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

Assassins: Difference between revisions

From the Assassin's Creed Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>NoMoreVillains
No edit summary
 
(171 intermediate revisions by 36 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Era|ACAC|AC|ACBL|AC2|AC2D|ACB|ACR|AC3|AC3L|AC4|ACU|ACRG|PL|ACP|ACM|CC|CI|CR|ACS|ACRE|ACO|ACI|DYL}}
{{Era|Organizations|HiddenOnes|Assassins|Good}}{{WP-REAL}}
{{Era|Renaissance|Bbook|TSC|Rbook|3book|4book|Ubook|UW|TF|TC|Brahman|Titan|FC|DO|ACL|ASD|ACE|Film|Assassins|Good}}
{{Quote|We work in the dark, to serve the light. We are Assassins.|[[Niccolò Machiavelli]]|Assassin's Creed II}}
{{WP-REAL}}
{{Working Revamp|Master Sima Yi}}
{{Spoilerhd}}
{{Update|''[[Assassin's Creed: The Essential Guide]]'' and ''[[Assassin's Creed: Origins]]''}}
{{Quote|We work in the dark, to serve the light. We are Assassins.|[[Niccolò Machiavelli]].|Assassin's Creed II}}
{{Faction Infobox
{{Faction Infobox
|image = AssassinLogo.png
|image = Aclogo.png
|leader = [[Mentor]]<ref name="Revelations">''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]''</ref><ref name="The Fall #1">''[[Assassin's Creed: The Fall]]'' - ''Issue #1''</ref>
|founder = [[Eve]] and [[Adam]]<ref name="AC2">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]''</ref> {{c|legendary}}<br>[[Bayek]] and [[Amunet]] {{c|''de jure''}}<ref name="ACO">''[[Assassin's Creed: Origins]]''</ref>
|leader = [[Mentor]]<ref name="ACR">''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]''</ref><ref name="The Fall">''[[Assassin's Creed: The Fall]]''</ref>
|headquarters =  
|headquarters =  
|locations =
|locations =
|related =
|predecessor  =  
*[[Hidden Ones]] (precursor incarnation)
*[[Shields of Mars]]
*[[Vigilantes]]<ref name="AC">''[[Assassin's Creed]]''</ref><ref name="Brotherhood">''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]''</ref>
*[[Artabanus' group]]
*[[Mercenaries]]<ref name="AC2">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]''</ref>
*[[Babylonian Brotherhood]]
*[[Courtesans]]<ref name="AC2" />
*[[Medjay]]
*[[Thieves]]<ref name="AC2" />
|successor    =
*[[Romani]]<ref name="Revelations" />
|subsidiaries =
*[[Sons of Liberty]]<ref name="AC3">''[[Assassin's Creed III]]''</ref>
[[Roman Hidden Ones|Liberatores]]<ref name="ACPL - Giovanni Borgia">''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]'' [[Rome: Chapter 2 – Giovanni Borgia]]</ref><br>
*[[Rooks]]<ref name="ACS">''[[Assassin's Creed: Syndicate]]''</ref>
[[Liberalis Circulum]]<ref name="AC3A">''[[Assassin's Creed 3: Accipiter]]''</ref><br>
*[[Narodnaya Volya]]<ref name="The Fall Deluxe">''[[Assassin's Creed: The Fall]]'' - ''Deluxe Edition''</ref>
[[Rooks]]<ref name="ACS">''[[Assassin's Creed: Syndicate]]''</ref><br>
*[[Initiates]]<ref name="ACU">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]''</ref>
[[Narodnaya Volya]]<ref name="The Fall"/><br>
|formed = Prehistory
[[Initiates]]<ref name="ACU">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]''</ref>
|reorganized = 48 BC <br>1191<ref name="AC2" />
|formed = c. 75000 BCE {{c|legendary}}<br>47 BCE {{c|''de jure''}}
|religion = {{wiki|Agnosticism}}<ref name="AC" /><ref name="ACU" />
|reorganized = 1191<ref name="AC2" />
{{wiki|Atheism}}<ref name="AC" /><ref name="ACU" /><ref name="nb1">Although the organization is irreligious and professes to an agnostic philosophy, [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad]] and [[Arno Dorian]] described the creed in strongly atheist terms as well, having specifically been {{wiki|agnostic atheism|agnostic atheists}}. Despite this, individual members may practice various faiths—an example being [[Luis de Santángel]] who was a Jew.</ref>
|religion = {{wiki|Agnosticism}}<ref name="AC1">''[[Assassin's Creed]]''</ref><ref name="ACU" />
{{wiki|Atheism}}<ref name="AC1" /><ref name="ACU" /><ref name="nb1">Although the organization is irreligious and professes to an agnostic philosophy, [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad]] and [[Arno Dorian]] described the creed in strongly atheist terms as well, having specifically been {{wiki|agnostic atheism|agnostic atheists}}. Despite this, individual members may practice various faiths—an example being [[Luis de Santángel]] who was a Jew.</ref>
|collapsed =
|collapsed =
|notable =
}}
*[[Bayek]]
The '''Assassin Brotherhood''', also known as the '''Assassin Order''' and originally as the '''Hidden Ones''' (Arabic: المخفيون; Chinese: 無形者), is a secret global peacekeeping organization dedicated to protecting humanity from abuses of power, coercive rule, and injustice. As the etymology of the term ''assassin'', their traditional methods have revolved around stealth operations, selective violence, and the assassination of those deemed to be perpetrators of oppression under the belief that this minimizes collateral damage in accordance with their absolute prohibition against harming innocent lives.
*[[Hassan-i Sabbāh]]
*[[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad]]
*[[Ezio Auditore da Firenze]]
*[[Ratonhnhaké:ton]]
*[[Desmond Miles]]|founder = Human descendants of [[Those Who Came Before]]<ref name="AC2" />}}
The '''Assassin Brotherhood''', also known as the '''Assassin Order''', the '''[[Hidden Ones]]''' during its early years and the '''Hashshashin''' during the Crusades, was an organized order of assassins and sworn enemies of the [[Templars]], against whom they fought a [[Assassin–Templar War|continuous, recondite war]] throughout the entirety of recorded [[Humans|human]] history. Whereas the Templars sought to save humanity from itself by controlling free will, the Assassin Order fought to ensure the survival of freedom, as it allowed for the progression of new ideas and the growth of individuality. The Assassins have also recently become enemies of the [[Instruments of the First Will]], a cult hellbent on re-establishing the [[Isu]]'s absolute rule over humanity.  


The Assassins, if not the Order itself, have existed since at least 456 BCE, throughout the Roman Empire, the Middle Ages, the [[Renaissance]], the Industrial Revolution and into the [[Modern times|Modern era]].
Their political philosophy is enshrined in [[the Creed]], consisting of a maxim and three core tenets which serve as their principal prescriptions. While the maxim presents itself as akin to a doctrine, it is in reality a value-neutral epistemic claim about nature that the Assassins hold to serve as the bedrock to developing an independent, critical, and open-minded value and belief system. Despite this, their culture and goals are driven by an idealistic ideology emphasizing the faith in humanity's potential to foster world peace through collective growth enabled by freedom of education, belief, and expression.
 
Although the Assassins can trace their genetic and cultural roots to the [[hybrid]]s [[Eve]] and [[Adam]], they officially originated with the [[Medjay]] of [[Egypt]]. The last Medjay [[Bayek]] and his wife [[Amunet|Aya of Alexandria]] founded the order—then known as the Hidden Ones—at the tumultuous twilight of [[Ptolemaic Kingdom|Ptolemaic rule]] to defend the common people against the [[Order of the Ancients]], a clandestine militant group which evolved into the [[Templars|Templar Order]]. Since then, the Assassins and the Templars have been sworn enemies, fighting a recondite [[Assassin-Templar War|shadow war]] for more than two millennia across the world, a conflict so intractable and immemorial that it is often thought to have instead spanned the entirety of recorded human history. Fundamental to this conflict is the Assassin conviction that the preservation of free will is a necessary condition for human fulfillment and harmony while the Templars believe that humanity can only find lasting peace through the imposition of a world government under their control.
 
In a development paralleling that of the Templars, the Hidden Ones emerged as the Assassins in the 11th century when [[Hassan-i Sabbāh]] fled Egypt and re-organized the order as a state in [[Alamut]], where it could be protected by the northern mountains of [[Iran|Persia]]. Alamut remained the heartland of the Assassins until [[Al Mualim]] founded a branch in [[Masyaf]] and thereupon established a reputation feared by the [[Crusaders]] and [[Saracens]] alike, entering into public imagination. By then, the Assassins had become entrenched in traditional dogma, and under Al Mualim's successor, [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad]], a wave of momentous reforms was enacted that were simultaneously progressive and returned the Assassins to the original principles of the Hidden Ones. Unable to withstand the onslaught of the [[Mongol Empire]], the Assassins then relinquished their state, retreated into the shadows once more, and spread across the world, seeding their presence to regions like [[Italy]] and [[Spain]], [[India]] and [[Japan]], and reaching peoples as far-flung as the [[Kanien'kehá:ka]] and the [[Maya]], becoming a truly multicultural and global network.
 
==History==
{{Main|History of the Assassins}}


==The Creed==
==The Creed==
{{Quote|Laa shay'a waqi'un mutlaq bale kouloun moumkin.<br/>("Nothing is true, everything is permitted" in Arabic.)|The Assassins' [[The Creed|Creed]].|Assassin's Creed II}}
{{Quote|Laa shay'a waqi'un mutlaq bale kouloun moumkin.<br/>("Nothing is true, everything is permitted" in Arabic.)|The Assassins' [[The Creed|Creed]].|Assassin's Creed II}}The Order believes in a strong set of values that strictly govern their way of life, referred to as "the Creed". This Creed consists of three tenets:
The Order believes in a strong set of values that strictly govern their way of life, referred to as "the Creed". This Creed consists of three tenets:
#"Stay your blade from the flesh of an innocent."
#"Stay your blade from the flesh of an innocent."
#"Hide in plain sight, be one with the crowd."
#"Hide in plain sight, be one with the crowd."
#"Never compromise the Brotherhood."<ref name="AC" />
#"Never compromise the Brotherhood."<ref name="AC1" />
 
These tenets permeated every aspect of the Assassins' daily life, as well as their fight for "peace in all things". The Assassins carry out their duties through political, strategic assassination, in the hope that killing one individual will lead to the salvation of thousands. They also believe that they fight on the behalf of those who do not possess the abilities, resources, or knowledge to speak out against those who abuse their power.<ref name="AC2" />
 
==Ideals and goals==
===Skepticism===
{{Quote|You cannot '''know''' anything. Only suspect. You must expect to be wrong, to have overlooked something.|[[Malik Al-Sayf]] to [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad]]|Assassin's Creed}}
 
Throughout its long existence, the Assassin Order has opposed tyrants and oppressors alike, priding itself as a "champion of the poor" and downtrodden,<ref name="Revelations" /> while assuming ideals such as equality and freedom and other principles associated with human rights.<ref name="Essential Guide">''[[Assassin's Creed: The Essential Guide]]''</ref> Though these principles may encourage the view that the Assassins are, like their sworn enemies the Templars, founded on a distinct set of ideals, at its roots, the Assassins' philosophy is grounded not in idealism, but in rationalism and epistemology, with the unique viewpoint that before one devises a specific code of ethics or belief system, one must first approach the world from a chiefly scientific standpoint, un-tempered by biases or such subjective products as morality or faith.<ref name="Revelations" /><ref name="ACBF" /><ref name="Essential Guide" /> To an Assassin, knowledge should be obtained first and foremost through strict objective reasoning, but this method is disrupted by each individual's fundamental dependency on his or her own senses to acquire information. These senses can be deceived in some measure, or otherwise will never convey the precise intrinsic quality of an object. Consequently, they are rendered unreliable, with the end result being that "true" or "full" objectivity is, as Altaïr argued, unreachable.<ref name="AC2" /> The driving theory behind the Assassin's creed is thus that "one can only know that one knows nothing,"<ref name="AC" /><ref name="ACBF" /> a handicap corroborated by the [[Isu]] [[Juno]], who cited this as a defect of [[humans]].<ref name="Brotherhood" />
 
From this skepticism arises the Assassins' maxim that "nothing is true, everything is permitted," a relativistic assertion designed to provide an answer to the vastly disparate convictions over the perfect solution for humanity's ills: that there is no Truth and any attempted application of a singular ideal on a universal scale is first and foremost unrealistic. Moderation is therefore an inherent principle of the Assassins, who shun extremism as destructive to society. To treat one belief as absolute is to not only submit oneself to the irrationality of blind faith, but also to cloud oneself from the perspectives of inevitable dissenters.<ref name="Essential Guide" /> These perspectives must always be taken into account, not only in one's outlook of society and life, but also in aspects of one's work, which manifests in the Assassins' emphasis on precision and stealth, and has been referred to by Assassins such as Altaïr and [[Pierre Bellec]] as "variables."<ref name="AC" /><ref name="ACU" />
 
The second component of the creed, "everything is permitted" is an extension of this principle of uncertainty. Because the quantity of variables is infinite, it follows that theoretically, anything within nature is possible, for as long as there is no absolute answer to any query, no impossibility can be ascertained. Therefore, one must remain vigilantly open-minded to the unexpected and unknown, drawing to a conclusion while being ever mindful of that conclusion's plausibility of error. Beyond being a further vessel for pluralism, Assassins are taught to be watchful of pretensions and their own capability to achieve either great dreams or great destruction. In essence, this corollary commands one to take responsibility for one's actions towards oneself and society at large.<ref name="Revelations" /><ref name="ACU" />
 
Though the maxim as a whole is actually descriptive, not normative, it nevertheless serves as the threshold into Assassin ethos, wherein reason, not divinity or society, is the source for guidance;<ref name="AC" /> dogmatism is discouraged for its potential to brew prejudice and violence,<ref name="ACU" /> and diversity of thought is respected as the closest conduit to reaching truth.<ref name="Essential Guide" />


According to [[Haytham Kenway]], the Templar Order was "born of a realization" that humanity is fundamentally corrupt, necessitating strenuous control for it to be guided to peace.<ref name="AC3" /> From the Assassin perspective, their brotherhood was born of the "realization" that to be wise, one must first liberate one's mind from the assumption of having acquired true knowledge.<ref name="Brotherhood" />
These tenets permeate every aspect of the Assassins' daily life, as well as their fight for "peace in all things". The Assassins carry out their duties through political, strategic assassination in the hope that killing one individual will lead to the salvation of thousands. They also believe that they fight on the behalf of those who do not possess the abilities, resources, or knowledge to speak out against those who abuse their power.<ref name="AC2" />


