to become the iconic weapon of the Assassin Brotherhood.

Biography

During the 5th century BCE, the precursors to the Templars supported the reign and conquests of the Achaemenid kings Darius I and his son Xerxes I.[2] Opposing the Persian kings' tyranny over the people, Darius personally assassinated King Xerxes I with the Hidden Blade in August 465 BCE, in what would become the first recorded use of the Assassins' iconic weapon.[3] In the same way he tried unsuccessfully the murder of his brother the King Antaxerxes I.

Legacy

By 48 BCE, Darius' Hidden Blade wound up in the hands of Queen Cleopatra of Egypt, who passed it on to her protector Aya. Aya eventually made one of her own and gave Darius' blade to her husband Bayek. After the two founded the Hidden Ones, it became the signature weapon of their organization,[4] still used centuries later when their Brotherhood reformed as the Assassins.[3]

By the time of the Renaissance, Darius was retroactively considered an Assassin and a tomb dedicated to him was built beneath Santa Maria Novella in Florence, Italy. The Italian Assassin Ezio Auditore da Firenze explored the tomb and took the hidden seal from the tomb's sarcophagus, which later allowed him to obtain the Armor of Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad sealed in the Sanctuary beneath Villa Auditore in Monteriggioni where a statue of Darius (and other celebrated Assassins) had been erected sometime before 1476.[3]

Trivia

  • Unlike most Assassins, Darius wore his Hidden Blade on the right arm.
  • Historically, Artabanus had murdered the Crown Prince of Persia Darius just prior to killing Xerxes according to Aristotle. The Latin historian Justinus however offers an alternative account where Crown Prince Darius was executed for the patricide of Xerxes after being framed by Artabanus.

Gallery

Appearances

References

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