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− | {{Era| |
+ | {{Era|Organizations|Assassins}} |
− | {{Update|''[[Assassin's Creed Volume 2: Setting Sun]]'' |
+ | {{Update|''[[Assassin's Creed Volume 2: Setting Sun]]'',''[[Assassin's Creed (film)|Assassin's Creed: The Movie]]'' and ''[[Assassin's Creed: Rebellion]]''}} |
+ | {{Imageneed}} |
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{{Faction Infobox |
{{Faction Infobox |
||
− | |image= Spanish_Assassin_Insignia.png |
+ | |image = Spanish_Assassin_Insignia.png |
− | |locations |
+ | |locations = [[Spain]] |
− | |related |
+ | |related = [[Assassins]]<br>[[Emirate of Granada]]<br>Republicans |
− | |religion |
+ | |religion = |
− | |hideh |
+ | |hideh = yes |
− | |notable |
+ | |notable = [[Luis de Santángel]]<br>[[Raphael Sánchez]]<br>[[Benedicto]]<br>[[Aguilar de Nerha]]<br>[[María (Assassin)|María]]<br>[[Gonzalo Pardo]]<br>[[Ignacio Cardona]] |
− | + | |headquarters = [[Sierra de Cazorla]]}} |
|
The '''Spanish Brotherhood of Assassins''' is the [[Assassin Guilds|Guild]] of [[Assassins]] operating in [[Spain]], who, during the [[Renaissance]], cultivated ties with the royal houses of Castile, Aragon, and the [[Emirate of Granada]]. |
The '''Spanish Brotherhood of Assassins''' is the [[Assassin Guilds|Guild]] of [[Assassins]] operating in [[Spain]], who, during the [[Renaissance]], cultivated ties with the royal houses of Castile, Aragon, and the [[Emirate of Granada]]. |
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The Spanish Brotherhood was traditionalist in comparison to other branches, and by the 15th century, they still retained archaic practices such as the amputation of the ring finger as part of the induction ceremony, a sacrifice no longer required for the use of [[Hidden Blade]]s. |
The Spanish Brotherhood was traditionalist in comparison to other branches, and by the 15th century, they still retained archaic practices such as the amputation of the ring finger as part of the induction ceremony, a sacrifice no longer required for the use of [[Hidden Blade]]s. |
||
− | == |
+ | ==History== |
⚫ | |||
+ | In 1489, the Spanish Assassins came upon a former [[Knights Hospitalier]] [[Horacio de Heredia]], whose family was executed by [[Tomás de Torquemada]] after they refused to support the Inquisition. Travelling to his former estate in [[Old Castile]], the Assassins assisted Horacio in reclaiming the estate and brought him to their hideout in [[Sierra de Cazorla]] after his was heavily wounded.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Rebellion]]'' – [[Home Sweet Home]]</ref> |
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+ | While the knight recuperates, the Spanish Assassins assisted him in tracking down [[Bordingas]], the Inquisition sergeant who was not present at the estate. Locating him at a slum, they eliminated him and a local [[Concha|slumlord]].<ref>''Assassin's Creed: Rebellion'' – [[Deal Breaker]]</ref> Learning the sergeant was taking orders from [[Fort Alphonso]], an Inquisition keep. There, they destroyed supply shipments to prepare their infiltration of the fort.<ref>''Assassin's Creed: Rebellion'' – [[One Stop Too Many]]</ref> In the same timeframe, they also recovered the Heredia's family riches that had been stolen by the Inquisitors and stashed in a remote abbey meant for the Fort..<ref>''Assassin's Creed: Rebellion'' – [[Noble Deeds]]</ref> |
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⚫ | |||
⚫ | In 1491, |
||
+ | Having weaken Fort Alphonso's defenses, the Spanish Assassins infiltrated the fort and assassinated the executioner [[Pedrosa]] and commandant [[Duran]], who were responsible for executing Horacio's family.<ref>''Assassin's Creed: Rebellion'' – [[Horacio's Payback]]</ref> |
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⚫ | In 1492, the Mentor of the Brotherhood, [[Benedicto]], led a team of Assassins to a rural village in Andalusia to rescue [[Ahmed of Granada]], the son of Sultan [[Muhammad XII of Granada|Muhammad XII]] from the [[Spanish Rite of the Templar Order|Spanish Templars]]. The Assassins were initally successful, but were eventually overwhelmed by the Templars. Many of the Assassins were killed and Benedicto, Aguilar and |