===Liberalism===
==Philosophy and goals==
{{Quote|Twenty-two years ago, I stood where I stand now – and watched my loved ones die, betrayed by those I had called friends. Vengeance clouded my mind. It would have consumed me, were it not for the wisdom of a few strangers, who taught me to look past my instincts. They never preached answers, but guided me to learn from myself. We don't need anyone to tell us what to do; not Savonarola, not the Medici. We are free to follow our own path. There are those who will take that freedom from us, and too many of you gladly give it. But it is our ability to choose – whatever you think is true – that makes us human... There is no book or teacher to give you the answers, to show you the path. Choose your own way! Do not follow me, or anyone else|[[Ezio Auditore da Firenze]]|Assassin's Creed II}}
{{Quote|To recognize nothing is true and everything is permitted. That laws arise not from divinity, but reason. I understand now that our Creed does not command us to be free. It commands us to be wise.|Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad, 1191|Assassin's Creed|Assassination (Sibrand)}}
===Origins===
Since its earliest beginnings, the Assassin Order has taken it upon themselves to be a force for the protection of humanity against social injustice, abuses of power, state terror, and enslavement. They have prided themselves on sacrificing their lives to "champion the poor and powerless"<ref name="The Guardian 2">''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]'' – [[The Guardian, Part 2]]</ref> while embracing human rights ideals such as equality, liberty, justice, and welfare. This premise can be traced back to the order's founding as the Hidden Ones by the last [[Medjay]] of [[Egypt]], [[Bayek]], and his wife [[Aya|Amunet]]. Recognizing that their sworn enemies, the [[Order of the Ancients]], "work[ed] in the shadows of kings and queens" to control nations for their whims, Bayek advocated that there needed to be those who "work in the shadows. . .to defend the free will of the people".<ref name="The Aftermath">''[[Assassin's Creed: Origins]]'' – [[The Aftermath]]</ref> True to his Medjay roots, Bayek was bringing to the fledgling group the principle of ''[[ma'at]]'' he had lived by in his service to Egypt.<ref name="Bayek's Promise">''[[Assassin's Creed: Origins]]'' – [[Bayek's Promise]]</ref> His ardent belief was that the Medjay was not merely the protector of the pharaoh but the protector of the Egyptian people as well, especially the downtrodden among them. Nor did their duty stop at protection; it extended further to the advancement of their well-being.<ref name="The False Oracle">''[[Assassin's Creed: Origins]]'' [[The False Oracle]]</ref> It was the determination of the first Hidden Ones that their society's unity owed not to an exalted leader but in the shared values of their cause, encapsulated in the Creed.<ref name="The Aftermath" /> An individual-centric, rather than a state-centric, orientation and the concept of peace as self-fulfillment rather than merely security are themes which have echoed through the ages in Assassin political action, undergirding their opposition to coercive authority.<ref name="Codex">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'' – [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad's Codex]]</ref><ref name="Power to the People">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'' – [[Power to the People]]</ref>


Though the Assassins' philosophy begins with a purely empirical assessment of life that seemingly verges on nihilism, their order is profoundly idealistic, with a deep sentiment for principles of social justice, humanitarianism, egalitarianism, and liberty.<ref name="AC2" /><ref name="Brotherhood" /><ref name="Revelations" /><ref name="AC3" />
===The Creed===
{{Quote|You cannot know anything, only suspect. You must expect to be wrong, to have overlooked something.|Malik al-Sayf to Altaïr Ibn-La'ahad, 1191|Assassin's Creed|Knowledge (Majd Addin)}}
Because of its symbolic role for the Assassins' values, the Creed, consisting of a central maxim and three proscriptive tenets, has served as the highest authority guiding the ethics of their actions and as their foundational code.<ref name="The Aftermath" /><ref name="ACfilm">''[[Assassin's Creed (film)|Assassin's Creed: The Movie]]</ref> It has often been misinterpreted literally by their [[Templars|Templar]] enemies and third-parties alike to prescribe {{wiki|moral nihilism}},<ref name="Codex" /> enable wanton hedonism,<ref name="Nothing is True...">''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]'' – [[Nothing Is True...]]</ref> and propagate the pursuit of absolute individual freedoms without a mind to the risk of "chaos".<ref name="Father and Son">''[[Assassin's Creed III]]'' – [[Father and Son]]</ref><ref name="We the People">''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]'' – [[We the People]]</ref> While certain Assassins across history, such as [[Spanish Brotherhood of Assassins|Spanish Assassins]] [[María]] and [[Aguilar de Nerha]], have been more dogmatic in their obeisance to it than others,<ref name="ACfilm" /> the Creed's maxim is fundamentally a descriptive claim about the nature of reality to be contemplated and not a doctrine to be followed.<ref name="A Homecoming">''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]'' – [[A Homecoming]]</ref> For all their idealism, the Assassins' philosophy begins with {{wiki|epistemology|epistemological}} principles and not {{wiki|normative ethics}}.
<blockquote>"Nothing is true, everything is permitted."</blockquote>
This claim pertains to {{wiki|philosophical skepticism}} and {{wiki|moral relativism}}. "''Nothing is true''" is an affirmation that Truth, as an absolute, flawless worldview applicable to all contexts, does not exist—or if it does, then [[human|human beings]] lack the capacity to know it. As the [[Mentor]] [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad]] reflected in his [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad's Codex|Codex]], perfect objectivity is unachievable because the sheer amount of variables and formulae needed to construct an ideal paradigm for our world's quandaries and travails is infinitely great. The intricate depths of reality is awe-inspiring and fathomless, and its labyrinthine web of interconnections are impossible to thoroughly unravel. Humans can reach for perfection by employing the {{wiki|empirical research|empirical process}} of information-gathering, thereby becoming ever more and more objective in our understandings, but Truth behaves {{wiki|asymptote|asymptotically}}—it shall always remain elusive and just beyond our grasp.<ref name="Codex" />


It is aforementioned that the Assassins' justify perspectivism with the view that it is logical and realistic, but it is further reinforced ethically by their ardent belief in the "sanctity of life" and each individual's humanity.<ref name="AC2" /> This, in conjunction with moral relativism, are the guiding motives behind their support for cultural diversity and free will. Assassins perceive societal norms and conventions as artificial structures that can hinder one's partiality and lead to prejudices. These false boundaries include but are not limited to national borders, gender, ethnicity, social class, and race. As a result, Assassins oppose discrimination of virtually every kind, with physical abuse and [[Slavery|slavery]] being especially abhorrent. <ref name="AC" /><ref name="AC2" /><ref name="Revelations" /><ref name="AC3" /><ref name="ACBF" /><ref name="Freedom Cry">''[[Freedom Cry]]''</ref><ref name="ACRG" /><ref name="ACU" />
These limits of {{wiki|empiricism}} are given expression in the line "''everything is permitted''", which serves as a reminder that it is {{wiki|Problem of induction|fallacious to presume the uniformity of nature}}. Patterns of the present are not proofs of the future, which can always be radically different from all that has preceded it. As teased by a message left by the [[Isu]] for humanity in [[Oun-mAa Niye Ressoot]], all the regularities of sentient beings' lifelong experiences, too, cannot falsify the possibility that they exist only within a "masterfully crafted simulation" or a "dream within a dream".<ref name="The Empirical Truth">''[[Assassin's Creed: Origins]]'' – [[Layla Hassan's personal files#The Empirical Truth|The Empirical Truth]]</ref>


===Goals and motivations===
Confronted by this complexity of reality, humans are compelled to simplify it into comprehensible models, but some react with a more intense impulse: insecurity in the face of uncertainty. With this insecurity comes the desire to resolve it through the assumption of a truth and obtain a measure of certainty, a certainty that is inherently self-deceptive.<ref name="Forsaken">''[[Assassin's Creed: Forsaken]]''</ref> A danger arises when an individual, in their fixation on their truth, becomes convinced of its universality and strives to impose it onto the world as the grand solution, a project that inevitably involves the violent erasure of other epistemic communities.<ref name="Codex" /><ref name="Forsaken" /> Replication of this imaginary truth across the ages in the form of harmful discursive practices and repression of dissent can cement it in societal consciousness as a self-evident Truth—a "realization"<ref name="Lee's Last Stand">''[[Assassin's Creed III]]'' – [[Lee's Last Stand]]</ref>—but it will always remain fundamentally a falsehood. The Assassins identify this progression from fear of uncertainty to the imposition of an illusion for Truth as a destructive force to humanity and a recurring theme among authoritarians like their sworn enemies, the Templars.<ref name="Codex" /> When [[Al Mualim]] betrayed the Assassins in 1191, Altaïr recognized that their own leader had succumbed to this same temptation.<ref name="Al Mualim">''[[Assassin's Creed]]'' – [[Assassination (Al Mualim)]]</ref>
{{Quote|Man seeks dominion over all that he encounters. I suppose it is a natural tendency for us to aspire towards mastery of our surroundings. But this should not include other human beings. Every day more and more are pressed into service – by deception or by force. Others, though not so firmly imprisoned, are made to feel as if their lives are worthless. I have seen the ways in which men persecute women. Heard the cruel words hurled at those who come here from other lands. Watched as those who believe or act differently are made to suffer...<br/> We discuss such things often – watching as we do from the spires of Masyaf. What can be done to stop this? To encourage tolerance and equality? Some days we speak of education, believing that knowledge will free us from immorality. But as I walk the streets and see slaves sent off to auction – my heart grows cold. When I see the husband hurl abuses and stones at his wife, insisting she exists only to serve him – my fists clench. And when I see children torn from their parents so that another man might profit – sent off to suffer beneath the desert sun and die...<br/> ...On these days, I do not think that dialogue will make a difference. On these days, I can think only of how the perpetrators need to die|Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad|Assassin's Creed II}}


In light of their antipathy for authoritarianism, the Assassins throughout history have fought under the banner of liberation for oppressed peoples. In spite of this, freedom was not at the heart of their ambitions, but peace. The Assassins aspire for the establishment of global prosperity and harmony, the genesis of what essentially amounts to a utopia. In this, they share with the Templars a sincere desire to resolve the chaos that plagues humanity. Their incompatible visions of the means by which such a utopia could be achieved dismantled this common spirit.<ref name="AC" /> Unlike the Templars, who condemn humanity as irredeemably weak-minded and corrupt, the Assassins uphold faith, even love, in humanity as one of their core ideals.<ref name="Embers" /> Their fundamentally skeptic creed neither justifies the defeatist attitude that is the hallmark of Templar ideology, nor endorses the notion that a single group can be wise enough to impress a correct way of life or belief on the people at large.<ref name="AC2" /> Consequently, they scorn the notion that a short-cut to universal peace, especially in the form of global enslavement or elitist control, could be a suitable solution to society's ills. Instead, they argue that humanity must be permitted to undergo the slow and arduous journey of developing tolerance for their myriad differences, a process derided as unrealistic and impossible by the Templars.  
As a result, Assassins teach their pupils that complex answers to life should be embraced,<ref name="Codex" /> and uncertainty should be accepted as natural.<ref name="Forsaken" /> Wisdom begins with uncertainty and not from self-assurance. While this {{wiki|pedagogy|pedagogical}} practice, alongside anti-authoritarianism, gives the Creed a normative slant, the starting Assassin premise against Templar ideology rests still on epistemic grounds. Many of the leading Assassins throughout history, such as Altaïr Ibn-La'ahad and [[Ezio Auditore da Firenze|Ezio Auditore]] reify their moral convictions to {{wiki|cultural pluralism|pluralism}}, {{wiki|humanitarianism}}, and {{wiki|egalitarianism}} by reference to the Creed, but the Creed itself may not necessarily entail these political stances. Its core argument remains that sentient beings do not truly know anything, and if the Templars are in error, that error lies not just in the inhumane consequences of their deeds but also in their self-denial that their own truth does not amount to universal reality, for it is not any more or less objective than the Assassins' own ethical values. The classic Templar conception of their [[Assassin-Templar War|perennial conflict]] with the Assassins hinges on {{wiki|false dilemma|false binaries}} such as "order" vs. "freedom", presupposing parity in incommensurable first-order claims. This narrative actually elides the proposition of fallibility central to Assassin thought, the admission that even the Assassin way is not absolute. Unlike the Templars, the Assassins engage in higher-order questions of {{wiki|meta-ethics}}.


In the Assassin view, peace is a product of education, not force,<ref name="AC" /> and this is only possible without the stringent control over information and society that authoritarians advocate. For this reason, and due to Altaïr's reformation of the Order and focus on free will, the Assassins have identified with the ideals of liberty over the centuries, to the extent that by the [[American Revolution]], many Templars, notably [[Grand Master]] Haytham Kenway, believed that the Assassins had abandoned their goal of peace in favor of freedom as an end, even accusing them of anarchism,<ref name="AC3" /><ref name="ACRG" /> although the Assassins support democracy, not the abolition of order and government.<ref name="AC3" /><ref name="ACU" /><ref name="The Fall Deluxe" />
The introspective quality of Assassin philosophy is evinced in the self-awareness by [[Rebecca Crane]] and [[Shaun Hastings]] that to be Assassins does not necessarily mean to be the "good guys"; they make no claims that they are a force of flawless, moral good, only that their way of life is chosen because they believe it is the best they can do to prevent greater harm to humanity. The introspection is again apparent in Altaïr's reflections of the "ironies" in their order's practices: that they murder while seeking to promote peace, that they mandate discipline to a code of rules while seeking to open minds, and that they embody ideals requiring leaps in faith despite warning against blind faith.<ref name="Codex" />


Ironically, in spite of the Assassins' optimistic view of humanity as a whole, they do not always retain the same faith for adversaries of human rights. This is the guiding force behind their operations, of which assassinations take primacy. Altaïr could not help but doubt the efficacy of persuasion, lamenting that many abusers were far too cemented in their ways to be redeemed through dialogue. Echoing Altaïr's sentiment, [[Rebecca Crane]] once explained to [[Desmond Miles]] that sometimes, "there's no other way." To protect the lives of innocents, the Assassins believed that realistically, an ideal, noble resolution was not always possible (i.e. one may have to kill a perpetrator to save an innocent). For many members, compassion has been a key motivation that has paradoxically translated into objectives very often revolving around murder.<ref name="AC" /><ref name="AC2" /> Perhaps most critically, social justice is a unifying theme among Assassins, and in this capacity, they serve as a reactionary force against perceived oppression, tyranny, and abuses against humanity, becoming the mortal enemies of the Templars.<ref name="AC" /><ref name="AC2" /><ref name="Brotherhood" /><ref name="AC3" />
The paradoxes between their theory and practice has not been lost on Assassins through the ages. To meditate on one's own internal contradictions, on the possibility of hypocrisy, is a central facet of their philosophy. In answering his own charge, Altaïr hazards to circle back to the Creed, for contained within it is the perception that polar opposites may be true simultaneously.<ref name="Codex" /> The nature of reality is paradoxical and that is why it is complex and full of uncertainties. When queried by the Maya Mentor [[Ah Tabai]], [[Edward Kenway]] offered the insight that the Creed was "''only the beginning of wisdom, and not its final form''".<ref name="...Everything is permitted">''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]'' – [[...Everything Is Permitted]]</ref> The affirmation that "nothing is true, everything is permitted" does not prevent an individual from developing their own value and belief system, but the Assassins hold that without prior acknowledgement of the subjective source of those convictions, there can be no wisdom no matter the content of those principles.


===Paradoxes and misconceptions===
===Goals===
{{Quote|What follows are the three great ironies of the Assassin Order: (1) Here we seek to promote peace, but murder is our means. (2) Here we seek to open the minds of men, but require obedience to a master and set of rules. (3) Here we seek to reveal the danger of blind faith, yet we are practitioners ourselves|Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad|Assassin's Creed II}}
{{Quote|What can be done to stop this? To encourage tolerance and equality? Some days we speak of education, believing that knowledge will free us from immorality. But as I walk the streets and see slaves sent off to auction—my heart grows cold. When I see the husband hurl abuses and stones at his wife, insisting she exists only to serve him—my fists clench. And when I see children torn from their parents so that another man might profit—sent off to suffer beneath the desert sun and die...<br/> ...On these days, I do not think that dialogue will make a difference. On these days, I can think only of how the perpetrators need to die|Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad|Assassin's Creed II}}
In light of their antipathy for authoritarianism, the Assassins throughout history have fought under the banner of liberation for oppressed peoples. In spite of this, freedom was not at the heart of their ambitions, but peace. The Assassins aspire for the establishment of global prosperity and harmony, the genesis of what essentially amounts to a utopia. In this, they share with the Templars a sincere desire to resolve the chaos that plagues humanity. Their incompatible visions of the means by which such a utopia could be achieved dismantled this common spirit.<ref name="AC1" />


To laymen and especially Templars, the creed is very often taken literally as a propagation of nihilism, anarchism, and self-gratification. The pirate [[Edward Kenway]], before being inducted into the Assassin Order, is a prime example of this, misconstruing the creed as a suggestion to "chase every desire."<ref name="ACBF" /> The Templar [[James Wardrop]], in his dying words to [[Shay Cormac]], bemoaned that "if everything is permitted, nothing is safe," implying that the maxim is a call for wanton hedonism.<ref name="ACRG">''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]''</ref> Even the scholarly woman [[Sofia Sartor]] was apt to remark on the creed's "cynicism" upon first hearing it cited by her future husband, the [[Mentor]] Ezio Auditore.<ref name="Revelations" />
Unlike the Templars, who condemn humanity as irredeemably weak-minded and corrupt, the Assassins uphold faith, even love, in humanity as one of their core ideals.<ref name="Embers" /> Their fundamentally skeptic Creed neither justifies the defeatism that is the hallmark of Templar ideology, nor endorses the notion that a single group can be wise enough to impose a correct way of life or belief on the people at large.<ref name="AC2" /> Consequently, they scorn the notion that a short-cut to universal peace, especially in the form of global enslavement or elitist control, could be a suitable solution to society's ills. Instead, they argue that humanity must be permitted to undergo the slow and arduous journey of developing tolerance for their myriad differences, a process derided as unrealistic and impossible by the Templars.


