Welcome to Assassin's Creed Wiki! Log in and join the community.

Majd Addin: Difference between revisions

From the Assassin's Creed Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>1857a
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
 
(25 intermediate revisions by 15 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Era|Individuals|Templars|Good}}
{{Era|Individuals|Templars|Good}}
{{Quote|Of course not! I killed them because I could, because it was fun! Do you know what it feels like, to determine another man's fate? And did you see the way the people cheered? The way they feared me? I was like a God! You'd have done the same if you could. Such power!|Majd Addin.|Assassin's Creed}}
{{Quote|Of course not! I killed them because I could, because it was fun! Do you know what it feels like, to determine another man's fate? And did you see the way the people cheered? The way they feared me? I was like a God! You'd have done the same if you could. Such power!|Majd Addin.|Assassin's Creed|Assassination (Majd Addin)}}
{{Character Infobox
{{Character Infobox
|name = Majd Addin
|name = Majd Addin
|image = Madjpng.png
|image = AC Majd Addin.png
|death = August 1191 <br>[[Jerusalem]], [[Ayyubid dynasty|Ayyubid Sultanate]]
|birth = c. 1130s<ref name="AC guide">''[[Assassin's Creed: Official Game Guide]]'' – Characters and Enemies</ref>
|period = High Middle Ages
|death = August 1191<br>[[Jerusalem]], [[Ayyubid dynasty|Ayyubid Sultanate]]
|species = [[Human]]
|affiliates = [[Saracens]]<br>[[Templars]]
|affiliates = [[Saracens]]<br>[[Templars]]
*[[Levantine Rite of the Templar Order|Levantine Rite]]
*[[Levantine Rite of the Templar Order|Levantine Rite]]
|voice = [[Richard Cansino]]}}
}}
'''Majd Addin''' (died 1191) was a [[Saracens|Saracen]], the regent of [[Jerusalem]], and a member of the [[Levantine Rite of the Templar Order|Levantine Templars]]. He was the sixth individual to be assassinated by the [[Assassins|Assassin]] [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad]], and like his Templar brothers, his death was planned by [[Al Mualim]]. Majd Addin was located in Jerusalem's Poor District.
'''Majd Addin''' (c. 1130s – 1191) was the [[Saracens|Saracen]] regent of [[Jerusalem]] and a member of the [[Levantine Rite of the Templar Order|Levantine Templars]]. Having risen from the status of a mere scribe to his position as regent, he ruled the city's citizens through fear and intimidation while operating from Jerusalem's Poor District.
 
Majd Addin was the sixth target assigned to the [[Assassins|Assassin]] [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad]], in his [[hunt for the nine|pursuit of redemption]], as part of a wider purge of all the Templar leaders. Like his fellow Templar brothers, his death was mandated by the Assassin leader [[Al Mualim]], who sought to secure the [[Apple of Eden 2|Apple of Eden]] by eliminating those privy to the Templars' secret alliance.


==Biography==
==Biography==
===Rise to power===
===Rise to power===
{{Quote|Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn's absence left the city without a proper leader and Majd Addin has appointed himself to play the role.|Malik describing Majd's power.|Assassin's Creed}}Majd Addin was once a simple scribe. At some point in his life, not only did he become a member of the Templar Order, but he also became aware of an [[Apple of Eden 2|Apple of Eden]] and its capabilities; Addin and nine other individuals closely guarded its secrets and intended to use the Apple to create a [[New World Order|new world]].<ref name="AC">''[[Assassin's Creed]]''</ref>
{{Quote|Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn's absence left the city without a proper leader and Majd Addin has appointed himself to play the role.|Malik describing Majd's power.|Assassin's Creed|Knowledge (Majd Addin)}}
Originally a mere scribe, Majd Addin eventually became a member of the Templar Order and became aware of the Apple of Eden. Alongside his Templar brothers, he intended to use the artifact to create a [[New World Order|new world]], receiving clandestine payments and deliveries from his fellow Templar [[Abu'l Nuqoud]] to further their shared cause.<ref name="Pickpocketing Abu'l">''[[Assassin's Creed]]'' – [[Pickpocketing (Abu'l Nuqoud)]]</ref> Following his induction into the Order, Addin rose to the regency of Jerusalem through nefarious means, ascending to the position after every individual previously appointed in [[Saladin|Salāḥ ad-Dīn's]] stead met with a mysterious and untimely end. These "accidents" led many within the city to suspect that Addin was responsible for his predecessors' fates in order to seize power for the Templars.<ref name="Pickpocketing">''[[Assassin's Creed]]'' – [[Pickpocketing (Majd Addin)]]</ref><ref name="Knowledge">''[[Assassin's Creed]]'' – [[Knowledge (Majd Addin)]]</ref>