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⚫ | In 1491, Torquemada was fooled by [[Rodrigo Borgia]], the [[Grand Master of the Templar Order|Grand Master]] of the [[Roman Rite of the Templar Order]], into believing that the Assassins were heretics. As a result, the Spanish Inquisitors arrested and burned numerous Spanish Assassins. [[Luis de Santángel]], an Assassin and companion of [[Christopher Columbus]], informed the Italian Assassin [[Ezio Auditore da Firenze]] of the Inquisition, which caused Ezio to sail for Spain. The spokesman of the Spanish Assassins, [[Raphael Sánchez]], met with Ezio, and assigned him to kill several high-ranking Inquisitors. With help from other Spanish Assassins, Ezio rescued several captured Brothers, and killed many Inquisitors. He failed to kill Tomás de Torquemada however, and later spared him, saying that he was not a Templar, just blinded by his faith.<ref name="AC2D">''[[Assassin's Creed II: Discovery]]''</ref> |
||
⚫ | Sometime later, the two Assassins made their way to [[Alhambra]] to prevent the Sultan from handing the [[Aguilar's Apple of Eden|Apple of Eden]] to Torquemada. |
||
+ | [[File:ACfilm_Spanish_Brotherhood_of_Assassins.png|thumb|250px|The Spanish Assassins led by Benedicto in 1492]] |
||
⚫ | By 1498, the Inquisition killed most of the Assassins,<ref name="AC2D" /> although they managed to kill Torquemada.<ref name="Glyphs">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'' – [[Glyphs]]</ref> By that same year, Santángel had died, leaving the Assassins with no grip on the Spanish royal family and the branch nearly deserted. Ezio, now co-leader of the Italian Assassins along with [[Niccolò Machiavelli]], sent his apprentices to reorganize the branch. |
||
⚫ | In 1492, the Mentor of the Brotherhood, [[Benedicto]], led a team of Assassins to a rural village in Andalusia to rescue [[Ahmed of Granada]], the son of Sultan [[Muhammad XII of Granada|Muhammad XII]] from the [[Spanish Rite of the Templar Order|Spanish Templars]]. The Assassins were initally successful, but were eventually overwhelmed by the Templars. Many of the Assassins were killed and Benedicto, Aguilar and María were captured. The three Assassins were brought to [[Seville]] where they were branded as heretics and to be burned at the stake. Benedicto was burned alive but Aguilar and María managed to escape the village.<ref name="ACfilm">''[[Assassin's Creed (film)|Assassin's Creed: The Movie]]''</ref> |
||
⚫ | Sometime later, the two Assassins made their way to [[Alhambra]] to prevent the Sultan from handing the [[Aguilar's Apple of Eden|Apple of Eden]] to Torquemada. María was killed in the process but Aguilar managed to kill [[Ojeda]] and retrieved the Apple, escaping in the process. Realizing that the Apple will never be safe in his possession, Aguilar entrusted the Apple to [[Christopher Columbus]], an ally of the Assassins who would keep the Apple until his death.<ref name="ACfilm" /> |
||
⚫ | These apprentices, searched Santángel's room, found his journal, and realized that he had been slowly poisoning Queen Isabella. They felt at first that it was retaliation for slaughtering his family. However they kept an eye on the Queen, and found that she was threatened by the Borgia to help spread the Inquisition. They decided to finish what Santángel started, poisoning the Queen. They found the recipe of the poison, and doubled the dose to ensure her death. They found that one of the Queen's servants was a collaborator, and through her, they administered a fatal dose.<ref name="ACB" |
||
+ | After the fall of Granada, many allies of Muhammad XII joined the Spanish Assassins to fight the Templars, as [[Jariya al-Zakiyya]], [[Shakir al-Zahid]] and [[Muza ben Abel Gazan]]. |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | By 1511, the Spanish Assassins had regrouped and occasionally received aid from [[ |
||