As Altaïr reported in [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad's Codex|his codex]], it was not an uncommon occurrence that people newly exposed to the creed be waylaid by immorality or driven mad by the disintegration of a sense of security.<ref name="AC2" /> Experienced Assassins were often obliged to chide their pupils or outsiders for misinterpreting "everything is permitted" as a message to abolish all sense of moral restraint and discipline.<ref name="AC" /><ref name="AC2" /><ref name="Revelations" /><ref name="ACBF" />
In the Assassin view, peace is a product of education, not force,<ref name="AC1" /> and this is only possible without the stringent control over information and society that authoritarians advocate. For this reason, and due to Altaïr's reformation of the Order and focus on free will, the Assassins have increasingly identified with the ideals of liberty over the centuries. This fixation on freedom and compassion led many Templars by the [[American Revolution]], notably [[Grand Master of the Templar Order|Grand Master]] Haytham Kenway, to erroneously accuse the Assassins of having abandoned their goal of peace in favour of absolute freedom as an end.<ref name="AC3">''[[Assassin's Creed III]]''</ref><ref name="ACRG">''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]</ref>


The Assassins' devotion to free will and their assertion of moral relativism can indeed invite questions of whether or not they and their creed are nihilistic or anarchic. Their liberal belief system, along with their support of cultural expression and life,<ref name="AC2" /><ref name="Revelations" /><ref name="Embers" /> would indicate otherwise. The creed itself, however, implies that all values are meaningless. A contradiction thus arises, which can be summarized as "why do Assassins adhere strictly to beliefs while asserting that none are true?" This can be taken even further into a charge of hypocrisy when one considers that Assassins preach freedom of beliefs and yet use violence to suppress those who reject their own beliefs (of free will), an accusation that the Templars [[Abu'l Nuqoud]] and [[Jubair al Hakim]] directed upon Altaïr with their dying words.<ref name="AC" />
Ironically, in spite of the Assassins' optimistic view of humanity as a whole, they do not always retain the same faith for adversaries of human rights; this is the guiding force behind their operations, of which assassinations take primacy. Altaïr could not help but doubt the efficacy of persuasion, lamenting that many abusers were far too cemented in their ways to be redeemed through dialogue. Echoing Altaïr's sentiment, [[Rebecca Crane]] once explained to [[Desmond Miles]] that sometimes, "there's no other way." To protect the lives of innocents, the Assassins believe that realistically an ideal, noble resolution is not always possible, thus one may have to kill a perpetrator to save an innocent. For many members, compassion has acted as a key motivation, which has paradoxically translated into objectives very often revolving around murder.<ref name="AC2" /><ref name="AC1" /> Social justice is a powerful unifying theme among Assassins, and in this capacity they serve as a reactionary force against perceived oppression, tyranny, and abuses against humanity, becoming the mortal enemies of the Templars.<ref name="AC2" /><ref name="AC1" /><ref name="ACB">''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]''</ref><ref name="AC3" />
 
While Altaïr at the time noted that he had no "satisfactory answer" to these charges, even expressing fear that "none exist," Ezio Auditore and Edward Kenway both provided insight into how these paradoxes are resolved.
 
In addressing this paradox, Ezio explained that the creed itself is more akin to that of a scientific theory, rather than a doctrine in itself, and therefore it is neither meant to be followed nor obeyed, but merely understood.<ref name="Revelations" /> Edward Kenway, upon his induction into the Assassin Order, posed the same questions to the Mentor [[Ah Tabai]]. When Ah Tabai redirected them back to him, the former pirate answered that "it might be that this idea is only the beginning of wisdom, and not its final form."<ref name="ACBF" /> In other words, the creed would be a call to nihilism—and implicitly the Assassins hypocritical for not adhering wholly to it—if it were a dogma itself. It is not, however, the dogma of the Assassins, for it can be said to be the scientific introduction ''to'' a belief system, one that only formulates the framework of an ideology, but not the completed complex of ideals itself. As such, while "nothing is true," and all beliefs and moral values can not be validated from an objective standpoint, it does not follow that morals and beliefs should be ''perceived'' as false from an ethical standpoint. While "everything is permitted" from a naturalistic perspective, it does not follow that everything must necessarily be ethically permissible. Thus, the creed is descriptive, not normative; it does not reject the notion that there is an absolute truth, nor assert that it does exist. The Assassins regard the creed as an exposition to their concept of wisdom, in that they believe that one must first understand the subjective origins of all beliefs and values before devising his or her own ideology, so as to remain open-minded and unprejudiced, but the relativity of beliefs does not make beliefs insignificant.<ref name="AC" /><ref name="AC2" /><ref name="ACBF" />
 
While explaining why the creed is not meant to support nihilism or anarchism, it does not resolve the paradox that Assassins murder in the name of peace or kill those that disagree with their own ideals in the name of free will. Altaïr, in attempting to provide an answer, suggested that the creed incorporates an even deeper meaning: that paradoxes exist and are not impossible, or rather that it is because paradoxes exist and cannot be avoided, that "nothing is true.<ref name="AC2" />


==Methods==
==Methods==
{{Quote|Cultures and religions and languages keep folks divided. But there's something in the Assassin's Creed that crosses all boundaries. A fondness for life and liberty.|Mary Read, on the Assassin's Creed and society.|Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag}}
{{Quote|Cultures and religions and languages keep folks divided. But there's something in the Assassin's Creed that crosses all boundaries. A fondness for life and liberty.|Mary Read, on the Assassin's Creed and society.|Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag}}
===Precision and Stealth===
===Precision and stealth===
Throughout the long centuries of war between the Assassins and Templars, members of both factions often mused on the similarity of their goals and the contrast between their means.<ref name="AC" /><ref name="Revelations" /> Even so, it was a frequent contention of Templars that the Assassins' methods were identical to their own in principle: "a minor evil, for a greater good."<ref name="AC" /> Indeed, the Assassins extensively hunted and murdered [[assassination targets|key individuals]] they perceived to be corrupt or a danger to humanity, and this became one of their defining attributes.<ref name="AC" /><ref name="AC2" /> A critical distinction, however, lied in the strict tenet that an Assassin must refrain from harming an innocent. As Altaïr reflected, the Templars were brutal and lacked precision in their methods: burning books wholesale, committing grand massacres, and in later histories, instigating nation-wide purges.<ref name="AC" />
Throughout the long centuries of war between the Assassins and Templars, members of both factions often mused on the similarity of their goals and the contrast between their means.<ref name="ACR" /><ref name="AC1" /> Even so, it was a frequent contention of Templars that the Assassins' methods were identical to their own in principle: "a minor evil, for a greater good."<ref name="AC1" /> Indeed, the Assassins extensively hunted and murdered [[assassination targets|key individuals]] they perceived to be corrupt or a danger to humanity, and this became one of their defining attributes.<ref name="AC2" /><ref name="AC1" /> A critical distinction, however, lay in the strict tenet that an Assassin must refrain from harming an innocent. As Altaïr reflected, the Templars were brutal and lacked precision in their methods: burning books wholesale, committing grand massacres, and in later histories, instigating nation-wide purges.<ref name="AC1" />


Accordingly, precision was a guiding principle behind the Assassins' technique and a factor behind their focus on stealth and discretion. By reducing collateral damage and the chance of open conflict, casualties would be minimized. Such a tactic aligned with their traditional respect for humanity and life, and in theory (though not always in practice), assassinations were to be carried out only in cases of utmost necessity. Once a target had been killed, agents were dissuaded from rejoicing in the death, and some even adopted the practice of paying last respects, no matter how vile they held them to be.<ref name="ACAC">''[[Assassin's Creed: Altaïr's Chronicles]]''</ref><ref name="AC2" /><ref name="AC3" />
Accordingly, precision was a guiding principle behind the Assassins' technique and a factor behind their focus on stealth and discretion. By reducing collateral damage and the chance of open conflict, casualties would be minimized. Such a tactic aligned with their traditional respect for humanity and life, and in theory (though not always in practice), assassinations were to be carried out only in cases of utmost necessity. Once a target had been killed, agents were dissuaded from rejoicing in the death, and some even adopted the practice of paying last respects, no matter how vile they held them to be.<ref name="AC2" /><ref name="ACAC">''[[Assassin's Creed: Altaïr's Chronicles]]''</ref><ref name="AC3" />


Although not every Assassin operated on the level of perfectionism exhibited by [[Francesco Vecellio]], <ref name="ACPL">''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]''</ref> prodigious information was expected to be gathered before an assassination is attempted. Failure to do so could yield catastrophic errors, such as [[Arno Dorian]]'s mistaken murder of the Templar ally [[Chrétien Lafrenière]].<ref name="ACU" /> For their investigations, Assassins referred to a variety of means including but not limited to: [[eavesdropping|espionage]], [[pickpocketing|theft]] of documents, and mingling with locals.<ref name="AC" /><ref name="AC2" /><ref name="Brotherhood" /><ref name="ACPL" /><ref name="ACU" />
Although not every Assassin operated on the level of perfectionism exhibited by [[Francesco Vecellio]],<ref name="ACPL">''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]''</ref> prodigious information was expected to be gathered before an assassination is attempted. Failure to do so could yield catastrophic errors, such as [[Arno Dorian]]'s mistaken murder of the Templar ally [[Chrétien Lafrenière]].<ref name="ACU" /> For their investigations, Assassins referred to a variety of means including but not limited to: [[eavesdropping|espionage]], [[pickpocketing|theft]] of documents, and mingling with locals.<ref name="AC2" /><ref name="AC1" /><ref name="ACB" /><ref name="ACPL" /><ref name="ACU" />


In some ways, the reforms of Altaïr promoted a greater level of stealth than under the tenure of his predecessor, Rashid ad-din Sinan. Previously, it was common practice for the Levantine Assassins to perform high-risk, near suicidal, yet awe-inspiring assassinations in crowded, public areas.<ref name="ACU" /> This tactic relied on shock to impress power—through fear—in the public imagination.<ref name="AC" /> Under Altaïr's direction, the Assassins retreated further into the shadows, and this approach was generally discouraged, if not outright abolished, and restrictions on formerly banned methods such as [[poison]] were lifted. While some members were impatient with the secrecy demanded by the brotherhood, feeling that it hampered progress and influence, Altaïr feared the great risks of exposure to public society. Ever mindful that Assassins could be branded as madmen and destroyed if they remained an open target, as evident in the [[Fall of Masyaf]] to the [[Mongol Empire]], Altaïr withdrew the brotherhood further into secrecy. Thus, security was another reason for the Assassins' policy of stealth.<ref name="AC" />
In some ways, the reforms of Altaïr promoted a greater level of stealth than under the tenure of his predecessor, Rashid ad-din Sinan. Previously, it was common practice for the Levantine Assassins to perform high-risk, near suicidal, yet awe-inspiring assassinations in crowded, public areas.<ref name="ACU" /> This tactic relied on shock to impress power—through fear—in the public imagination.<ref name="AC1" /> Under Altaïr's direction, the Assassins retreated further into the shadows, and this approach was generally discouraged, if not outright abolished, and restrictions on formerly banned methods such as [[poison]] were lifted. While some members were impatient with the secrecy demanded by the brotherhood, feeling that it hampered progress and influence, Altaïr feared the great risks of exposure to public society. Ever mindful that Assassins could be branded as madmen and destroyed if they remained an open target, as evident in the [[Fall of Masyaf]] to the [[Mongol Empire]], Altaïr withdrew the brotherhood further into secrecy. Thus, security was another reason for the Assassins' policy of stealth.<ref name="AC1" />


Despite this, it was not unknown for Assassins even after the High Middle Ages to resort to open conflict, and these uncommon tactics could range from the instigation of riots, employment of mercenaries, or even a direct militaristic assault on enemy bases.<ref name="Revelations" /><ref name="AC3" /><ref name="ACRG" />
Despite this, it was not unknown for Assassins even after the High Middle Ages to resort to open conflict, and these uncommon tactics could range from the instigation of riots, employment of mercenaries, or even a direct militaristic assault on enemy bases.<ref name="ACR" /><ref name="AC3" /><ref name="ACRG" />


===Social Reforms===
===Social reforms===
In Altaïr's time, the Assassins were markedly apprehensive that public promotion of their ideals could yield societal reforms. As a result, at first much of their activities revolved only around the elimination or sabotage of those they believed threatened the rights of humanity. With their dream that humanity arrive at utopia through free will, their way of guidance was often indirect, with an emphasis on individuals learning through self-experience. For instance, their way of teaching Ezio against the path of vengeance involved allowing him to experience that journey personally.
In Altaïr's time, the Assassins were markedly apprehensive that public promotion of their ideals could yield societal reforms. As a result, at first much of their activities revolved only around the elimination or sabotage of those they believed threatened the rights of humanity. With their dream that humanity arrive at utopia through free will, their way of guidance was often indirect, with an emphasis on individuals learning through self-experience. For instance, their way of teaching Ezio against the path of vengeance involved allowing him to experience that journey personally.