Due to his membership of the Order, and the absence of the Sultan [[Salāḥ ad-Dīn]], Majd Addin was able to take control of Jerusalem. Addin believed that everyone should view the world in his way, and those that did not oblige to this were sentenced to death. He used fear and intimidation to keep the population of Jerusalem in check, often issuing strict and confusing edicts regarding the way people should conduct themselves. This way, he was slowly reversing Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn's long-standing policy of tolerance toward all races, religions, and creeds.<ref name="AC" />
Utilizing the absence of Salāḥ ad-Dīn, Addin took control of the city and ruled through fear and intimidation from his seat in the Poor District. He employed a "veil" of religious righteousness to justify his reign, using heralds to proclaim that he was returning the citizens to a "proper course" through the strict enforcement of God's law. By demanding that even minor transgressions be reported, he effectively reversed Salāḥ ad-Dīn's long-standing policy of tolerance, instead purging anyone he labeled as "wicked".<ref name="Knowledge"/><ref name="Interrogation">''[[Assassin's Creed]]'' – [[Interrogation (Majd Addin)]]</ref>


Mock trials were often held for those he perceived to be enemies of the city. In these, he would either frame them or exaggerate their crimes, in order to make sure the trials would always result in death, as well as the public's disapproval of the sentenced – this caused the people of Jerusalem to call the trials "executions" instead. Through these executions, Addin silenced anyone who would oppose him, and struck fear into the hearts of any who considered an uprising.<ref name="AC" />
To maintain his grip on Jerusalem, Addin held mock trials for perceived enemies of the city, often framing innocents or exaggerating crimes to ensure a death sentence. These public executions served to silence dissent and discourage any potential uprisings.<ref name="Interrogation"/> Despite his claims of working for the greater good, Addin was a sadist who took personal pleasure in the act of execution, famously remarking that the power to determine another's fate made him feel like a god.<ref name="Knowledge"/><ref name="Assassination">''[[Assassin's Creed]]'' – [[Assassination (Majd Addin)]]</ref>
 
He was known to speak with an authoritative edge and insisted that he knew what was best for the people of Jerusalem. However, Majd was a cruel man and his citizens knew he could not be trusted.<ref name="AC" />


===Death===
===Death===
{{Quote|Not so innocent. Dissident voices cut deep as steel. They disrupt order. In this, I do agree with the Brotherhood.|Majd about the people he attempted to execute.|Assassin's Creed}}Altaïr traveled to Jerusalem's Poor District, where he started his investigation of Majd Addin. He soon discovered that there was to be another execution, and that a group of citizens were planning to stand up against Majd Addin in order to save the son of their leader.<ref name="AC" />
{{Quote|Not so innocent. Dissident voices cut deep as steel. They disrupt order. In this, I do agree with the Brotherhood.|Majd about the people he attempted to execute.|Assassin's Creed|Assassination (Majd Addin)}}
 