+ | In 1493, Ezio called for assistance from the Assassins Brotherhoods in Europe, having learned that Templars had returned to Florence and reestablished their presence in the city. In response, Aguilar sent a team of Assassins to the city, aiding Ezio and two other Italian Assassins [[Corvo Antonelli]] and [[Perina di Bastian]]. They unvelied [[Bonacolto Contarini]] as the one responsible and eliminated him.<ref>''Assassin's Creed: Rebellion'' – ''[[A War in the Shadows]]''</ref> |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | By the mid-18th century, the Spanish Brotherhood had allied themselves with the Spanish Crown. In 1748, [[Gaspar Velasquez]], a Spanish shipbuilder, had begun the designs of a brig that would serve as the primary fleet of the [[ |
||
+ | In 1495, the Spanish Assassins cooperated with a team led by the Mentor of the [[Ottoman Brotherhood of Assassins]] [[Ishak Pasha]] to retrieve [[The Secret Crusade|Niccolò Polo's journal]] in Spain. As the Spanish Inquisition wanted to give the journal to the [[Byzantine Rite of the Templar Order]], the Assassins decided to take it during the exchange. As the Assassins arrived, they discovered it was a trap and escaped from the Templars.<ref>''Assassin's Creed: Rebellion'' – ''[[The Ottoman Connection]]''</ref> |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | By the 20th century, the brotherhood was still active and a cell led by [[Ignacio Cardona]] consisting [[Glaucia Acosta]], [[Miguel Carasso]], [[Dwight Adams]] were part of the [[Spanish Civil War]], fighting on the side of the Republicans. Facing difficulties, the cell requested aid from the [[British Brotherhood of Assassins|British Brotherhood]] of Assassins, who sent [[Norbert Clarke]] in response.<ref>[[Assassin's Creed: Uprising |
||
⚫ | By 1498, the Inquisition killed most of the Assassins,<ref name="AC2D" /> although they managed to kill Torquemada.<ref name="Glyphs">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'' – [[Glyphs]]</ref> By that same year, Santángel had died, leaving the Assassins with no grip on the Spanish royal family and the branch nearly deserted. Ezio, now co-leader of the Italian Assassins along with [[Niccolò Machiavelli]], sent his apprentices to reorganize the branch.<ref name="ACB">''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]''</ref> |
||
⚫ | |||
+ | |||
⚫ | These apprentices, searched Santángel's room, found his journal, and realized that he had been slowly poisoning Queen Isabella. They felt at first that it was retaliation for slaughtering his family. However they kept an eye on the Queen, and found that she was threatened by the Borgia to help spread the Inquisition. They decided to finish what Santángel started, poisoning the Queen. They found the recipe of the poison, and doubled the dose to ensure her death. They found that one of the Queen's servants was a collaborator, and through her, they administered a fatal dose.<ref name="ACB" /><ref name="ACPL">''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]''</ref> |
||
+ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | By 1511, the Spanish Assassins had regrouped and occasionally received aid from [[Ottoman Brotherhood of Assassins|Ottoman Assassins]] sent from [[Constantinople]] by Ezio Auditore. That year, the Spanish Assassins once again faced problems from the Inquisitors, who were now acting on orders of [[Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros]]. With help of the [[Turkish Assassins|Ottoman Assassins]], the Spanish Assassins eliminated the culprits.<ref name="ACR">''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]''</ref> |
||
+ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | By the mid-18th century, the Spanish Brotherhood had allied themselves with the Spanish Crown. In 1748, [[Gaspar Velasquez]], a Spanish shipbuilder, had begun the designs of a brig that would serve as the primary fleet of the [[American Brotherhood of Assassins|Colonial Brotherhood]]. However, as he and his colleagues' progress grew, the [[British Rite of the Templar Order|British Templars]] posed an imminent threat towards them. Gaspar decided to send the plans to the French [[Assassin Council]] in the hope of completing the ''[[Aquila]]'' and, by the next year, was fully constructed and sent to the Colonial Brotherhood.<ref name="ACRG">''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]''</ref> |