Over time, the brotherhood's policies evolved and during the [[Renaissance|Italian Renaissance]], the Assassins under the leadership of Ezio Auditore became more active at winning the hearts of the public. It was Ezio's conviction that the strength of the Assassins derived from the strength of the common people, a sentiment initially rebuffed by the cynical Mentor [[Niccolò Machiavelli]]. Accordingly, the Assassins' campaign in [[Rome]] was prolific in rehabilitating a city crumbling under the weight of [[Borgia]] corruption, such as funding renovations, sponsoring merchants, and rescuing civilians.<ref name="Brotherhood" /><ref name="The Fall Deluxe" />
Over time, the brotherhood's policies evolved and during the [[Renaissance|Italian Renaissance]], the Assassins under the leadership of Ezio Auditore became more active at winning the hearts of the public. It was Ezio's conviction that the strength of the Assassins derived from the strength of the common people, a sentiment initially rebuffed by the cynical Mentor [[Niccolò Machiavelli]]. Accordingly, the Assassins' campaign in [[Rome]] was prolific in rehabilitating a city crumbling under the weight of [[Borgia]] corruption, such as funding renovations, sponsoring merchants, and rescuing civilians.<ref name="The Fall" /><ref name="ACB" />


The order continued to adapt and reform gradually through the centuries, and by the 20th century, their activities began to shift over to non-violent social reforms rather than aggressive enforcement. The transition was tenuous: certain branches, such as the fledgling branch established in North America by [[Achilles Davenport]] and the Assassin-sponsored movement ''[[Narodnaya Volya]]'' engaged in operations smacking of terrorism. It was only after [[World War II]] that the Assassins definitively refocused their activities towards inspiring change through example. Assassinations became far rarer, and until the [[Great Purge|Great Purge of 2000]], the shadow war with the Templars defused to one waged through covert tampering of political elections instead.<ref name="The Fall Deluxe" />
The order continued to adapt and reform gradually through the centuries, and by the 20th century, their activities began to shift over to non-violent social reforms rather than aggressive enforcement. The transition was tenuous: certain branches, such as the fledgling branch established in North America by [[Achilles Davenport]] and the Assassin-sponsored movement ''[[Narodnaya Volya]]'' engaged in operations smacking of terrorism. It was only after [[World War II]] that the Assassins definitively refocused their activities towards inspiring change through example. Assassinations became far rarer, and until the [[Great Purge|Great Purge of 2000]], the shadow war with the Templars defused to one waged through covert tampering of political elections instead.<ref name="The Fall" />


==Practices==
==Practices==
Line 116: Line 99:
{{Main|Initiation into the Assassin Order}}
{{Main|Initiation into the Assassin Order}}
[[File:Ascension 9.png|thumb|250px|Claudia Auditore being inducted into the Assassin Order in 1503]]
[[File:Ascension 9.png|thumb|250px|Claudia Auditore being inducted into the Assassin Order in 1503]]
There were two ways of entering into the Order: through birth, like Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad, Ezio Auditore and Desmond Miles,<ref name="AC" /><ref name="AC2" /> or through recruitment, like [[Assassin apprentices]], Edward Kenway and Shaun Hastings.<ref name="Brotherhood" /><ref name="ACBF">''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]''</ref><ref name="AC2" />
There were two ways of entering into the Order: through birth, like Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad, Ezio Auditore and Desmond Miles,<ref name="AC1" /><ref name="AC2" /> or through recruitment, like [[Assassin apprentices]], Edward Kenway and Shaun Hastings.<ref name="ACB" /><ref name="AC4">''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]''</ref><ref name="AC2" />


After declaring oneself an Assassin under the Creed, a trainee would be tested to prove their worth over an unspecified period of time. For example, Ezio was tasked with hunting down Templar conspirators over years before he was officially inducted,<ref name="AC2" /> whereas Assassin apprentices had to gain enough experience in their contract missions across the world before joining the [[Assassins Guilds|Assassins Guild]] as fully-fledged members.<ref name="Brotherhood" />
After declaring oneself an Assassin under the Creed, a trainee would be tested to prove their worth over an unspecified period of time. For example, Ezio was tasked with hunting down Templar conspirators over years before he was officially inducted,<ref name="AC2" /> whereas Assassin apprentices had to gain enough experience in their contract missions across the world before joining the [[Assassins Guilds|Assassins Guild]] as fully-fledged members.<ref name="ACB" />


===Training===
===Training===
The Assassins spent their entire lives training to kill.<ref name="AC" /> From an early age, they were taught to observe their surroundings and plan ahead. Combat skills were essential and focused on bladed weaponry. However, the most important consideration in the Assassins' training was concealment. Stealth was the greatest weapon of the Assassins, and everything about their lives emphasized a devotion to it.<ref name="AC" /><ref name="AC2" /> 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.<ref name="AC" />
The Assassins spent their entire lives training to kill.<ref name="AC1" /> From an early age, they were taught to observe their surroundings and plan ahead. Combat skills were essential and focused on bladed weaponry. However, the most important consideration in the Assassins' training was concealment. Stealth was the greatest weapon of the Assassins, and everything about their lives emphasized a devotion to it.<ref name="AC1" /><ref name="AC2" /> 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.<ref name="AC1" />


Another significant focus of an Assassin's training was maneuverability. By the time an Assassin reached the [[Ranks|rank]] of Master Assassin, they were also a master of [[freerunning]], an early form of {{Wiki|parkour}} extensively utilized by the Assassins. Widely seen as alien by the general populace, this method of movement allowed the Assassins to reach areas not otherwise accessible. Freerunning gave the Assassins a significant advantage over nearly all of their enemies and city [[guards]], and could be used to traverse crowded urban environments quickly and efficiently.
Another significant focus of an Assassin's training was maneuverability. By the time an Assassin reached the [[Ranks|rank]] of Master Assassin, they were also a master of [[freerunning]]. Widely seen as alien by the general populace, this method of movement allowed the Assassins to reach areas not otherwise accessible. Freerunning gave the Assassins a significant advantage over nearly all of their enemies and city [[guards]], and could be used to traverse crowded urban environments quickly and efficiently.


[[File:AC1 Fight Instructor.png|thumb|250px|left|Altaïr with the combat trainer at Masyaf]]
[[File:AC1 Fight Instructor.png|thumb|250px|left|Altaïr with the combat trainer at Masyaf]]
However, not all Assassins were trained from birth, particularly those recruited later in life. Trainees had to learn the ways of their craft through personal experience and the teachings from other Assassins in the field. For example, Ezio learned many techniques from other Assassins and allies like [[Paola]], his uncle [[Mario Auditore]] and the [[Thieves|thief]] [[Rosa]], as well as several fundamental assassination techniques through reading Altaïr's Codex.<ref name="AC2" /> Centuries later, Edward Kenway used skills learned through [[piracy]] to better himself as an Assassin.<ref name="ACBF" />
However, not all Assassins were trained from birth, particularly those recruited later in life. Trainees had to learn the ways of their craft through personal experience and the teachings from other Assassins in the field. For example, Ezio learned many techniques from other Assassins and allies like [[Paola]], his uncle [[Mario Auditore]] and the [[Thieves|thief]] [[Rosa]], as well as several fundamental assassination techniques through reading Altaïr's Codex.<ref name="AC2" /> Centuries later, Edward Kenway used skills learned through [[piracy]] to better himself as an Assassin.<ref name="AC4" />


Unlike certain other factions, the Assassins did not have a specific style of fighting. Aside from their signature Hidden Blade, each branch used weapons and fighting styles native to the area. For example, the Turkish Assassins favored curved daggers,<ref name="Revelations" /> while the [[Chinese Assassins]] were trained in ''{{Wiki|Chinese martial arts|wushu}}''.<ref name="Embers">''[[Assassin's Creed: Embers]]''</ref>
Unlike certain other factions, the Assassins did not have a specific style of fighting. Aside from their signature Hidden Blade, each branch used weapons and fighting styles native to the area. For example, the Ottoman Assassins favored curved daggers,<ref name="ACR" /> while the [[Chinese Brotherhood of Assassins|Chinese Assassins]] were trained in ''{{Wiki|Chinese martial arts|wushu}}''.<ref name="Embers">''[[Assassin's Creed: Embers]]''</ref>


===Equipment===
===Equipment===
Throughout the ages, the Brotherhood has had many weapons at its disposal. During ancient times, the Assassins did not have any standard attire or equipment, but ancient Assassins were known for using [[Long weapons|spears]], [[poison]]s, [[bow]]s, and other armaments.<ref name="AC2" /> By the time of the High Middle Ages, they had assumed white as their general color and robes with beaked hoods as their common clothing.
Throughout the ages, the Brotherhood has had many weapons at its disposal. During ancient times, the Assassins did not have any standard attire or equipment, but ancient Assassins were known for using [[Long weapons|spears]], [[poison]]s, [[bow]]s, and other armaments.<ref name="AC2" /> By the time of the High Middle Ages, they had assumed white as their general color and robes with beaked hoods as their common clothing.


This age also marked the appearance of the Assassins' signature weapon, the [[Hidden Blade]], a retractable blade first conceptualized by [[Darius]]. Other weapons used by the Assassins included swords, [[short blades]] and [[throwing knives]], though the Order forbade the use of poison as "a coward's tool". Many such rules changed under the leadership of Altaïr, who pioneered several inventions and techniques with the assistance of an [[Apple of Eden 2|Apple of Eden]]. These included the [[Poison Blade]], the [[Hidden Gun]], and new types of assassinations which dramatically altered the practices of the Order.<ref name="AC" />
This age also marked the appearance of the Assassins' signature weapon, the [[Hidden Blade]], a retractable blade first conceptualized by [[Darius]]. Other weapons used by the Assassins included swords, [[short blades]] and [[throwing knives]], though the Order forbade the use of poison as "a coward's tool". Many such rules changed under the leadership of Altaïr, who pioneered several inventions and techniques with the assistance of an [[Apple of Eden 2|Apple of Eden]]. These included the [[Poison Blade]], the [[Hidden Gun]], and new types of assassinations which dramatically altered the practices of the Order.<ref name="AC1" />


From the Renaissance onward, the Assassins' equipment did not change significantly, but some weapons were added to their arsenal. The use of armor over robes had become popular, although the white robes with beaked hoods persisted. Ezio Auditore and other Italian Assassins used a Hidden Gun, [[crossbow]], [[poison darts]], [[Bombs#Smoke bombs|smoke bombs]], and a secondary Hidden Blade, among more conventional weapons like swords and knives. Some regions also had unique weapons not seen elsewhere, like the [[Tomahawks|tomahawk]] of Ratonhnhaké:ton or [[Hookblade]]s used in the early 16th century Ottoman Empire. Still others, such as the [[West Indies Brotherhood of Assassins|Caribbean Assassins]], did not have beaked hoods as part of their standard attire.
From the Renaissance onward, the Assassins' equipment did not change significantly, but some weapons were added to their arsenal. The use of armor over robes had become popular, although the white robes with beaked hoods persisted. Ezio Auditore and other Italian Assassins used a Hidden Gun, [[crossbow]], [[poison darts]], [[Bombs#Smoke bombs|smoke bombs]], and a secondary Hidden Blade, among more conventional weapons like swords and knives. Some regions also had unique weapons not seen elsewhere, like the [[Tomahawks|tomahawk]] of Ratonhnhaké:ton or [[Hookblade]]s used in the early 16th century Ottoman Empire. Still others, such as the [[West Indies Brotherhood of Assassins|Caribbean Assassins]], did not have beaked hoods as part of their standard attire.


Under the Mentorship of the Sikh [[Jayadeep Mir]], the British Brotherhood adopted the fear tactics developed by the [[Indian Brotherhood of Assassins|Indian Brotherhood]], began utilizing fear tactics through the employment of hallucinogens and [[fear bombs]]. By scaring enemies from battle, the Indian and British Assassins could avoid being forced to kill them, thereby mitigating casualties.  
Under the Mentorship of the Sikh [[Jayadeep Mir]], the British Brotherhood adopted the fear tactics developed by the [[Indian Brotherhood of Assassins|Indian Brotherhood]], began utilizing fear tactics through the employment of hallucinogens and [[fear bombs]]. By scaring enemies from battle, the Indian and British Assassins could avoid being forced to kill them, thereby mitigating casualties.


In modern times, Assassins followed the rest of society into the new era. As technology progressed, guns became commonplace and computers became prevalent, with Assassins like Rebecca Crane and [[Hannah Mueller]] specializing in their use.<ref name="AC2" /><ref name="AC3" /><ref name="The Fall #2">''Assassin's Creed: The Fall - Issue #2''</ref> While Desmond Miles was being held by [[Abstergo Industries]] within their [[Animus Project laboratory|Roman facility]], a small group of Assassins attempted to rescue him, armed with automatic weapons.<ref name="AC" />
In modern times, Assassins followed the rest of society into the new era. As technology progressed, guns became commonplace and computers became prevalent, with Assassins like Rebecca Crane and [[Hannah Mueller]] specializing in their use.<ref name="AC2" /><ref name="AC3" /><ref name="The Fall #2">''Assassin's Creed: The Fall - Issue #2''</ref> While Desmond Miles was being held by [[Abstergo Industries]] within their [[Animus Project laboratory|Roman facility]], a small group of Assassins attempted to rescue him, armed with automatic weapons.<ref name="AC1" />


===Burial system===
===Specializations===
Historically, Assassins always showed great respect for the dead. Their own were buried in crypts or large tombs, wrapped in a cloth shroud with their red sash spread across the body. The greatest Assassins were venerated in large tombs and entombed within sarcophagi, their likeness emblazoned on the lid and their symbol venerated in the flags of the tomb.<ref name="AC2" />
While the classical Assassin is a parkour expert who specializes in eliminating targets in stealth operations, not all Assassins fit this archetypal mold. These are commonly termed field agents,<ref name="ACS" /> but more than a paramilitary organization, the Assassin Brotherhood was a transnational state within itself, composed of entire families born into the order with a diverse range of skill sets, not all of them combat-oriented.<ref name="AC2" /><ref name="ACI">''[[Assassin's Creed: Initiates]]''</ref> Many Assassins serve in support roles, such as Shaun Hastings, whose specialty is as a history analyst, and Rebecca Crane, a security expert and computer technician.<ref name="ACB" /> Within their team, Desmond Miles and later Galina Voronina acted as their field operative.<ref name="AC3" /><ref name="ACS" />


For all assassination targets, unless circumstances prevented, Assassins would give them their last rites after they had passed away. Early in his career as an Assassin, Ezio Auditore was reprimanded by his uncle Mario for disrespecting the corpse of his target and longtime rival [[Vieri de' Pazzi]], instilling in him a respect for the dead.<ref name="AC2" />
Even among Assassins primarily trained for combat roles, there has been much variation in specialization. The Italian Brotherhood of the early 16th century deployed teams such as that of Francesco Vecellio which had among its members [[Tessa Varzi]], a herbalist with an unrivaled knowledge of concocting poisons, and [[Cipriano Enu]], a masterful archer.<ref name="ACPL" />


===Expulsion===
====Italian Brotherhood system====
When an Assassin had behaved irrationally on several occasions, the [[Assassin Council]] could call for a vote of expulsion. The expulsion would include that the Assassin was stripped of their rank and exiled from the Brotherhood.
{{AmbCanon Start}}
During the Renaissance in the Italian peninsula some assassins like [[Lo Sparviero]] were typed as Berserker, Shadowblade, Trickster, Thief, or some dual combination there of. Berserkers focused on attack and defense, using heavy damage to stun, knock over, and shred armor of multiple opponents at a time, and were equipped with [[splinter bomb]]s to cause bleeding. Shadowblades were masters of stealth, able to remain incognito for longer periods while under scrutiny, using throwing knives to silence and blind enemies or deal precision strikes, and smokbombs to extricate themselves from battle. Trickster were skilled in guile and creating diversions, able to disguise themselves as guards, lure or distract targets with whistling or coins, and employed [[Sticky bomb casing|sticky bombs]] and the explosive jack in the box to kill from a distance. Thieves were adept pickpocket who used sand and fast strikes to blind and overwhelm opponents, relied on precision and agility to reduce noteriety and fall damage, and set [[Trip-wire bomb casing|trip-wire bombs]] to frighten and cause bleeding.<ref>[[Assassin's Creed: Identity|''Assassin's Creed: Identity'']]</ref>
{{AmbCanon End}}


The Assassin Arno Dorian was expelled from the Order, after he had defied the Council's orders, performed several assassinations without the Council's consent and in their words "flouted the Creed at every step".<ref name="ACU" />
====Spanish Brotherhood system====
Depending on the branch, specializations differed and could be more formalized. During the era of the Spanish Inquisition, the Spanish Brotherhood classified its agents as either Shadow, Enforcer, or Specialist with each further broken down into three subdivisions. Shadows could focus their training more exclusively towards pure stealth, the art of assassination, or freerunning. Enforcers were warriors whose approach could be geared more towards an offensive style, defensive style, or employing crowd control tactics. Specialists provided field support as medics, saboteurs who disarmed traps, or in other miscellaneous roles.<ref name="Rebellion">''[[Assassin's Creed: Rebellion]]''</ref>


In cases of extreme disregard for the Creed's tenets, an expelled member may further become the target of assassination by their former comrades, such examples being [[Perotto Calderon]] for the theft of the Shroud of Eden, and Shay Cormac for the theft of the Voynich manuscript.
====French Brotherhood system====
The French Brotherhood utilized a similar system of nine classes which recognized a wide range of operational styles. Derived from four parameters, combat, stealth, parkour, and tactics (i.e. relying on tools), eight of the classes corresponded to either one of these specializations or was a hybrid of two; the ninth was a ''generalist'' field that encompassed all in equal measure as a jack of all trades. These classes are as follows:<ref name="ACU" /><ref name="ACI" />
*''Prowlers'' who focused all their training on mastering the art of social stealth relied almost exclusively on slow and steady, low-profile assassinations rather than the swift, high-profile assassinations of popular imagination.
*''Brawlers'', being combat purists, were akin to the Enforcers of the Spanish Brotherhood. An exception to the stealth ethos of the Assassins, Brawlers engaged in direct combat equipped with heavy plate and mail armor and often a [[heavy weapon]] such as a two-handed sword. Their role was to defend their comrades as a tank or create a diversion with their own presence.
*''Daredevils'' who mastered freerunning exclusively took a pacifistic approach where their speed and navigational expertise facilitated swift entries and getaways without ever engaging with hostiles.
*''Tricksters'' were essentially [[snipers]] armed with a [[musket]] or [[rifle]] to shoot enemies from afar. Much like archers of an older age, they provided long range cover for their squad mates, cleared rooftops of enemies, or performed assassinations from a safe distance.
*''Infilitrators'' were those who employed the traditional methods iconic with the Assassins: a fast-paced yet meticulous fusion of parkour and stealth for swift and precise assassinations. These Assassins had to be able to rapidly shift between the demands of remaining undetected and acting quickly and efficiently as the situation develops.
*''Rioters'' were what the French Brotherhood called those who relied upon {{wiki|guerrilla warfare}}. They sprung from hiding to ambush enemies in berserker-like fashion before merging back into the environment.
*''Tormentors'' were so-called because they sowed chaos in their enemies by manipulating the environment from the shadows. They relied upon gadgets such as bombs and the [[Phantom Blade]] to rain confusion and strike terror of an impending yet undetectable danger looming around them.
*''Handlers'' were soldiers with light equipment, such as a single cuirass, a sword, and a pistol who fought conventionally against enemies.