In 1191, Altaïr traveled to Jerusalem's Poor District to begin his investigation into Majd Addin. He soon discovered that a public execution was imminent and that a local citizen named [[Ahmad]] was planning a desperate intervention to save his son from the scaffold.<ref name="Eavesdropping">''[[Assassin's Creed]]'' – [[Eavesdropping (Majd Addin)]]</ref> Upon visiting the city's [[Assassin bureau]], the [[Rafiq|Dai]] [[Malik Al-Sayf]] informed Altaïr that one of the prisoners was actually a member of the [[Assassin Brotherhood]]. Malik tasked Altaïr with eliminating Majd Addin before the execution could be completed, ensuring the safety of their Brother.<ref name="Knowledge"/>
During the public execution, Majd judged an alleged prostitute, a thief, a gambler and a heretic. The heretic was in fact an Assassin, and [[Malik Al-Sayf]] had tasked Altaïr with killing Majd before the Assassin was executed. The citizens who had planned to stand up to Majd tried in vain to stop the execution, but they were quickly killed by [[archers]] and other [[guards]].<ref name="AC" />
 
Majd began his speech about the prostitute, declaring that she had sold her body to several men. She defended herself by stating that she was only there because she had refused to lie with Addin. He then killed the woman, saying that even when she was only moments from her death, she still continued to lie.<ref name="AC" />


The second victim was the gambler, who remarked that he had only played a game of chance. Majd told him that it was not sin that corrupted the city, but the gambler. Majd then killed him and moved on to his next victim.<ref name="AC" />
During the public execution, Majd Addin presided over the judgment of four prisoners: a woman accused of being a prostitute, a gambler, a thief, and the captured Assassin. The proceedings were interrupted when Ahmad and another civilian attempted to storm the stage, but they were ruthlessly cut down by [[archers]] and [[guards]]. Unfazed, Addin continued his morbid spectacle, beginning with the woman. Despite her protest that she had been condemned solely for refusing Addin's advances, he executed her, claiming she continued to lie even in the face of death. He then wordlessly killed the gambler, who had accused Addin of being the true corruption in the city, before turning to the alleged thief. Though the man argued he had merely picked up a single dinar from the ground, Addin dismissed his plea and executed him to "prevent" further crime.<ref name="Assassination"/>
 
The third victim was being accused of stealing the gain of others. To acquire support from the public, Majd convinced the crowd that everyone had been violated by his actions. The man tried to defend himself, saying that he had picked only one dinar which had fallen to the floor. However, Majd Addin rebuked that the crime would rise and begin to affect others more directly, after which he killed the man.<ref name="AC" />


[[File:Majd Assassination 4.png|thumb|250px|left|Altaïr assassinating Majd Addin]]
[[File:Majd Assassination 4.png|thumb|250px|left|Altaïr assassinating Majd Addin]]
Before Majd could move on to the Assassin, Altaïr made his way to the stage and stabbed Majd with his [[Hidden Blade]], allowing Malik's other Assassins to save their imprisoned brother.<ref name="AC" />
Before Majd Addin could execute the final prisoner, Altaïr maneuvered through the crowd and onto the stage, fatally stabbing the regent with his [[Hidden Blade]]. This distraction allowed other Assassins to intervene and rescue their imprisoned Brother. In his final moments, Addin abandoned his veil of righteousness, confessing that he sought the regency purely for the pleasure of exercising power and instilling fear. He claimed that anyone in his position, including Altaïr, would have done the same—a notion the Assassin rejected before delivering a final, killing blow. Altaïr then took his blood with a [[Feathers|feather]] to confirm the kill to Malik.<ref name="Assassination" />
 
During Majd's dying moments, he told Altaïr the reason for his evil deeds, commenting that, while he joined the Templars to help them take control of Jerusalem, in fact, he simply wanted the power and fear such a position granted. He stated his belief that Altaïr would have done the same, which the Assassin denied, and finished him with a second stab with the Hidden Blade. Afterwards, Altaïr smeared the [[Feathers|feather]] he had brought with Addin's blood, and reported back to the [[Assassin bureau]].<ref name="AC" />