||
+ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | By the 20th century, the brotherhood was still active and a cell led by [[Ignacio Cardona]] consisting [[Glaucia Acosta]], [[Miguel Carasso]], [[Dwight Adams]] were part of the [[Spanish Civil War]], fighting on the side of the Republicans. Facing difficulties, the cell requested aid from the [[British Brotherhood of Assassins|British Brotherhood]] of Assassins, who sent [[Norbert Clarke]] in response.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Uprising]]''</ref> |
||
+ | |||
⚫ | |||
'''[[Granada War]]''' |
'''[[Granada War]]''' |
||
<div style="float:left; width:48;"> |
<div style="float:left; width:48;"> |
||
− | * |
+ | *[[Sayyid al-Abbas]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Muza ben Abel Gazan]] |
+ | *[[Najma Alayza]] |
||
⚫ | |||
+ | *[[Diego de Alvarado]] {{c|betrayed}} |
||
⚫ | |||
+ | *[[Máximo Barrosa]] |
||
− | * |
+ | *[[Benedicto]] {{c|Mentor, c. 1492}} |
− | * [[Luis Chico]] |
||
− | * |
+ | *[[Georgios Cardoso]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Angela Carillo]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Luis Chico]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Andrea Cortés]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Flora de la Cruz]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Mayya al-Dabbaj]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Qasim al-Dani]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Gershon Deloya]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Jorge Díaz]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Gaspar Donoso]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Álvaro de Espinosa]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Rodrigo de Mendoza]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Mateo Galan]] |
⚫ | |||
+ | *[[Luisa Gallego]] |
||
+ | *[[Lupo Gallego]] |
||
</div> |
</div> |
||
<div style="float:right; width:48%;"> |
<div style="float:right; width:48%;"> |
||
− | * |
+ | *[[Hamid al-Jasur]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Horacio de Heredia]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Baltasar de León]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Ysabel Lomelin]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Tereysa de Lyaño]] |
⚫ | |||
− | * [[Beatriz de Navarrete]] |
||
− | * |
+ | *[[Inigo Montañés]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Tariq al-Nasr]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Beatriz de Navarrete]] |
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
− | * |
+ | *[[Bartolomé Ortiz]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Alonso Pinto]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Jaime Del Rada]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Constanza Ramos]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Raphael Sánchez]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Luis de Santángel]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Magdalena Suárez]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Faris al-Saffar]] |
+ | *[[Domingo De la Torre]] |
||
+ | *[[Shakir al-Zahid]] |
||
⚫ | |||
</div> |
</div> |
||
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'''[[Age of Discovery]]''' |
'''[[Age of Discovery]]''' |
||
− | * |
+ | *[[Gonzalo Pardo]] |
'''[[Age of Enlightenment]]''' |
'''[[Age of Enlightenment]]''' |
||
− | * |
+ | *[[Gaspar Velasquez]] |
'''[[Spanish Civil War]]''' |
'''[[Spanish Civil War]]''' |
||
− | * |
+ | *[[Ignacio Cardona]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Glaucia Acosta]] {{C|deserted}} |
− | * |
+ | *[[Miguel Carasso]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Dwight Adams]] {{c|American Brotherhood}} |
− | * |
+ | *[[Rosa Martinez]] |
{{-}} |
{{-}} |
||
− | === |
+ | ===Allies and puppets=== |
'''Granada War''' |