==History==
These classes were not necessarily rigid, serving more as templates which permitted flexibility to accommodate the unique skills and sensibilities of French Assassins. They illustrate that although mainstream Assassin methodology mandated discretion, there has historically been a recognition of the need for specialized roles which did not conform strictly with the classical approach. Exceptions were allowed for Assassins to be battle specialists, such as the Spanish Enforcers or French Brawlers, who confronted enemies aggressively and directly, particularly as part of a larger strategem to divert attention away from fellow Assassins in charge of stealth infiltration.<ref name="ACU" /> Such tactics were not unprecedented and were akin to the way [[mercenaries]] were hired and employed by the Italian Brotherhood.<ref name="ACB" /><ref name="AC2" />
===Formation===
The bloodline of the original Assassins was formed millennia ago, after members of the First Civilization conceived children with humans. These children had the appearance of humans, but were gifted with some of the inhuman abilities from the precursor race, mainly [[Eagle Vision]]. However, throughout the years, these senses were spread thin into the genetic pool, and became dormant in many humans. Only those with high concentrations of First Civilization genetics could freely use the power in the modern era, or those who gained the ability through the [[Bleeding Effect]].


Regardless of ability, many of the resulting humans eventually banded together to accomplish the same goals shared with their modern-day descendants: the protection of the free will for all people, and the removal of individuals who would threaten the freedom of others.<ref name="AC2" />
===Burial system===
Historically, Assassins always showed great respect for the dead. Their own were buried in crypts or large tombs, wrapped in a cloth shroud with their red sash spread across the body. The greatest Assassins were venerated in large tombs and entombed within sarcophagi, their likeness emblazoned on the lid and their symbol venerated in the flags of the tomb.<ref name="AC2" />


===Early Ancient era===
For all assassination targets, unless circumstances prevented, Assassins would give them their last rites after they had passed away. Early in his career as an Assassin, Ezio Auditore was reprimanded by his uncle Mario for disrespecting the corpse of his target and longtime rival [[Vieri de' Pazzi]], instilling in him a respect for the dead.<ref name="AC2" />
In 465 BCE, [[Xerxes I of Persia|Xerxes I]] was killed by the Persian Proto-Assassin Darius with a Hidden Blade, because the Achaemenid dynasty was being supported by the Templars. A century later, the Proto-Templar-affiliated conqueror known as [[Alexander the Great]] was poisoned by the Proto-Assassin [[Iltani]] in order to attain a [[Staves of Eden|Stave of Eden]].<ref name="AC2" />


In 210 BCE, the Chinese Proto-Assassin [[Wei Yu]] killed the Emperor [[Qin Shi Huang]] with a spear, to free the people of the land from the Proto-Templar-backed tyrant.<ref name="AC2" />
===Expulsion and Reinstatement===
It is possible for members of the Order to be expelled for various reasons, including but not limited to breaking the tenents of the Creed. In such situations, the [[Assassin Council]] could call for a vote of expulsion. After being expelled, the Assassin would be stripped of their rank and exiled from the Brotherhood.


===Ptolemy Egypt===
The Assassin Arno Dorian was expelled from the Order, after he had defied the Council's orders, performed several assassinations without the Council's consent and in their words "flouted the Creed at every step". Arno would be welcomed back into the Order, however, after he later reformed and demonstrated true fidelity to the Creed.<ref name="ACU"/>
In 51 BCE, as the young [[Ptolemy XIII]] ascended to the throne as co-ruler of Egypt alongside his sister-wife [[Cleopatra]]. The Proto-Templars, then calling themselves the [[Order of the Ancients]], quickly became the true power behind the throne and used all their powers to influence, through Ptolemy, the organization of Egyptian society and to push forward their own plans for the realm.


Discovering that the Queen was not as easy to handle as her brother, the Order instigated the expulsion of Cleopatra from Egypt in 48 BCE. They chose Ptolemy, knowing that Cleopatra was a much more cunning ruler and a better strategist than her younger brother, who was more interested in the superficiality of power and was easily swayed by them.
In cases of extreme disregard for the Creed's tenets, an expelled member may further become the target of assassination by their former comrades, such examples being [[Perotto Calderon]] for the theft of the Shroud of Eden, and Shay Cormac for the theft of the Voynich manuscript.
 
After he discovered their existence, the Medjay [[Bayek]] began a quest to thwart their plans for domination. As a result he and his wife [[Aya]] later founded the [[Hidden Ones]], a brotherhood which would eventually evolve into the Assassin Brotherhood and fight against the next iteration of the Order of the Ancients in the following millennia, the Templar Order.<ref name="ACO">''[[Assassin's Creed: Origins]]''</ref>
 
===Roman era===
[[File:Assassination of Julius Caesar.jpg|thumb|left|250px|The Assassins killing Julius Caesar]]
During the later days of the [[Roman Republic]], the Hidden Ones (known as ''Liberalis Circulum'') was secretly enemy of the {{Wiki|Roman Senate}}, the Order-influenced ruling body of the Republic. Little is known of the Hidden Ones' hierarchy and activities during this time, barring a few major assassinations. In 44 BCE, forty Hidden Ones, who had previously been part of the Roman Senate, plotted the [[Assassination of Julius Caesar|assassination]] of the Roman dictator, [[Gaius Julius Caesar]]. [[Marcus Junius Brutus]] was tasked with plotting the assassination by [[Gaius Cassius Longinus]], after seeing visions granted by the First Civilization in the [[Colosseum Vault]]. Twenty-three of the forty Hidden Ones stabbed Caesar to death at the Roman Senate.<ref name="Brotherhood" /> <ref name="ACO">''[[Assassin's Creed: Origins]]''</ref> Following this event, the Hidden Ones went their separate ways, but most were eventually tracked down and killed by Caesar's allies. Brutus himself committed suicide before the {{Wiki|Battle of Philippi}}, which his forces eventually lost. Afterward, his Brothers unsuccessfully tried to revive him with the [[Shroud of Eden]].<ref name="Project Legacy">''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]''</ref>
 
In 30 BCE, [[Cleopatra]], Caesar's former lover and Queen of [[Egypt]], was killed by the [[Egyptian Assassins|Egyptian Proto-Assassin]], Aya (who at this point, renamed herself [[Amunet]]) with a venomous [[Snakes|snake]]. Years later, on 24 January 41 CE, [[Roman Empire|Roman Emperor ]] [[Caligula]] was stabbed to death by the Hidden One [[Leonius]] under unknown circumstances.<ref name="AC2" />
 
In 259 CE, the Hidden Ones [[Accipiter]] and [[Aquilus]] safeguarded an [[Ankh]] for the Hidden Ones. Aquilus' father, [[Lucius]], initially held the Ankh, but when he was killed by the Order of the Ancients, Aquilus fought to retrieve it. He uncovered an Order of the Ancients traitor, [[Faustinus]], who pointed to Roman senator [[Caïus Fulvus Vultur]] as the ringleader before Aquilus eliminated him. Though he was able to kill and retrieve the Ankh from Vultur, Aquilus died a captive of the [[Prefect of Lugdunum]]. Accipiter, Aquilus' cousin, managed to save Aquilus' wife, [[Valeria]], and she told him of the work that they were doing. Together, the two recovered the Ankh, and Valeria interred it in a shrine to Aquilus' memory.<ref name="Ankh of Isis">''[[Assassin's Creed - The Ankh of Isis Trilogy]]''</ref>
 
In the 4th century, a [[Roman Assassin|Hidden One]] operated in the Roman Empire during the rise of [[Constantine I]] as emperor, witnessing the foundation of [[Constantinople]].<ref>[https://twitter.com/DarbyMcDevitt/status/694275921604407296 Darby McDevitt's Twitter]</ref>
 
===High Middle Ages===
As Christian European lords tried to retake the Holy Land from its Muslim rulers during the Crusades, control of the Hidden Ones fell to [[Hassan-i Sabbāh]], who changed the Brotherhood into a public organization of Assassins that openly operated from the impregnable fortresses of [[Alamut]] and [[Masyaf]]. Under his command, public assassinations occurred much more often and the people were encouraged to stand up to their oppressors, realizing that they were not on their own.<ref name="Encyclopedia">''[[Assassin's Creed: Encyclopedia]]''</ref>
 
At the same time, however, the Order of the Ancients became a public knightly order under the name of the "Order of the Knights Templar". As their sole stated purpose was to protect pilgrims to the Holy Land, they were a significant military presence in the Levant and often clashed with local Assassins.<ref name="Encyclopedia" />
 
During the 1170s, the Assassins were at odds with the [[Saracens]]; in 1174, thirteen Assassins were sent to the Sultan [[Salāḥ ad-Dīn|Saladin]]'s camp close to [[Damascus]] to assassinate him. They successfully infiltrated his tent, but were detected once inside. One Assassin was killed by a Saracen general and the others were executed upon trying to escape.<ref name="Secret Crusade">''[[Assassin's Creed: The Secret Crusade]]''</ref>
 
In 1176, Saladin led a siege on the Assassins' fortress at [[Masyaf]]. After the location of Saladin's tent was revealed by the Assassin spy [[Ahmad Sofian]], [[Umar Ibn-La'Ahad]] was sent to leave a [[Feathers|feather]] and a dagger with a threatening message at Saladin's bedside. Despite a careful approach, he was ultimately detected and killed a Saracen noble to make his escape. Ahmad Sofian confirmed Umar's identity under torture, and Umar gave himself up to execution to spare Ahmad's life.<ref name="Secret Crusade" />
 
In 1189, the Assassins were betrayed by a man named [[Haras]], who captured Mentor Al Mualim and three other Assassins, and allowed Crusaders into Masyaf's village. Under the leadership of young Assassin Altaïr, members of the Brotherhood were able to force the Crusaders back. Altaïr personally assassinated Haras and saved Al Mualim, earning the rank of Master Assassin.<ref name="Revelations" />
 
The next year, the Assassins began to hunt for the [[Adha|Chalice]], an object rumored to be so powerful that it could end the Crusades. Al Mualim wanted to keep it out of Templar hands, and sent Altaïr to recover it. Investigating the Chalice's location, he eventually tracked it to the Temple of Sand, but found the Templar leader [[Basilisk]] had removed it. As the structure began to crumble, Basilisk revealed that the Chalice was not an object, but a woman, then left Altaïr to die. However, Altaïr escaped and hunted Basilisk, uncovering the Templar plan to poison the water supply of [[Acre]].<ref name="Chronicles">''[[Assassin's Creed: Altaïr's Chronicles]]''</ref>
 
After foiling this plot, Altaïr followed the trail of the Chalice to [[Jerusalem]] and recognized her to be Adha, a former acquaintance of his. On Adha's instruction, Altaïr killed [[Harash]], a traitor to the Assassin Order. Altaïr then planned to run away with Adha, but she was soon captured by Basilisk and transported to an unknown location. Years later, Altaïr found her dead, and began hunting the individuals responsible for her murder.<ref name="Chronicles" />
 
[[File:Almualimassassins.png|thumb|250px|Al Mualim and the Assassins in the fortress of Masyaf]]
In 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 the Templars' interest in an ancient artifact hidden within the catacombs of [[Solomon's Temple]]. A mission to retrieve the artifact was organized, and though it was successful, it led to the death of [[Kadar Al-Sayf|one Assassin]], the disfigurement of [[Malik Al-Sayf|another]], and the arrival of the Templar army at the gates of Masyaf. The Assassins were nearly overwhelmed by the [[Siege of Masyaf|following battle]], but were ultimately able to drive the Templars from the fortress and village.<ref name="AC" />
 
Following the assault, the Assassin blamed for prompting the assault – Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad – was reduced to the rank of [[novice]] and tasked with [[Hunt for the Nine|eliminating nine corrupt leaders]] who all answered to Robert de Sable. As Altaïr made his way through the list of both Crusaders and Saracen, he was unsettled by the realization that their goal to bring peace to the Holy Land was just, and that they 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 did. As his mission progressed, Altaïr sought to know what tied his victims together, and the discovery that they were all Templars reinforced his determination to bring an end to their plot.<ref name="AC" />
 
By fall of 1191, Robert de Sable and his associates had been eliminated. However, it was soon discovered that Al Mualim was secretly a former member of de Sable's coalition and wished to use the Apple of Eden to force his rule upon the world. He was killed during a confrontation with Altaïr, who subsequently took on the position of Mentor of the [[Levantine Assassins|Levantine Order]].<ref name="AC" /> With full control over the Assassins, Altaïr set out to liberate the island of [[Cyprus]] from the Templars, who had recently purchased it from [[Richard I of England|King Richard I]]. After assassinating the Templar Grand Master [[Armand Bouchart]] and discovering the [[Templar Archive]],<ref name="Bloodlines">''[[Assassin's Creed: Bloodlines]]''</ref> Altaïr returned to Masyaf with [[Maria Thorpe]], de Sable's former disciple and Templar deserter.
 