Majd Addin was later buried in a cemetery in Jerusalem, where both Saracen and Crusader soldiers joined together to pay their respects. Altaïr was also present, as he had discovered that his next target, [[Robert de Sablé]], would also be present; while there, he noted that there was very little conviction behind the wails and prayers of sorrow from the assembled nobles. However, the funeral turned out to be an ambush as Robert had not planned to attend, knowing that the Assassin would strike, so he sent a [[Maria Thorpe|decoy]] instead.<ref name="AC" />
Following his death, Majd Addin was buried in a cemetery in Jerusalem. His funeral was attended by both Saracens and [[Crusaders]], including the Templar Grand Master [[Robert de Sablé]]. Altaïr attended the service to assassinate de Sablé, observing that the nobles' displays of grief were largely performative. However, the event proved to be an ambush; Robert, anticipating an attack, had sent [[Maria Thorpe]] to act as a decoy in his place.<ref name="Assassination Robert">''[[Assassin's Creed]]'' – [[Assassination (Robert de Sablé)]]</ref>


==Personality and characteristics==
==Personality and traits==
{{Quote|Fear and intimidation get him what he wants.|Malik on Majd.|Assassin's Creed}}[[File:Majd Assassination 3.png|thumb|250px|Majd Addin addressing the crowd]]
{{Quote|Fear and intimidation get him what he wants.|Malik on Majd.|Assassin's Creed|Knowledge (Majd Addin)}}
Majd Addin was a power-hungry individual who thrived off of the fear that people had for him. It was this lust for power that led him to become a member of the Knights Templar, who offered him what he desired in exchange for his allegiance.<ref name="AC" />
[[File:Majd Assassination 3.png|thumb|250px|Majd Addin addressing the crowd]]
Majd Addin was an egotistical and power-hungry individual who thrived on the fear he instilled in others. His desire for power led him to join the Templar Order, viewing their influence as an opportunity to elevate his own station from that of a mere scribe. Unlike some of his brethren who sought to justify their actions through noble ends, Addin was a sadist who took personal pleasure in the act of murder, openly admitting that he killed "because I could, because it was fun!"<ref name="Assassination"/>


Addin often conducted executions because he felt that determining another man's fate gave him a god-like status. A very proficient speaker, Majd Addin could manipulate the crowd with his words, often making them blindly believe that the executions he carried out were for the good of the city.<ref name="AC" />
Addin possessed a god complex, believing that the power to determine the fate of another granted him a divine status. A proficient and manipulative orator, he employed a "veil" of religious righteousness to frame his executions as a necessary purge of the "wicked" to return the city to a "proper course." Through his heralds and public lectures, he convinced the populace that his mock trials were acts of God's will, effectively using the law as a weapon to silence dissident voices and maintain absolute control.<ref name="Interrogation"/><ref name="Assassination"/>


Dying, Majd Addin did not claim that what he did was right, instead confessing that he did it not to help his brethren, but because he enjoyed it, as well as to gain power and fame, which he accomplished over time. However, this led to his downfall as he had allowed these factors to corrupt him.<ref name="AC" />
At the moment of his death, Addin did not attempt to claim his deeds were for a higher cause; instead, he confessed that he joined the Templars purely for the power and fear such a position granted. He remained unrepentant until the end, viewing the cheers of the crowd and the terror of the citizens as validation of his god-like authority.<ref name="Assassination" />