'''Granada War''' |
||
<div style="float:left; width:48;"> |
<div style="float:left; width:48;"> |
||
− | * |
+ | *[[Ezio Auditore da Firenze]] {{c|[[Italian Brotherhood of Assassins|Italian Brotherhood]]}} |
− | * |
+ | *[[Claudia Auditore da Firenze]] {{c|Italian Brotherhood}} |
− | * |
+ | *[[Niccolò Machiavelli]] {{c|Italian Brotherhood}} |
− | * |
+ | *[[Girolamo Da Lucca]] {{c|Italian Brotherhood}} |
− | * |
+ | *[[Lucas Bellini]] {{c|Italian Brotherhood}} |
− | * |
+ | *[[Luciano Cavazza]] {{c|Italian Brotherhood}} |
− | * |
+ | *[[Corvo Antonelli]] {{c|Italian Brotherhood}} |
− | * |
+ | *[[Perina di Bastian]] {{c|Italian Brotherhood}} |
+ | *[[Ishak Pasha]] {{c|Ottoman Brotherhood}} |
||
+ | *[[Aleksei Zima]] {{c|Ottoman Brotherhood}} |
||
</div> |
</div> |
||
<div style="float:right; width:48%;"> |
<div style="float:right; width:48%;"> |
||
− | * |
+ | *[[Yusuf Tazim]] {{c|Ottoman Brotherhood}} |
+ | *[[Jean Delacroix]] {{c|Italian Brotherhood}} |
||
⚫ | |||
− | * |
+ | *[[Ferdinand II of Aragon]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Isabella I of Castile]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Muhammad XII of Granada]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Diego]] |
− | * |
+ | *[[Christopher Columbus]] |
</div> |
</div> |
||
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'''Age of Enlightenment''' |
'''Age of Enlightenment''' |
||
− | * |
+ | *[[Achilles Davenport]] {{c|Colonial Brotherhood}} |
'''Spanish Civil War''' |
'''Spanish Civil War''' |
||
− | * |
+ | *[[Nobby Clarke|Norbert Clarke]] {{c|British Brotherhood]}} |
− | * |
+ | *[[Albert Bolden]] |
{{-}} |
{{-}} |
||
− | == |
+ | ==Gallery== |
<gallery captionalign="center" position="center" spacing="small" widths="180"> |
<gallery captionalign="center" position="center" spacing="small" widths="180"> |
||
Ezio others.jpg|Ezio with the Spanish Assassins |
Ezio others.jpg|Ezio with the Spanish Assassins |
||
Line 142: | Line 163: | ||
</gallery> |
</gallery> |
||
− | == |
+ | ==Appearances== |
− | * |
+ | *''[[Assassin's Creed II: Discovery]]'' {{1st}} |
− | * |
+ | *''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]'' {{Mo}} |
− | * |
+ | *''[[Assassin's Creed Volume 2: Setting Sun]]'' |
− | * |
+ | *''[[Assassin's Creed (film)|Assassin's Creed: The Movie]]'' |
− | * |
+ | *''[[Assassin's Creed: The Official Movie Novelization]]'' |
− | * |
+ | *''[[Assassin's Creed: Uprising]]'' |
− | * |
+ | *''[[Assassin's Creed: Reflections]]'' |
− | * |
+ | *''[[Assassin's Creed: Rebellion]]'' |
− | == |
+ | ==Trivia== |
− | * |
+ | *Because of the redesign made to the Hidden Blades by Altaïr, the Spanish Brotherhood does not amputate ''part'' of the ring finger to turn into the trigger mechanism, rather, as best seen with Aguilar, the ''entire'' ring finger is amputated. |
− | * |
+ | *Despite keeping the Levantine Brotherhood's practice of amputating the ring finger, it is unknown whether or not they also kept the practice of performing a [[Leap of Faith]] as part of their [[Initiation into the Assassin Order|initiation]]. |
− | == |
+ | ==References== |
+ | {{Reflist}} |
||
− | <references /> |
||
{{Assassins nav}} |
{{Assassins nav}} |
||
{{ACIID}} |
{{ACIID}} |
||
Line 166: | Line 187: | ||
{{ACRebellion}} |
{{ACRebellion}} |
||
+ | <!--Interwiki links--> |
||
+ | [[de:Spanischer Assassinenorden]] |
||
[[es:Hermandad española de Asesinos]] |
[[es:Hermandad española de Asesinos]] |
||
− | [[Category:Assassin |
+ | [[Category:Assassin guilds]] |
Revision as of 09:35, 24 February 2020
Patience, brothers. Soon we will reveal the secrets of Assassin's Creed Volume 2: Setting Sun,Assassin's Creed: The Movie and Assassin's Creed: Rebellion. This article has been identified as being out of date. Please update the article to reflect recent releases and then remove this template once done. |
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The Spanish Brotherhood of Assassins is the Guild of Assassins operating in Spain, who, during the Renaissance, cultivated ties with the royal houses of Castile, Aragon, and the Emirate of Granada.