[[File:Assault Armand Bouchart 14.png|thumb|left|250px|Altaïr writing the Codex]]
During this time, Altaïr began to write a detailed Codex based on information gleaned from the Apple of Eden.<ref name="Bloodlines" /> These secrets profoundly affected the Order, as new assassination techniques and equipment changed the way the organization operated. In 1209, Altaïr began to send his Assassins to cities throughout the world, after he was made aware of their existence by the Apple of Eden.<ref name="AC2" />
 
In the year 1217, Altaïr set out with his wife Maria and son [[Darim Ibn-La'Ahad|Darim]] to kill [[Genghis Khan]], leaving Malik Al-Sayf as the Order's temporary leader. Khan's army had advanced westward rapidly, and Altaïr suspected that he possessed a Piece of Eden. On their journey, the family met with [[Mongolian Assassins|Mongolian Assassin]] [[Qulan Gal]], and the group worked together to end the threat. Ultimately, Darim and Qulan succeeded in killing the Khan in 1227.<ref name="Secret Crusade" />
 
On their return to Masyaf, Altaïr found that his rival [[Abbas Sofian]] had taken over the Order, imprisoning Malik and killing Altaïr and Maria's youngest son, [[Sef Ibn-La'Ahad|Sef]]. Shortly after Altaïr's arrival, Malik was killed as well. Abbas then attempted to take the Apple from Altaïr, leading to Maria's death at the hands of [[Swami]], Abbas' lackey.<ref name="Revelations" />
 
Altaïr and Darim fled Masyaf and Altaïr fell into a deep depression, obsessing over the Apple and ultimately driving Darim and Sef's family away. Continued study of the Apple led him to [[Memory Seals]], and taught him how to make several advanced gadgets. Recovering his mental fortitude, Altaïr returned to Masyaf in 1247 and found it in disrepair. He rallied Assassins loyal to him and Malik, and turned several of Abbas' henchmen to his side. Together they took the fortress, and Altaïr executed Abbas with the Hidden Gun, reclaiming the title of Mentor.<ref name="Revelations" />
 
During this time, the [[Mongol Empire|Mongol]] threat continued advancing west, and Altaïr ordered his Assassins to abandon Masyaf and carry on their activities in secret. He trained and initiated the travelers [[Niccolò Polo|Niccolò]] and [[Maffeo Polo]] into the Order in 1257, then tasked them with creating Assassin guilds throughout the Old World. He then gave them his Codex and the Memory Seals for safekeeping in Constantinople before locking himself in [[Library of Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad|the empty Masyaf library]].
 
===Late Middle Ages===
{{Quote|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.|Assassin's Creed II}}
[[File:AC-Encyclopedia-Italian Insignia.png|thumb|250px|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]] started in Italy, the Assassin Order primarily focused themselves in the country, which served also as headquarters of the Templar Order at the time.<ref name="AC2" />
 
In the early 14th century, the Assassins manipulated King [[Philip IV of France]] to try and destroy the Templars. They made the Church brand the Templars heretics, turning their own weapon against them, with the intention of finishing off the Templars. They managed to have the Templar Grand Master, [[Jacques de Molay]] burned at the stake, however, his nine most trusted men had escaped after he had passed on the knowledge of the ancients, and their Order continued to survive.<ref name="Revelations - Dossiers">''Assassin's Creed: Revelations'' - ''[[Abstergo Files]]''</ref>
 
By 1321, various members of the Assassin Order had successfully integrated themselves into the everyday life of middle Italy, widely unknown to the average folk. That same year, a young sailor by the name of [[Domenico Auditore|Domenico]], the son of an Assassin, was apprenticed to the poet and Assassin [[Dante Alighieri]], who had been tasked with transporting Altaïr's Codex from [[Venice]] to [[Spain]].<ref name="AC2 - Crypt">''Assassin's Creed II'' - ''[[Auditore Family Crypt]]''</ref>
 
Upon Dante's death, however, the undertaking fell instead to Domenico. During the voyage, [[Piracy|pirates]] under the employ of the Templars ambushed the ship looking for the Codex, consequently raping and killing Domenico's [[Isabetta Auditore|wife]]. Fortunately for the Assassins, Domenico managed to break apart the Codex and hide its pages before he and [[Renato Auditore|his son]] were forced overboard.<ref name="AC2 - Crypt" />
 
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 adopted name of [[House of Auditore|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.<ref name="AC2 - Crypt" />
 
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 ceased, although the seal of the Order was branded upon the finger instead with a heated iron. Although significantly fewer in number, the Assassins were supported by the [[courtesans]], thieves and [[mercenaries]] of Florence and Venice; the guilds of which were each run by a member of the Order.<ref name="AC2" />
 
During this time period, the Assassins entered another span of increased hostility with the Templars, who were attempting to overthrow the ruling House of Medici in Florence, and [[Giovanni Mocenigo|the Doge]] of Venice. Having already [[Assassination of Galeazzo Maria Sforza|killed]] the [[Galeazzo Maria Sforza|Duke]] of [[Milan]] in 1476,<ref name="Lineage">''[[Assassin's Creed: Lineage]]''</ref> [[Rodrigo Borgia]], the Grand Master of the Templar Order, brought the noble families of [[House of Pazzi|Pazzi]] and [[House of Barbarigo|Barbarigo]] together to accomplish his goals.<ref name="AC2" />
 
Entering into conflict with the Assassins, Borgia dealt a crippling blow to the Order in 1476, when he had the experienced Assassin [[Giovanni Auditore da Firenze]] and two of his sons, [[Federico Auditore da Firenze|Fredrico]] and [[Petruccio Auditore da Firenze|Petruccio]], executed. The third son, Ezio, managed to escape and sought aid from his uncle. 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.<ref name="AC2" />
 
In 1487, the Order of Assassins learned that the Templars had retrieved [[Ezio's Apple of Eden|another Apple of Eden]] from the island of Cyprus, and deemed its capture necessary. Following the artifact from [[Arsenale di Venezia|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.<ref name="AC2" />
 
Borgia fled upon the arrival of other Assassins, and in doing so, the artifact fell into the hands of their Order. 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.<ref name="AC2" />
 
[[File:Ascension 3.png|thumb|250px|left|The Assassins in Rome]]
By 1500, right after [[Cesare Borgia]] [[Siege of Monteriggioni|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 da Firenze]] respectively, Ezio's brotherhood worked to [[Liberation of Rome|combat the influence and power]] of the [[House of Borgia|Borgia family]], and by extension, the [[Papacy]] itself.<ref name="Brotherhood" />
 
Headquartered in an underground storeroom owned by [[Fabio Orsini]], on [[Tiber Island]] in the center of Rome, the Assassins began 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]].<ref name="Brotherhood" />
 
There, the recruits killed and sabotaged Templars, the Templars' allies, and corrupt men in power, as well as defending and aiding their Assassin brothers and sisters, along with any willing to stand against the Borgia and the Church.<ref name="Brotherhood" />
 
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|Pope Julius II]], the Templars' influence over the city of Rome - and indeed over all of Italy - was shattered.<ref name="Brotherhood" />
 
Three years after [[Siege of Viana]] in 1507, when Ezio ended the threat of Cesare Borgia for once and all, the Assassin Mentor traveled to the ancient fortress of Masyaf, on a pilgrimage to learn about the origins of the Order. When he arrived, he discovered that the fortress had been overrun by the Templars, who were searching for the five [[Masyaf Keys|keys]], which would unlock a secret library beneath the fortress of Masyaf.<ref name="Revelations" />
 
With one seal already in the Templars' possession, Ezio learned that the remaining four were hidden throughout the city of [[Constantinople]]. From there, Ezio made his way to the city in the hopes of obtaining the remaining seals.<ref name="Revelations" />
 
When he arrived in Constantinople, Ezio was welcomed by the guild there, led by [[Yusuf Tazim]], and learned how to use their unique weapons. With the knowledge made known to him that the Templars had taken over the [[Byzantine Empire|Byzantine]] remnants, and in the recent years, had been attempting to overthrow the Ottomans, Ezio began to take a leading role in the conflict.<ref name="Revelations" />
 
He retook all the [[Assassin Dens]] around the city and trained seven recruits to the rank of Master Assassin, assigning each to one of the dens. The Constantinople guild of Assassins also worked to help liberate and spread their Order's influence in other cities, namely [[Bursa]], [[Rhodes]], [[Marseille]], Damascus, Jerusalem, [[Madrid]], Lisbon, [[Tunis]], [[Tripoli]], [[Athens]], [[Algiers]] and [[Alexandria]], where they slowly whittled away Templar control, rebuilt the cities and protected them from attacks by the Templars.<ref name="Revelations" />
 
They also rescued captured Assassins in these cities, and helped those who opposed the Templars. During these ventures, the Assassins were responsible for destroying the compound of the [[Knights Hospitalier]].<ref name="Revelations" />
 
Together with Yusuf, Ezio protected the Ottoman prince [[Suleiman I]] from the Templars, while continuing his search for the keys. Befriending a Venetian lady, [[Sofia Sartor]], she deciphered a map containing the location of the keys. After finding four of the keys to Altaïr's library, Ezio traveled to [[Derinkuyu|Cappadocia]] – after asking Yusuf to protect Sofia at her [[Book shops|shop]] – to hunt down [[Manuel Palaiologos]] and find the final key. On doing so, he discovered that Manuel was not the true leader of the Byzantines, but that Suleiman's uncle – [[Ahmet]] – was.<ref name="Revelations" />
 
On his return to Constantinople, Ezio made his way to Sofia's shop, only to find that Yusuf had been killed and Ahmet had captured Sofia, demanding the keys in exchange. However, after a full scale assault on the city's [[Harbor of Theodosius|Arsenal]], Ezio chased him over the countryside, culminating with Ahmet's brother, [[Selim I]], killing Ahmet by throwing the man from a cliff.<ref name="Revelations" />
 
From there, Ezio and Sofia traveled to Masyaf and unlocked the library of Altaïr, where Ezio attempted to communicate with Desmond. Deciding that his mission was over, Ezio left behind his sword and Hidden Blade, resigning his life as an Assassin.<ref name="Revelations" />
 
Once he had returned to Italy, Ezio appointed the Assassin [[Lodovico Ariosto]] as the Mentor of the Italian Assassins and then retired from the Order, marrying Sofia Sartor and having two children with her, [[Flavia Auditore|Flavia]] and [[Marcello Auditore]], while settling down on a [[Tuscany|Tuscan]] vineyard.<ref>[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations (novel)|''Assassin's Creed: Revelations'' novel]]</ref><ref name="Embers" />
 
As the Templars had been severely weakened in Europe, the Assassins began collecting and studying several Pieces of Eden. In 1510, Francesco Vecellio hunted down [[Niccolò di Pitigliano]], recovering the Shroud of Eden.<ref name="Project Legacy" />
 
By 1519, [[Giovanni Borgia]] was secured a position aboard [[Hernán Cortés]]' ship, which was sailing to the {{Wiki|New World}}. After the Spanish troops began to ransack [[Tenochtitlan]], Giovanni recovered a [[Crystal Skulls|Crystal Skull]] from the [[Mayans|Mayan]] city, assassinating one of their priests to obtain it. On bringing it to [[Bombastus|Paracelsus]] for study, the Assassins found that it was not one of the Pieces.<ref name="Project Legacy" />
 
In 1527, Giovanni accidentally read a tome belonging to Paracelsus and succeeded in crafting the Philosopher's Stone. After discovering that the tome was one half of the [[Book of Abraham]], he searched for the other half with [[Maria Amiel]], Paracelsus' assistant, but only found a translation. However, he did develop a relationship with Maria, with the two of them becoming romantically involved and later marrying each other.<ref name="Project Legacy" />
 
In 1542, after studying the Crystal Skull over a long period of time, Giovanni found out that it could be used to communicate over large distances, seeing the face of a [[China|Chinese]] man in his mind.<ref name="Project Legacy" />
 
Around this time, the Chinese Assassins were fighting desperately against the Templars. Several Chinese Emperors came to power through Templar support, who would then orchestrate the mass killings of Assassins. One such ruler was the [[Yongle Emperor]], who was killed by the Assassin [[Li Tong]] in 1424.<ref name="DiscoverYourLegacy">''Assassin's Creed: Revelations'' - ''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations – Discover Your Legacy|Discover Your Legacy]]''</ref>
 
When the [[Jiajing Emperor]] came to power, he nearly destroyed the Brotherhood in China, though a handful of Assassins fled west for support. [[Shao Jun]] and [[Zhu Jiuyuan|her Mentor]] escaped to Italy, though the Jiajing Emperor's men killed Jun's Mentor along the way, leaving her to fend for herself. With no alternative, Jun went to Ezio to seek guidance and support.<ref name="Embers" />
 
Though he initially wanted nothing to do with the Assassins anymore, he eventually relented and taught her how to rebuild her Brotherhood. Shao Jun, armed with this knowledge and [[Precursor boxes|a box]] that Ezio told her to open only if she lost her way, traveled back to China with the vow to rebuild the Chinese Brotherhood, no matter how long it took.<ref name="Embers" /><ref name="China">''[[Assassin's Creed Chronicles: China]]''</ref>
 
===Golden Age of Piracy===
The [[Caribbean Assassins]] learned that the [[Caribbean Templars]] holding [[Bartholomew Roberts]], a [[Sages|Sage]] who could led them to the [[Observatory]]. The Mentor [[Ah Tabai]] sent his Assassins to get him, but failed. The pirate [[Edward Kenway]], who had killed the Assassin traitor [[Duncan Walpole]], helped the Assassins against the attack of the British on the [[Tulum]]. Edward later joined the Assassins and prevent from the Templars to use the Observatory. He offered his hideout on [[Great Inagua]] to the Brotherhood. Ah Tabai accepted and eventually moved the Order to the new location.<ref name="ACBF" />
 
===Colonial America===
As the reach of the {{Wiki|Old World}} spread to the New, the Assassins followed to ensure they were able to protect it from any advances the Templars made. In 1503, the Italian Assassins under Ezio were sent to recover a map of the New World made by [[Piri Reis]]. Using this map, they too began to send their forces to [[North America|America]]. The first Assassin to ever reach the New World was [[John de la Tour]], who set up a base for the Brotherhood there.<ref name="ACRG" />
 
In 1510, the Assassins in [[Florida]] recruited [[Alonso Carlo]] and his adopted son, [[Miguel Ramón Carlo de Lugo]], to their cause. In 1521, Carlo was tasked with stopping the explorer [[Juan Ponce de León]] from reaching the [[Fountain of Youth]], where they knew he would find a Piece of Eden. While Miguel distracted León in conversation, a poisoned arrow killed the explorer, following which Miguel escaped.<ref name="DiscoverYourLegacy" />
 
In the mid-1730s, [[Achilles Davenport]] was recruited to the [[Colonial Assassins|Colonial branch of the Assassin Order]] and became its [[Mentor]] in 1746. The [[Templars]], headed by [[Haytham Kenway]], nearly decimated this branch of Assassins in 1763, wiping out most of its members and nearly all of its records. The exact nature of the attack was caused by former Assassin [[Shay Cormac]] who betrayed the Brotherhood after a failed attempt at locating a Temple using the [[Voynich manuscript]] and a [[Precursor boxes|Precursor box]]. Shay eventually realized the Assassins wouldn't stop trying to find these Temples and killed Assassin members [[Liam O'Brien]], [[Hope Jensen]], Louis-Joseph and [[Kesegowaase]]. After Liam's death, Haytham attempted to kill Achilles who was spared by Shay's convincing though forever wounded in the leg, effectively ending his time as an Assassin and he went into retirement.<ref name="ACRG" />
 
Years later, Achilles mentored the young Assassin [[Ratonhnhaké:ton]], who ultimately destroyed the [[Colonial Rite of the Templar Order]] through his actions during the [[American Revolutionary War]]. Ratonhnhaké:ton also rebuilt the province's Brotherhood, by recruiting several citizens of [[New York City|New York]] and [[Boston]].<ref name="AC3" />
 
===French Revolution===
Following his [[Charles Dorian|father]]'s death by [[Shay Cormac]],<ref name="ACRG" /> [[Arno Dorian]] was adopted by [[François de la Serre]], the [[Grand Master]] of the French Templars. In 1789 François was murdered by his opponents in the Templar order, led by [[François-Thomas Germain]]. Arno joined the Assassin Order to revenge his father and his adopted father's death while also to redeem himself from his past mistakes and to uncover the intriguer of the [[French Revolution]]. He was assisted by his adopted sister, [[Élise de la Serre]], a Templar by herself. As the Assassin Mentor [[Honoré Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau]] was poisoned by [[Pierre Bellec]], Arno had to kill his trainer and friend. Arno eventually killed all the Templars who sided with Germain, until he killed Germain himself, the made the Revolution happen.<ref name="ACU" />
 
===Victorian era===
In 1868, the two sibling Assassins, [[Jacob Frye|Jacob]] and [[Evie Frye]], arrived to [[London]] to free the city from the hands of the Templar and to take from them the [[Shroud of Eden 2|Shroud of Eden]]. With the help of [[Jayadeep Mir|Henry Green]], they founded the gang, the [[Rooks]] to fight against the Templar gang of the Grand Master, [[Crawford Starrick]]. Jacob and Evie killed the Templar members in London until they found out Starrick had found the Shroud and planned to kill Queen [[Victoria, Queen of the United Kingdom|Victoria]]. The siblings killed Starrick and hid the Shroud.<ref name="ACS" />
 
===Modern times===
{{Quote|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.|Assassin's Creed: The Fall}}
 
During the mid-19th century, at the start of the [[Sikh Empire]], the [[Indian Assassins|Indian Assassin]] [[Arbaaz Mir]] and ancestor to [[Monima Das]] was active in the search for a powerful [[Piece of Eden]] known as the [[Koh-i-Noor]]. During this period the Indian Assassins were led by the Assassin [[Hamid (Amritsar)|Hamid]] in the capital city of the Sikh Empire, [[Amritsar]].<ref name="Brahman">''[[Assassin's Creed: Brahman]]''</ref>
 
[[File:Tungaska Explod v.png|thumb|250px|One of the Pieces of Eden, a Staff, destroyed in the Tunguska explosion]]
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 – as [[Aleksandr Ulyanov|Lenin's brother]] was an Assassin himself.
 