==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*Majd Addin ("glory of the faith") may be very loosely based on a man named {{Wiki|Baha ad-Din ibn Shaddad|Bahā' ad-Dīn ibn Shaddād}} ("splendor of the faith"), who was close to Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn and wrote a biography on the great Saracen military leader and sultan.
*Majd Addin ("glory of the faith") may be very loosely based on a man named {{Wiki|Baha ad-Din ibn Shaddad|Bahā' ad-Dīn ibn Shaddād}} ("splendor of the faith"), who was close to Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn and wrote a biography of the great Saracen military leader and sultan.
*Alternatively, he may be based on Majd al-Din Mubārak, an emir and former deputy of Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn's elder brother [[wikipedia:Turan-Shah|Shams ad-Din Turanshah]] in the city of [[wikipedia:Zabid|Zabid]], [[wikipedia:Yemen|Yemen]] who was arrested in 1181 by Saladin's confidants for the misappropriation of revenue in the wake of Turan-Shah's passing but was pardoned by Saladin afterwards.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=hGR5M0druJIC&pg=PA158&source=gbs_toc_r&cad=4#v=onepage&q&f=false ''Saladin: the Politics of the Holy War'']</ref>
*Alternatively, he may be based on Majd al-Din Mubārak, an emir and former deputy of Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn's elder brother {{Wiki|Turan-Shah|Shams ad-Din Turanshah}} in the city of {{Wiki|Zabid}}, {{Wiki|Yemen}} who was arrested in 1181 by Saladin's confidants for the misappropriation of revenue in the wake of Turan-Shah's passing but was pardoned by Saladin afterwards.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=hGR5M0druJIC&pg=PA158&source=gbs_toc_r&cad=4#v=onepage&q&f=false ''Saladin: the Politics of the Holy War'']</ref>
*In one of Altaïr's investigations, it was revealed that Majd Addin was once the scribe of the ''emir'', wherein Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn was the Emir or Sultan at this time.
*In one of Altaïr's investigations, it was revealed that Majd Addin was once the scribe of the ''emir'', wherein Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn was the Emir or Sultan at this time.
*Malik told Altaïr that Majd Addin had ''"declared himself Regent in Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn's absence."'' However, when [[eavesdropping]] on some [[civilians]]—particularly the father of one of those to be executed—it becomes clear that the people were under the impression that Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn himself had appointed Majd Addin as Regent.
*Malik told Altaïr that Majd Addin had ''"declared himself Regent in Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn's absence."'' However, when [[eavesdropping]] on some [[civilians]]—particularly the father of one of those to be executed—it becomes clear that the people were under the impression that Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn himself had appointed Majd Addin as Regent.
*If allowed, Majd Addin would execute the Assassin in a far more brutal manner than what he would do to the other three. He would execute the first two with a simple slash of his sword, and impale the third, but when he got to the Assassin, Addin would impale him and then shift the blade around inside his body.
*If allowed, Majd Addin would execute the Assassin in a far more brutal manner than what he would do to the other three. He would execute the first two with a simple slash of his sword, and impale the third, but when he got to the Assassin, Addin would impale him and then shift the blade around inside his body.
**If the other Assassin is executed, Altaïr would slowly lose [[synchronization]] bars until he assassinated Majd Addin, or desynchronized.
**If the other Assassin is executed, Altaïr would slowly lose [[synchronization]] bars until he assassinated Majd Addin, or desynchronized.
*Majd Addin was one of only four targets who required multiple stabs of the Hidden Blade to die—once during gameplay, and another in the [[Memory Corridor]]. The other three were [[Checco Orsi]] in ''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'', [[Shahkulu]] in ''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]'' and [[Edward Braddock]] in ''[[Assassin's Creed III]]''.
*Majd Addin was one of only four targets in the series who required multiple stabs of the Hidden Blade to die—once during gameplay, and another in the [[Memory Corridor]]. The other three were [[Checco Orsi]] in ''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'', [[Shahkulu]] in ''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]'' and [[Edward Braddock]] in ''[[Assassin's Creed III]]''.
*Majd is one of the five targets of the original game that have personal bodyguards; the others are [[Tamir]], [[Abu'l Nuqoud]], [[Talal]] and [[Jubair al Hakim]].
*In the non-canonical [[Assassin's Creed (mobile game)|mobile game adaptation]] of ''Assassin's Creed'', he is called "Maj Aldim". Rather than being a Saracen, he is dressed in the battle armor and surcoat of the Knights Templar. He fights Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad in Jerusalem with a [[crossbow]], which he principally fires down on him from above on top of metal platforms. To damage him, Altaïr strikes the gears controlling the platforms to cause them to spin, causing him to drop to the ground. The scenario is repeated several times—with Maj Aldim launching bolts that unleash waves of destructive energy upon impacting the ground once he loses more than a quarter of his health—until he is killed. Altaïr then retrieves his crossbow for his own use afterwards.
*In the non-canonical [[Assassin's Creed (mobile game)|mobile game adaptation]] of ''Assassin's Creed'', he is called "Maj Aldim". Rather than being a Saracen, he is dressed in the battle armor and surcoat of the Knights Templar. He fights Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad in Jerusalem with a [[crossbow]], which he principally fires down on him from above on top of metal platforms. To damage him, Altaïr strikes the gears controlling the platforms to cause them to spin, causing him to drop to the ground. The scenario is repeated several times—with Maj Aldim launching bolts that unleash waves of destructive energy upon impacting the ground once he loses more than a quarter of his health—until he is killed. Altaïr then retrieves his crossbow for his own use afterwards.