Much of their operations in this period revolved around vying for influence with the Christian monarchs against the Templars, resulting in several Assassins such as Raphael Sánchez and Luis de Santángel being appointed as prominent officials. The Templars in turn preyed on the religious zealotry of the Catholic Monarchs through the Spanish Inquisition, and at the peak of that institution, the Assassins across Spain were targeted as heretics. Thanks in part to the intervention of Ezio Auditore da Firenze of the Italian Brotherhood, the Spanish Assassins survived the purge and became instrumental in putting an end to the Granada War and saving as many civilians as they could from the Inquisition.
In that same period, the Assassins were also pivotal in securing the Genoese navigator Christopher Columbus the sponsorship of Queen Isabella I of Castile, personally funding half of the expenses and thereby facilitating his explorations of the New World. The exposure of the continent to European powers would spark a frenzy by the Spanish Empire to conquer indigenous American empires such as the Inca and Aztecs, leading to the Spanish Assassins to send secret agents with the conquistadors abroad to keep a watchful eye over their activities.
The Spanish Brotherhood was traditionalist in comparison to other branches, and by the 15th century, they still retained archaic practices such as the amputation of the ring finger as part of the induction ceremony, a sacrifice no longer required for the use of Hidden Blades.
History
Granada War
In 1489, the Spanish Assassins came upon a former Knights Hospitalier Horacio de Heredia, whose family was executed by Tomás de Torquemada after they refused to support the Inquisition. Travelling to his former estate in Old Castile, the Assassins assisted Horacio in reclaiming the estate and brought him to their hideout in Sierra de Cazorla after his was heavily wounded.[1]
While the knight recuperates, the Spanish Assassins assisted him in tracking down Bordingas, the Inquisition sergeant who was not present at the estate. Locating him at a slum, they eliminated him and a local slumlord.[2] Learning the sergeant was taking orders from Fort Alphonso, an Inquisition keep. There, they destroyed supply shipments to prepare their infiltration of the fort.[3] In the same timeframe, they also recovered the Heredia's family riches that had been stolen by the Inquisitors and stashed in a remote abbey meant for the Fort..[4]
Having weaken Fort Alphonso's defenses, the Spanish Assassins infiltrated the fort and assassinated the executioner Pedrosa and commandant Duran, who were responsible for executing Horacio's family.[5]
In 1491, Torquemada was fooled by Rodrigo Borgia, the Grand Master of the Roman Rite of the Templar Order, into believing that the Assassins were heretics. As a result, the Spanish Inquisitors arrested and burned numerous Spanish Assassins. Luis de Santángel, an Assassin and companion of Christopher Columbus, informed the Italian Assassin Ezio Auditore da Firenze of the Inquisition, which caused Ezio to sail for Spain. The spokesman of the Spanish Assassins, Raphael Sánchez, met with Ezio, and assigned him to kill several high-ranking Inquisitors. With help from other Spanish Assassins, Ezio rescued several captured Brothers, and killed many Inquisitors. He failed to kill Tomás de Torquemada however, and later spared him, saying that he was not a Templar, just blinded by his faith.[6]