Due to the efforts of the Assassin Nikolai Orelov, the Templar-affiliated Tsar [[Alexander III of Russia|Alexander III]] died of kidney failure and a Staff of Eden was destroyed in the [[Tunguska explosion]]. Without power, Tsarevich [[Nicholas II of Russia|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.<ref name="The Fall #3">''Assassin's Creed: The Fall - Issue #3''</ref> Whilst the Order of Assassins had kept to their policy of remote camps and isolation,<ref name="AC" /> the Templars had begun to infiltrate society further; taking the form of many publicly known corporations such as [[NASA]],<ref name="AC" /> {{Wiki|Kraft Foods|Kraft}} and [[British Petroleum|BP]],<ref name="Brotherhood" /> which all secretly linked to the shadow-corporation Abstergo Industries.
 
The Templars [[Winston Churchill]], [[Joseph Stalin]], [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]], and [[Adolf Hitler]] planned a war, [[World War II]], which would place the Templars in control. At the end of the war, Hitler was supposed to kill his double, created by the Piece of Eden in his control, and then escape. However, the Assassins spoiled this victory by assassinating Hitler as he exited the bunker that his body double was placed in.
 
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]].<ref name="The Fall #3" />
 
By the year 2000, the Hidden Blade had become a largely ceremonial weapon.<ref name="The Fall #3" /> In the meantime however, the Templars continued to search for and investigate the various Pieces of Eden they discovered throughout this period,<ref name="AC" /><ref name="AC2" /> whilst the Assassins continued their war against them; notably being responsible for the destruction of at least one Templar-controlled base in {{Wiki|Siberia}} in 1908, known in public as the Tunguska explosion.<ref name="AC2" />
 
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.<ref name="Brotherhood" />
 
[[File:DanielKillMentor.png|thumb|250px|The Mentor's death at Cross' hands]]
That same year, a ten to eleven year old child, a descendant of the Assassin Nikolai Orelov, was kidnapped by Abstergo's [[Lineage Discovery and Acquisition|Lineage Research and Acquisition]] department and entered into the [[Animus Project]], later being codenamed "Daniel Cross".<ref name="The Fall #1" /> Years later, in 1998, Daniel joined the Assassin 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, as a result of a neurological impulse instilled in him by Warren Vidic during his time as an Abstergo captive.<ref name="The Fall #3" />
 
Cross' actions directly led to the fall of the Assassin Order, as he compromised virtually all of the Assassin camps around the world that he had visited in search for the Mentor upon his programmed return to Abstergo Industries, which forced the Assassins even further into hiding. Other notable Assassins held captive by Abstergo included Clay Kaczmarek and Desmond Miles – both descendants of Ezio Auditore and [[Adam]].<ref name="AC" /><ref name="AC2" />
 
After the Mentor's death, William Miles began to take a prominent role in the Order's functioning, and became their de facto leader. It was his decision of raising Lucy Stillman outside the Order after the age of seventeen, so that all her ties to the Assassins were cut and she could infiltrate Abstergo.<ref name="Lost Archive">''Assassin's Creed: Revelations'' - ''[[The Lost Archive]]''</ref>
 
The Assassins attempted to spy on Abstergo using moles several times, but the people they sent always turned out to be strong and got themselves killed, or too weak and easily manipulated by the Templars.<ref name="AC3" />
 
Sometime around 2008, William also recruited Clay Kaczmarek to the Order. Tasked with infiltrating Abstergo and discovering information about them, Clay returned successfully with a memo detailing the allocation of Abstergo Industries' budget, along with their funding of the Animus Project. With this information known to the Assassins, a plan was devised for him to get caught by their Lineage Research and Acquisition department as Subject 16, and was to be rescued later by Lucy.
 
However, years of isolation had caused her to turn against the Assassins, and once Clay learned of her defection through hacking into Abstergo's systems and uncovering security footage, she did not help him escape when the time came, leading to his subsequent suicide.<ref name="Lost Archive" />
 
{{Quote|We lost two more teams last night. That's eight more of us just... gone.|Lucy Stillman, 2012.|Assassin's Creed II}}
Later on, the Templars tracked down Desmond Miles, William's son, who had left the Order in 2003. 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. When Desmond began to suffer from the Bleeding Effect, Warren Vidic told Lucy to take him somewhere where he would feel safe, as part of a plan code-named "[[Project Siren]]".
 
Not long after, the Assassins were able to free Desmond with the "aid" of Lucy, as well as obtain their own copy of the map.<ref name="AC2" /> Following this, Desmond agreed to aid the Assassins in their quest to defeat Abstergo, mostly for revenge, but also for closure.
 
Utilizing the [[Animus|Animus 2.0]], a copy of the machine used by Abstergo to explore his genetic memories previously,<ref name="AC" /><ref name="AC2" /> Desmond followed the memories of Ezio Auditore, adopting his skills in combat and freerunning, 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. At least two known teams were reported to have been killed, one in Brisbane, Australia, and another in Whistler, Canada.<ref name="AC2" /><ref name="Initiates">''[[Assassin's Creed: Initiates]]''</ref>
 
As technology progressed, so did the weapons used against the Assassins. By 2012, the Templars were using cell phone towers and satellites to track them down. 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]], in order to facilitate communications.<ref name="Brotherhood" />
 
[[File:Modern Assassins in Santa Maria in Aracoeli.png|thumb|left|250px|The Assassins inside Santa Maria in Aracoeli]]
In the latter half of 2012, an Assassin team made up of Lucy Stillman, Rebecca Crane, Shaun Hastings and Desmond Miles discovered the Colosseum Vault – after Desmond had relived Ezio's memories in Rome through the Animus – and infiltrated it, securing the Apple of Eden that Ezio had hidden there centuries before. On contact with First Civilization artifact, Desmond's body was taken over by the ancient being [[Juno]], who forced him to stab and kill the Assassin-traitor, Lucy.
 
This indirectly helped to ensure that the Templars could not get their hands on Ezio's Apple of Eden and kept Desmond safe from Templar influence from within the Assassins. Due to this event, the team and the Apple were brought to William Miles and the Order, in turn securing one of the ancient artifacts for the Order's cause.<ref name="Brotherhood" /><ref name="Lost Archive" />
 
Also, around this time, an Assassin team in Moscow were chasing a potential lead on a Piece of Eden. However, as William Miles stated, this was some of the only good news they had got. There were teams in [[Osaka]] and [[São Paulo]]. In Osaka, the team was being tailed, so they had gone dark. In São Paulo, a leak was confirmed and the team was working on flushing it out.
 
The team in [[Denver]] were even worse off. They had lost contact without informing, and their safe house was empty. This meant that they were dead or captured, or that they had gone dark without notifying the Assassin headquarters.<ref name="Brotherhood" />
 
After killing Lucy, Desmond entered a coma, and was put back into the Animus. He relived a restored memory sequence, which provided the Assassins with co-ordinates, leading to the [[Grand Temple]]. While most Assassins continued their fight with Abstergo, William's team – with help from [[Gavin Banks]] – reached New York, hoping to find the Temple and stop the end of the world.<ref name="Revelations" /><ref name="Initiates" />
 
Upon finding out that they needed a key, and three "batteries" to open the door in the Grand Temple, Desmond began to work on finding the key, by reliving memories that Juno told him to. While William's team began working on opening the Temple, he had other teams run interference, and tried to thwart Abstergo's attempts to find them, or other Pieces of Eden.
 
During this endeavor, several Assassins were killed by Abstergo agents, including [[Adriano Maestranzi]]. William was captured by [[Juhani Otso Berg]] when he went alone to [[Cairo]] to retrieve the third and final power source. This attempt to find Desmond and take the Apple from him ended in failure, as he assassinated both Daniel Cross and Warren Vidic, killing the men responsible for nearly destroying the order 12 years previously, and foiling the [[Eye-Abstergo]] through these actions.<ref name="AC3" />
 
Returning to the Temple, Desmond fully reactivated it and discovered [[The Eye|the Eye]], a device that would save the world from the [[2012 coronal mass ejection|Second Disaster]]. Juno urged Desmond to activate the Eye, but Minerva asked him not to, saying that the Eye's activation would also kill Desmond and release Juno from her prison.<ref name="AC3" />
 
While Minerva and her brethren tried to save the world, Juno was planning to use their technology to conquer it, so she was imprisoned. Minerva showed Desmond that if he let the Second Disaster happen, the world would be devastated, but humanity would endure. Desmond would become a legendary figure that would rebuild the world. However, upon his death, his ideals would be misinterpreted by future generations, bringing about the fall of civilization, and "what once was, shall be again".<ref name="AC3" />
 
Believing the world would have a chance at defeating Juno, Desmond told William, Shaun and Rebecca to leave and prepare for the incoming struggle. Desmond then activated the Eye and the world was indeed saved, but as he was informed, Desmond died and Juno was released from her prison.<ref name="AC3" />
 
Following Desmond's death, a depressed William went into exile, leaving the leadership of the Assassins in the hands of Gavin Banks. For the next year, Banks traveled the world onboard the ''[[Altaïr II]]'' in search of Assassin cells. Eventually, he located William in a [[William Miles' bunker|bunker]] in Norway. At the same time, Rebecca uncovered the existence of the [[Initiates]] hacker collective. After discovering that their fellow crewmembers [[Stephanie Chiu]] and [[Eric Cooper]] were Initiates, William decided to return to leadership of the Brotherhood. He recruited the Initiates and assigned them a handler, a mysterious woman going by the name [[Bishop]].<ref name="Initiates" /><ref name="ACS" />
 
In 2014, the Assassins learnt that Abstergo had acquired the body of a [[Sage]] named [[John Standish]], and had started the [[Phoenix Project]] to sequence a full Precursor genome. On October 13, Shaun and [[Galina Voronina]] assaulted and destroyed Abstergo's Paris laboratory. Knowing that the Templars would not stop in their plans to find the remains of more Sages, Bishop used the Initiates to sequence the memories of Arno Dorian, who was present at the death of [[François-Thomas Germain]], a Sage from the French Revolution. The Initiate's research revealed that Germain's bones were too degraded for DNA extraction, ensuring another victory for the Assassins.<ref name="ACU" /><ref name="ACS" />
 
In 2015, Bishop called upon the Initiate again to synch the memories of [[Jacob Frye|Jacob]] and [[Evie Frye]], twin Assassins from the Industrial Revolution, to find a Shroud of Eden in London before Abstergo could. However, Shaun and Rebecca chose to go off book and confront [[Isabelle Ardant]] and narrowly escaped being executed by [[Sigma Team]]. After the Initiate's data synch confirmed the Shroud's location underneath [[Buckingham Palace]], Shaun and Rebecca, backed up by Galina, infiltrated the vault but the Templars had gotten to them first. In the ensuing skirmish, Shaun managed to kill Ardant, but Rebecca was wounded by [[Violet da Costa]], who managed to escape with the Shroud.<ref name="ACS" />
 
William Miles later ordered all Assassins worldwide to search for [[Álvaro Gramática]]'s laboratory and recover the Shroud. While the Assassins had no luck in locating the lab, [[Jasdip Dhami]] and [[Eric Cooper]] relayed their concerns to Bishop in regards to putting the Initiates in the Templars' crosshairs. After much deliberation, William enacted the Rooftop Garden Protocol, instructing all Assassins to remain professional on their network and if they did find Gramática's lab, they were not to engage until a strike team could be assembled. Additionally, Bishop was forced to temporarily sever all contact with the Initiates.<ref>''Assassin's Creed: Syndicate'' - ''[[Jack the Ripper (DLC)]]''</ref>
 
==Known Assassins==
{{Quote|The seeds were planted as two worlds became one. Behold, the Assassins, the children of two worlds!|Clay Kaczmarek.|Assassin's Creed II}}
[[File:Play along 9.png|thumb|250px|Ezio's initiation into the Brotherhood]]
The Assassins have existed since before the turn of the first millennium; several known figures included Darius, Iltani, Wei Yu,<ref name="AC2" /> Gaius Cassius Longinus, Marcus Junius Brutus and their co-conspirators,<ref name="Project Legacy" /> Amunet and Leonius.<ref name="AC2" /> Historically however, the forebearers of the Assassins have existed since before recorded time, possibly reaching as far back as Adam and [[Eve]].<ref name="AC2" />
 
===Medieval and Renaissance periods===
During the Third Crusade, the Levantine branch of the Assassin Order was mainly made up of native individuals; although some, like Altaïr, were born to parents of both religions. Led by Al Mualim,<ref name="AC" /> and later Altaïr himself,<ref name="AC2" /> other members included Harash,<ref name="Bloodlines" /> Malik and Kadar Al-Sayf, [[Rauf]], Abbas Sofian, [[Masun]] and [[Jamal]].<ref name="AC" />
 
Decades later, in the north, the Mongolian branch of Assassins were working to halt the rise of the Mongolian Empire; notable members included the legendary Assassin Qulan Gal and his protégé [[Nergüi]].
 
Later still, individuals such as Dante Alighieri,<ref name="AC2" /> Maffeo Polo, Marco Polo,<ref name="Secret Crusade" /> and Domenico Auditore,<ref name="AC2" /> the founder of the House of Auditore would join the Order's ranks.
 
Allies also included various individuals, such as Adha,<ref name="Chronicles" /> and even former Templars like Maria Thorpe.<ref name="AC2" />
 
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,<ref name="Renaissance">''[[Assassin's Creed: Renaissance]]''</ref> to thieves,<ref name="AC2" /> and even royal treasurers.<ref name="Discovery">''[[Assassin's Creed II: Discovery]]''</ref>
 
They included the Florentine banker Giovanni Auditore da Firenze;<ref name="AC2" /><ref name="Lineage" /> 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 Contanto]], the heads of the Florentine and Venetian courtesans respectively; [[Antonio de Magianis]], the head of the Venetian Thieves Guild;<ref name="AC2" /> La Volpe, the head of the Florentine, and later, Roman Thieves Guild;<ref name="Brotherhood" /><ref name="AC2" /> Niccolò Machiavelli, a writer and head of the Florentine mercenaries; Bartolomeo d'Alviano, ''condottiero'' of Venice and later Rome,<ref name="Brotherhood" /><ref name="AC2" /> and [[Perotto Calderon]], undercover in the employ of the Borgia, who posed as a courier.
 