==Gallery==
==Gallery==
<gallery captionalign="center" position="center" spacing="small" widths="180">
<gallery captionalign="center" position="center" widths="180">
Emir by Michel Thibault.png|Majd Addin's character model by [[Michel Thibault]]
Emir Guard by Michel Thibault.png|Character models of Majd Addin's personal guard
ACMAddinSpeech.jpg|''[[Assassin's Creed: Memories]]'' art of Majd Addin
ACMAddinSpeech.jpg|''[[Assassin's Creed: Memories]]'' art of Majd Addin
ACMAddinHanging.jpg|''Memories'' art of Majd Addin at a hanging
ACMAddinHanging.jpg|''Memories'' art of Majd Addin at a hanging
Emir by Michel Thibault.png|Majd Addin character model by [[Michel Thibault]]
Emir Guard by Michel Thibault.png|Majd Addin's personal guard character model by Michel Thibault
Majd Assassination 1.png|Majd Addin arriving at the execution
Majd Assassination 1.png|Majd Addin arriving at the execution
Majd Assassination 5.png|Majd Addin's final moments
Majd Assassination 5.png|Majd Addin's final moments
Line 68: Line 65:
</gallery>
</gallery>


==Appearance==
==Appearances==
*''[[Assassin's Creed]]'' {{1st}}
*''[[Assassin's Creed]]'' {{1st}}
*''[[Assassin's Creed: The Secret Crusade]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: The Secret Crusade]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Memories]]''


==References==
==References==
Line 78: Line 76:
{{DEFAULTSORT:Addin, Majd}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Addin, Majd}}


[[de:Majd Addin]]
<!--[de:Majd Addin]
[[es:Majd Addin]]
[es:Majd Addin]
[[fa:مجد الدین]]
[fa:مجد الدین]
[[fr:Majd Addin]]
[fr:Majd Addin]
[[hu:Majd Addin]]
[hu:Majd Addin]
[[it:Majd Addin]]
[it:Majd Addin]
[[nl:Majd Addin]]
[lt:Majd Addin]
[[pl:Majd Addin]]
[nl:Majd Addin]
[[pt-br:Majd Addin]]
[pl:Majd Addin]
[[ru:Мажд Аддин]]
[pt-br:Majd Addin]
[[uk:Мажд Аддін]]
[ru:Мажд Аддин]
[[zh:马吉德·阿丁]]
[uk:Мажд Аддін]
[zh:马吉德·阿丁]-->
[[Category:1130s births]]
[[Category:1191 deaths]]
[[Category:1191 deaths]]
[[Category:Individuals]]
[[Category:Individuals]]
[[Category:Scholars]]
[[Category:Scholars]]
[[Category:Regents]]
[[Category:Saracens]]
[[Category:Saracens]]
[[Category:Templars]]
[[Category:Templars]]
[[Category:Levantine Templars]]
[[Category:Levantine Templars]]

Latest revision as of 02:34, 25 May 2026

"Of course not! I killed them because I could, because it was fun! Do you know what it feels like, to determine another man's fate? And did you see the way the people cheered? The way they feared me? I was like a God! You'd have done the same if you could. Such power!"
―Majd Addin.[src]-[m]

Majd Addin (c. 1130s – 1191) was the Saracen regent of Jerusalem and a member of the Levantine Templars. Having risen from the status of a mere scribe to his position as regent, he ruled the city's citizens through fear and intimidation while operating from Jerusalem's Poor District.