In 1492, the Mentor of the Brotherhood, Benedicto, led a team of Assassins to a rural village in Andalusia to rescue Ahmed of Granada, the son of Sultan Muhammad XII from the Spanish Templars. The Assassins were initally successful, but were eventually overwhelmed by the Templars. Many of the Assassins were killed and Benedicto, Aguilar and María were captured. The three Assassins were brought to Seville where they were branded as heretics and to be burned at the stake. Benedicto was burned alive but Aguilar and María managed to escape the village.[7]
Sometime later, the two Assassins made their way to Alhambra to prevent the Sultan from handing the Apple of Eden to Torquemada. María was killed in the process but Aguilar managed to kill Ojeda and retrieved the Apple, escaping in the process. Realizing that the Apple will never be safe in his possession, Aguilar entrusted the Apple to Christopher Columbus, an ally of the Assassins who would keep the Apple until his death.[7]
After the fall of Granada, many allies of Muhammad XII joined the Spanish Assassins to fight the Templars, as Jariya al-Zakiyya, Shakir al-Zahid and Muza ben Abel Gazan.
In 1493, Ezio called for assistance from the Assassins Brotherhoods in Europe, having learned that Templars had returned to Florence and reestablished their presence in the city. In response, Aguilar sent a team of Assassins to the city, aiding Ezio and two other Italian Assassins Corvo Antonelli and Perina di Bastian. They unvelied Bonacolto Contarini as the one responsible and eliminated him.[8]
In 1495, the Spanish Assassins cooperated with a team led by the Mentor of the Ottoman Brotherhood of Assassins Ishak Pasha to retrieve Niccolò Polo's journal in Spain. As the Spanish Inquisition wanted to give the journal to the Byzantine Rite of the Templar Order, the Assassins decided to take it during the exchange. As the Assassins arrived, they discovered it was a trap and escaped from the Templars.[9]
By 1498, the Inquisition killed most of the Assassins,[6] although they managed to kill Torquemada.[10] By that same year, Santángel had died, leaving the Assassins with no grip on the Spanish royal family and the branch nearly deserted. Ezio, now co-leader of the Italian Assassins along with Niccolò Machiavelli, sent his apprentices to reorganize the branch.[11]
These apprentices, searched Santángel's room, found his journal, and realized that he had been slowly poisoning Queen Isabella. They felt at first that it was retaliation for slaughtering his family. However they kept an eye on the Queen, and found that she was threatened by the Borgia to help spread the Inquisition. They decided to finish what Santángel started, poisoning the Queen. They found the recipe of the poison, and doubled the dose to ensure her death. They found that one of the Queen's servants was a collaborator, and through her, they administered a fatal dose.[11][12]
Age of Discovery
By 1511, the Spanish Assassins had regrouped and occasionally received aid from Ottoman Assassins sent from Constantinople by Ezio Auditore. That year, the Spanish Assassins once again faced problems from the Inquisitors, who were now acting on orders of Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros. With help of the Ottoman Assassins, the Spanish Assassins eliminated the culprits.[13]
Age of Enlightenment
By the mid-18th century, the Spanish Brotherhood had allied themselves with the Spanish Crown. In 1748, Gaspar Velasquez, a Spanish shipbuilder, had begun the designs of a brig that would serve as the primary fleet of the Colonial Brotherhood. However, as he and his colleagues' progress grew, the British Templars posed an imminent threat towards them. Gaspar decided to send the plans to the French Assassin Council in the hope of completing the Aquila and, by the next year, was fully constructed and sent to the Colonial Brotherhood.[14]
Spanish Civil War
By the 20th century, the brotherhood was still active and a cell led by Ignacio Cardona consisting Glaucia Acosta, Miguel Carasso, Dwight Adams were part of the Spanish Civil War, fighting on the side of the Republicans. Facing difficulties, the cell requested aid from the British Brotherhood of Assassins, who sent Norbert Clarke in response.[15]
Members
- Sayyid al-Abbas
- Muza ben Abel Gazan
- Najma Alayza
- Diego de Alvarado (betrayed)
- Máximo Barrosa
- Benedicto (Mentor, c. 1492)
- Georgios Cardoso
- Angela Carillo
- Luis Chico
- Andrea Cortés
- Flora de la Cruz
- Mayya al-Dabbaj
- Qasim al-Dani
- Gershon Deloya
- Jorge Díaz
- Gaspar Donoso
- Álvaro de Espinosa
- Rodrigo de Mendoza
- Mateo Galan
- Rosa Gallego
- Luisa Gallego
- Lupo Gallego
- Hamid al-Jasur
- Horacio de Heredia
- Baltasar de León
- Ysabel Lomelin
- Tereysa de Lyaño
- María
- Inigo Montañés
- Tariq al-Nasr
- Beatriz de Navarrete
- Aguilar de Nerha (Mentor)
- Bartolomé Ortiz
- Alonso Pinto
- Jaime Del Rada
- Constanza Ramos
- Raphael Sánchez
- Luis de Santángel
- Magdalena Suárez
- Faris al-Saffar
- Domingo De la Torre
- Shakir al-Zahid
- Jariya al-Zakiyya
- Ignacio Cardona
- Glaucia Acosta (deserted)
- Miguel Carasso
- Dwight Adams (American Brotherhood)
- Rosa Martinez
Allies and puppets
Granada War
- Ezio Auditore da Firenze (Italian Brotherhood)
- Claudia Auditore da Firenze (Italian Brotherhood)
- Niccolò Machiavelli (Italian Brotherhood)
- Girolamo Da Lucca (Italian Brotherhood)
- Lucas Bellini (Italian Brotherhood)
- Luciano Cavazza (Italian Brotherhood)
- Corvo Antonelli (Italian Brotherhood)
- Perina di Bastian (Italian Brotherhood)
- Ishak Pasha (Ottoman Brotherhood)
- Aleksei Zima (Ottoman Brotherhood)
- Yusuf Tazim (Ottoman Brotherhood)
- Jean Delacroix (Italian Brotherhood)
- Ferdinand II of Aragon
- Isabella I of Castile
- Muhammad XII of Granada
- Diego
- Christopher Columbus
Age of Enlightenment
- Achilles Davenport (Colonial Brotherhood)
Spanish Civil War
- Norbert Clarke (British Brotherhood])
- Albert Bolden
Gallery
Appearances
- Assassin's Creed II: Discovery (first appearance)
- Assassin's Creed: Rogue (mentioned only)
- Assassin's Creed Volume 2: Setting Sun
- Assassin's Creed: The Movie
- Assassin's Creed: The Official Movie Novelization
- Assassin's Creed: Uprising
- Assassin's Creed: Reflections
- Assassin's Creed: Rebellion
Trivia
- Because of the redesign made to the Hidden Blades by Altaïr, the Spanish Brotherhood does not amputate part of the ring finger to turn into the trigger mechanism, rather, as best seen with Aguilar, the entire ring finger is amputated.
- Despite keeping the Levantine Brotherhood's practice of amputating the ring finger, it is unknown whether or not they also kept the practice of performing a Leap of Faith as part of their initiation.
References
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Rebellion – Home Sweet Home
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Rebellion – Deal Breaker
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Rebellion – One Stop Too Many
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Rebellion – Noble Deeds
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Rebellion – Horacio's Payback
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Assassin's Creed II: Discovery
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Assassin's Creed: The Movie
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Rebellion – A War in the Shadows
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Rebellion – The Ottoman Connection
- ↑ Assassin's Creed II – Glyphs
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Revelations
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Rogue
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Uprising
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