Majd Addin was the sixth target assigned to the Assassin Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad, in his pursuit of redemption, as part of a wider purge of all the Templar leaders. Like his fellow Templar brothers, his death was mandated by the Assassin leader Al Mualim, who sought to secure the Apple of Eden by eliminating those privy to the Templars' secret alliance.

Biography[edit | edit source]

Rise to power[edit | edit source]

"Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn's absence left the city without a proper leader and Majd Addin has appointed himself to play the role."
―Malik describing Majd's power.[src]-[m]

Originally a mere scribe, Majd Addin eventually became a member of the Templar Order and became aware of the Apple of Eden. Alongside his Templar brothers, he intended to use the artifact to create a new world, receiving clandestine payments and deliveries from his fellow Templar Abu'l Nuqoud to further their shared cause.[2] Following his induction into the Order, Addin rose to the regency of Jerusalem through nefarious means, ascending to the position after every individual previously appointed in Salāḥ ad-Dīn's stead met with a mysterious and untimely end. These "accidents" led many within the city to suspect that Addin was responsible for his predecessors' fates in order to seize power for the Templars.[3][4]

Utilizing the absence of Salāḥ ad-Dīn, Addin took control of the city and ruled through fear and intimidation from his seat in the Poor District. He employed a "veil" of religious righteousness to justify his reign, using heralds to proclaim that he was returning the citizens to a "proper course" through the strict enforcement of God's law. By demanding that even minor transgressions be reported, he effectively reversed Salāḥ ad-Dīn's long-standing policy of tolerance, instead purging anyone he labeled as "wicked".[4][5]

To maintain his grip on Jerusalem, Addin held mock trials for perceived enemies of the city, often framing innocents or exaggerating crimes to ensure a death sentence. These public executions served to silence dissent and discourage any potential uprisings.[5] Despite his claims of working for the greater good, Addin was a sadist who took personal pleasure in the act of execution, famously remarking that the power to determine another's fate made him feel like a god.[4][6]

Death[edit | edit source]

"Not so innocent. Dissident voices cut deep as steel. They disrupt order. In this, I do agree with the Brotherhood."
―Majd about the people he attempted to execute.[src]-[m]

In 1191, Altaïr traveled to Jerusalem's Poor District to begin his investigation into Majd Addin. He soon discovered that a public execution was imminent and that a local citizen named Ahmad was planning a desperate intervention to save his son from the scaffold.[7] Upon visiting the city's Assassin bureau, the Dai Malik Al-Sayf informed Altaïr that one of the prisoners was actually a member of the Assassin Brotherhood. Malik tasked Altaïr with eliminating Majd Addin before the execution could be completed, ensuring the safety of their Brother.[4]

During the public execution, Majd Addin presided over the judgment of four prisoners: a woman accused of being a prostitute, a gambler, a thief, and the captured Assassin. The proceedings were interrupted when Ahmad and another civilian attempted to storm the stage, but they were ruthlessly cut down by archers and guards. Unfazed, Addin continued his morbid spectacle, beginning with the woman. Despite her protest that she had been condemned solely for refusing Addin's advances, he executed her, claiming she continued to lie even in the face of death. He then wordlessly killed the gambler, who had accused Addin of being the true corruption in the city, before turning to the alleged thief. Though the man argued he had merely picked up a single dinar from the ground, Addin dismissed his plea and executed him to "prevent" further crime.[6]

Altaïr assassinating Majd Addin

Before Majd Addin could execute the final prisoner, Altaïr maneuvered through the crowd and onto the stage, fatally stabbing the regent with his Hidden Blade. This distraction allowed other Assassins to intervene and rescue their imprisoned Brother. In his final moments, Addin abandoned his veil of righteousness, confessing that he sought the regency purely for the pleasure of exercising power and instilling fear. He claimed that anyone in his position, including Altaïr, would have done the same—a notion the Assassin rejected before delivering a final, killing blow. Altaïr then took his blood with a feather to confirm the kill to Malik.[6]

Following his death, Majd Addin was buried in a cemetery in Jerusalem. His funeral was attended by both Saracens and Crusaders, including the Templar Grand Master Robert de Sablé. Altaïr attended the service to assassinate de Sablé, observing that the nobles' displays of grief were largely performative. However, the event proved to be an ambush; Robert, anticipating an attack, had sent Maria Thorpe to act as a decoy in his place.[8]

Personality and traits[edit | edit source]

"Fear and intimidation get him what he wants."
―Malik on Majd.[src]-[m]
Majd Addin addressing the crowd

Majd Addin was an egotistical and power-hungry individual who thrived on the fear he instilled in others. His desire for power led him to join the Templar Order, viewing their influence as an opportunity to elevate his own station from that of a mere scribe. Unlike some of his brethren who sought to justify their actions through noble ends, Addin was a sadist who took personal pleasure in the act of murder, openly admitting that he killed "because I could, because it was fun!"[6]

Addin possessed a god complex, believing that the power to determine the fate of another granted him a divine status. A proficient and manipulative orator, he employed a "veil" of religious righteousness to frame his executions as a necessary purge of the "wicked" to return the city to a "proper course." Through his heralds and public lectures, he convinced the populace that his mock trials were acts of God's will, effectively using the law as a weapon to silence dissident voices and maintain absolute control.[5][6]

At the moment of his death, Addin did not attempt to claim his deeds were for a higher cause; instead, he confessed that he joined the Templars purely for the power and fear such a position granted. He remained unrepentant until the end, viewing the cheers of the crowd and the terror of the citizens as validation of his god-like authority.[6]

Trivia[edit | edit source]

  • Majd Addin ("glory of the faith") may be very loosely based on a man named Bahā' ad-Dīn ibn Shaddād ("splendor of the faith"), who was close to Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn and wrote a biography of the great Saracen military leader and sultan.
  • Alternatively, he may be based on Majd al-Din Mubārak, an emir and former deputy of Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn's elder brother Shams ad-Din Turanshah in the city of Zabid, Yemen who was arrested in 1181 by Saladin's confidants for the misappropriation of revenue in the wake of Turan-Shah's passing but was pardoned by Saladin afterwards.[9]
  • In one of Altaïr's investigations, it was revealed that Majd Addin was once the scribe of the emir, wherein Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn was the Emir or Sultan at this time.
  • Malik told Altaïr that Majd Addin had "declared himself Regent in Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn's absence." However, when eavesdropping on some civilians—particularly the father of one of those to be executed—it becomes clear that the people were under the impression that Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn himself had appointed Majd Addin as Regent.
  • If allowed, Majd Addin would execute the Assassin in a far more brutal manner than what he would do to the other three. He would execute the first two with a simple slash of his sword, and impale the third, but when he got to the Assassin, Addin would impale him and then shift the blade around inside his body.
    • If the other Assassin is executed, Altaïr would slowly lose synchronization bars until he assassinated Majd Addin, or desynchronized.
  • Majd Addin was one of only four targets in the series who required multiple stabs of the Hidden Blade to die—once during gameplay, and another in the Memory Corridor. The other three were Checco Orsi in Assassin's Creed II, Shahkulu in Assassin's Creed: Revelations and Edward Braddock in Assassin's Creed III.
  • Majd is one of the five targets of the original game that have personal bodyguards; the others are Tamir, Abu'l Nuqoud, Talal and Jubair al Hakim.
  • In the non-canonical mobile game adaptation of Assassin's Creed, he is called "Maj Aldim". Rather than being a Saracen, he is dressed in the battle armor and surcoat of the Knights Templar. He fights Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad in Jerusalem with a crossbow, which he principally fires down on him from above on top of metal platforms. To damage him, Altaïr strikes the gears controlling the platforms to cause them to spin, causing him to drop to the ground. The scenario is repeated several times—with Maj Aldim launching bolts that unleash waves of destructive energy upon impacting the ground once he loses more than a quarter of his health—until he is killed. Altaïr then retrieves his crossbow for his own use afterwards.

Gallery[edit | edit source]

Appearances[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]