Others included Giovanni Borgia, the illegitimate son of Calderon and [[Lucrezia Borgia]]; Paracelcus, Swiss scientist and alchemist; Francesco Vecellio, Renaissance painter; [[Tessa Varzi]] and [[Cipriano Enu]]; [[Rinaldo Vitturi]], the keeper of the Shroud;<ref name="Project Legacy" /> [[Ridolfo Fioravant]] and [[Pietro Antonio Solari]], spies working undercover as architects on the [[Kremlin]];<ref name="Brotherhood" /> [[Luis de Santángel]] and [[Raphael Sánchez]], finance minister to [[Ferdinand II of Aragon|Ferdinand II]] and treasurer of Queen [[Isabella I of Castile|Isabella I]] respectively;<ref name="Discovery" /> Yusuf Tazim, the leader of the Constantinople Assassin Guild; Piri Reis, a top navigator and cartographer to [[Bayezid II]]; and [[Dogan]] and [[Azize]], two lieutenants of the Constantinople Assassin Guild.<ref name="Revelations" />
 
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.<ref name="Brotherhood" /><ref name="AC2" /> Others included [[Caterina Sforza]], the Countess of [[Forlì]];<ref name="AC2 - Forlì">''Assassin's Creed II'' - ''[[Battle of Forlì (DLC)]]''</ref><ref name="Brotherhood" /> [[Lorenzo de' Medici]], the ruler of Florence; [[Agostino Barbarigo]], the Doge of Venice from 1486;<ref name="AC2" /> and the famed explorer [[Christopher Columbus]].<ref name="Discovery" />
 
By 1501, Ezio Auditore and Niccolò Machiavelli had begun training new Assassin recruits in the Order from their Tiber Island headquarters in Rome. In 1503, Claudia Auditore da Firenze, sister of Ezio, also joined the Order.<ref name="Brotherhood" />
 
===Age of Empires===
During the Colonial period, the Assassins spread their influence to the New World. Around this time, the [[Caribbean Assassins]] were led by [[Ah Tabai]], a [[Mayans|Mayan]]-born member of the Order. To secure the Assassin interests, he recruited [[Mary Read]] into the Brotherhood, as well as stationed numerous [[Assassin bureau|bureau]] leaders across the Caribbean, including [[Opía Apito]], [[Rhona Dinsmore]], Antó and [[Upton Travers]]. By the 1730, Edward Kenway and [[Adéwalé]] had joined the Order, albeit only after significant personal journeys. Adéwalé displayed an interest in the Creed early on, and became a student of Ah Tabai, while Edward joined the Order to make amends on the past misdeeds he had committed in his life.<ref name="ACBF" />
 
John de la Tour was the first Assassin to reach the American Colonies. In the following decades, the Colonial Assassins had grown in number significantly, led by Achilles Davenport as their Mentor. Other members of the Colonial Brotherhood included Liam O'Brien, Hope Jensen, Kesegowaase, Shay Cormac and Louis-Joseph Gaultier. Following Shay's defection to the Templars, and an [[Colonial Assassin purge|assault]] in 1763, the Colonial branch of the Order was almost completely wiped out.<ref name="ACRG" />
 
It would take another decade for the Assassins to rebuild their ranks, when they were joined by a number of new members, including Ratonhnhaké:ton, the grandson of Edward Kenway, who managed to ultimately eliminate the Colonial Rite of the Templars in 1782. During that time, he managed to recruit several individuals into the Order, including [[Clipper Wilkinson]], [[Deborah Carter]], [[Jacob Zenger]], [[Stephane Chapheau]], [[Jamie Colley]], [[Duncan Little]], and [[Patience Gibbs]].<ref name="AC3" /><ref name="ACBF" />
 
===French Revolution===
During the late 18th century, the French Assassins, with Arno Dorian among them, worked to expose the identities of Templars who orchestrated the French Revolution for their own benefit.<ref name="ACU" />
 
===Sikh Empire===
[[File:Mir.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Arbaaz Mir on his search for the Koh-i-Noor]]
During the mid-19th century, Indian Assassins had developed a strong presence in the Sikh Empire, with their main goal being the search for the Koh-i-Noor diamond and the removal of foreign Templars attempting to control India. Around this time, the Sikh Empire was ruled by Maharaja [[Ranjit Singh]], who was seen in a mixed light; he was viewed as a murderer by Assassins like Arbaaz Mir for his removal of Muslims in Kashmir, but by others as a hero for his near liberation of India, which ended abruptly with his poisoning by [[Francis Cotton]].<ref name="Brahman" />
 
===Victorian Era===
In the late 19th century, the [[British Assassins|British Brotherhood]], under the leadership of [[Jayadeep Mir|Henry Green]], restrengthened their ranks from the mid 18th century when the Assassin siblings [[Jacob Frye|Jacob]] and [[Evie Frye]] moved to London. While there, they worked to overthrow the Templar presence by establishing a [[Rooks|criminal syndicate]] in order to fight the oppression of poverty.<ref name="ACS" />
 
===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 [[Saint Petersburg|Petrograd]]. Members of the Narodnaya Volya were in fact members of the Assassin Order. Some known Assassins included Nikolai Orelov and Aleksandr Ulyanov, the older brother of Vladimir Lenin.<ref name="The Fall #1" />
 
[[File:Swap.png|thumb|250px|The British medic and Erich Albert]]
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.<ref name="Project Legacy" /> There was also [[Irish Assassin|at least one Assassin]] active In Ireland during this era, fighting in the country's War of Independence.<ref name="ACU" />
 
During the late 20th and 21st century, however, the Order seemed to have sunk further into hiding, with their numbers fewer than ever.<ref name="AC2" /> Although it is evident that more existed, only a few were known to be in the Order: Clay Kaczmarek, Callum Lynch, Desmond Miles, Lucy Stillman,<ref name="AC" /> Rebecca Crane, Shaun Hastings,<ref name="AC2" /> Hannah Mueller, Paul Bellamy, Daniel Cross,<ref name="The Fall #2" /> William Miles,<ref name="Brotherhood" /> Gavin Banks, [[Moussa]], [[Lin]], [[Emir]], [[Nathan]], [[Harlan Cunningham|Harlan T. Cunningham]], [[Siobhan Dhami]], [[Jasdip Dhami]], Adriano Maestranzi, a woman named [[Janice]], and a man named Marco.<ref name="Initiates" /> There were also known groups of Assassins based in São Paulo, Brazil; Moscow, Russia; Osaka, Japan; Denver, Colorado, United States;<ref name="Brotherhood" /> Whistler, Canada; Georgia and weapon suppliers in the [[Philippines]].<ref name="Initiates" />.


==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*In the High Middle Ages, an Assassin would prove one's target had been slain by dipping a white feather in their target's blood. This practice had fallen out of use by the Renaissance, but appeared to have been revived by the Victorian Era. Both [[Jacob Frye|Jacob]] and [[Evie Frye]] engaged in the practice, though they used white handkerchiefs rather than feathers.
*In the High Middle Ages, an Assassin would prove one's target had been slain by dipping a white feather in their target's blood. This practice had fallen out of use by the Renaissance, but appeared to have been revived by the Victorian Era. Both [[Jacob Frye|Jacob]] and [[Evie Frye]] engaged in the practice, though they used white handkerchiefs rather than feathers.
*Rebecca Crane noted that both the Assassin and Templar Orders had existed since before the formation of the Hashshashin and Order of the Knights Templar respectively, and queried what the two organizations called themselves beforehand.<ref name="AssassinBrotherhooddatabase">''Assassin's Creed: Syndicate'' - [[Database: The Assassin Brotherhood]]</ref>
*Rebecca Crane noted that both the Assassin and Templar Orders had existed since before the formation of the Hashshashin and Order of the Knights Templar respectively, and queried what the two organizations called themselves beforehand.<ref name="AssassinBrotherhooddatabase">''[[Assassin's Creed: Syndicate]]'' [[Database: The Assassin Brotherhood]]</ref>
**However, such an instance of the Assassins' earlier name is known: the [[Roman Assassins]] called themselves ''Liberalis Circulum'', Latin for ''Circle of Liberals''.
**However, such an instance of the Assassins' earlier name is known: the [[Roman Assassins]] called themselves ''Liberalis Circulum'', Latin for ''Circle of Liberals''.
**Historically, the ''Hashshashin'' were a sect of radical Persian Shia Muslims who, under Hassan-i Sabbāh, were said to be given a drug called hashish, under the influence of which they experienced "the Garden of Paradise". In exchange, they were expected to murder Sabbah's religious and political rivals, and due to the euphoria they experienced as an effect of the drug, they became unwaveringly loyal to Sabbah.
**Historically, the ''Hashashin'' were a sect of radical Persian Shia Muslims who, under Hassan-i Sabbāh, were said to be given a drug called hashish, under the influence of which they experienced "the Garden of Paradise". In exchange, they were expected to murder Sabbah's religious and political rivals, and due to the euphoria they experienced as an effect of the drug, they became unwaveringly loyal to Sabbah.
**The word ''Hashashashin'' also gave rise to the word 'assassin'.
**The word ''Hashashin'' also gave rise to the word 'assassin'.
**The first and the third tenets of the Creed are mostly based upon the sayings of Islam. The first tenet of not to kill innocents matches with many hadeeths and verses of the Quran. The third and last tenet of the Creed, compromising the Brotherhood, refers to waging war against God in Islam and breaking the trust of other people. In both the Brotherhood and Islam, the punishment for violating these rulings is death.
**The first and the third tenets of the Creed are mostly based upon the sayings of Islam. The first tenet of not to kill innocents matches with many hadeeths and verses of the Quran. The third and last tenet of the Creed, compromising the Brotherhood, refers to waging war against God in Islam and breaking the trust of other people. In both the Brotherhood and Islam, the punishment for violating these rulings is death.
==Appearances==
{{Scroll box|
*''[[Assassin's Creed]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Altaïr's Chronicles]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Bloodlines]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Lineage]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed II]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed II: Discovery]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Renaissance]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: The Fall]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]''
*[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood (novel)|''Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood'' novel]]
*''[[Assassin's Creed: The Secret Crusade]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Embers]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Ascendance]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]''
*[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations (novel)|''Assassin's Creed: Revelations'' novel]]
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Recollection]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: The Chain]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed III]]''
**''[[The Tyranny of King Washington]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed III: Liberation]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Forsaken]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]''
**''[[Freedom Cry]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Black Flag]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Brahman]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Pirates]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Memories]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]''
*[[Assassin's Creed: Unity (novel)|''Assassin's Creed: Unity'' novel]]
*''[[Assassin's Creed Chronicles: China]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Syndicate]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Underworld]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed Chronicles: India]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed Chronicles: Russia]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Identity]]'' {{c|non-canonical appearance}}
*''[[Assassin's Creed Volume 1: Trial by Fire|Assassin's Creed: Assassins – Volume 1: Trial by Fire]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants – Locus]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed Volume 2: Setting Sun|Assassin's Creed: Assassins – Volume 2: Setting Sun]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed Templars Volume 1: Black Cross|Assassin's Creed: Templars – Volume 1: Black Cross]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Heresy]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed (film)|Assassin's Creed: The Movie]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: The Official Movie Novelization]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants – Tomb of the Khan]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed Templars Volume 2: Cross of War|Assassin's Creed: Templars – Volume 2: Cross of War]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed Volume 3: Homecoming|Assassin's Creed: Assassins – Volume 3: Homecoming]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Uprising]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Desert Oath]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Origins]]''
**''[[The Hidden Ones (DLC)|The Hidden Ones]]''
**''[[The Curse of the Pharaohs]]''
*[[Assassin's Creed: Origins (comic)|''Assassin's Creed: Origins'' comic]]
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]]''
**''[[Legacy of the First Blade]]''
**''[[The Fate of Atlantis]]''
*[[Assassin's Creed: Odyssey (novel)|''Assassin's Creed: Odyssey'' novel]]
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Rebellion]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Dynasty]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – Song of Glory]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – Geirmund's Saga]]''
* [[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla (graphic novel)|''Assassin's Creed: Valhalla'' (graphic novel)]]
*''[[Assassin's Creed: The Silk Road]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: The Imperial Jade Seal]]'' – ''[[Assassin's Creed: Prophecy of the Emperor|Prophecy of the Emperor]]''
* ''[[The World of Assassin's Creed Valhalla: Journey to the North – Logs and Files of a Hidden One]]'' {{Mo}}
*''[[Assassin's Creed Roleplaying Game]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Mirage]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Nexus VR]]''
}}


==References==
==References==
Line 449: Line 262:
{{ACU}}
{{ACU}}
{{ACS}}
{{ACS}}
{{JTR}}
{{ACC}}
{{ACC}}
{{ACO}}
{{ACO}}
{{ACOD}}
{{ACV}}
{{ACPL}}
{{ACPL}}
{{ACDYL}}
{{ACDYL}}
Line 458: Line 272:
{{ACM}}
{{ACM}}
{{ACID}}
{{ACID}}
{{ACRebellion}}{{ACfilm}}
{{ACRebellion}}
{{ACNovelization}}
{{ACfilm}}
{{ACUW}}
{{ACUW}}
{{ACLD}}
{{ACLD}}
{{ACH}}
{{ACH}}
{{ACFC}}
{{ACFC}}
{{ACTF}}
{{ACS4}}
{{ACTC}}
{{ACBM}}
{{ACBM}}
{{ACLocus}}
{{ACComic}}
{{ACComic}}
{{ACTemplars}}
{{ACTemplars}}
Line 473: Line 285:
{{ACUprising}}
{{ACUprising}}
{{ACReflections}}
{{ACReflections}}
 
[[Category:Assassin Brotherhood|Assassin Brotherhood]]
[[de:Assassinen]]
[[es:Orden de los Asesinos]]
[[fr:Confrérie des Assassins]]
[[hu:Asszaszinok]]
[[it:Assassini]]
[[nl:Assassijnen]]
[[pl:Asasyni]]
[[pt-br:Assassinos]]
[[ru:Ассассины]]
[[zh:刺客]]
[[Category:Assassin Order]]
[[Category:Organizations]]
[[Category:Organizations]]
[[Category:Secret societies]]

Latest revision as of 03:34, 2 June 2026

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

The Assassin Brotherhood, also known as the Assassin Order and originally as the Hidden Ones (Arabic: المخفيون; Chinese: 無形者), is a secret global peacekeeping organization dedicated to protecting humanity from abuses of power, coercive rule, and injustice. As the etymology of the term assassin, their traditional methods have revolved around stealth operations, selective violence, and the assassination of those deemed to be perpetrators of oppression under the belief that this minimizes collateral damage in accordance with their absolute prohibition against harming innocent lives.

Their political philosophy is enshrined in the Creed, consisting of a maxim and three core tenets which serve as their principal prescriptions. While the maxim presents itself as akin to a doctrine, it is in reality a value-neutral epistemic claim about nature that the Assassins hold to serve as the bedrock to developing an independent, critical, and open-minded value and belief system. Despite this, their culture and goals are driven by an idealistic ideology emphasizing the faith in humanity's potential to foster world peace through collective growth enabled by freedom of education, belief, and expression.

Although the Assassins can trace their genetic and cultural roots to the hybrids Eve and Adam, they officially originated with the Medjay of Egypt. The last Medjay Bayek and his wife Aya of Alexandria founded the order—then known as the Hidden Ones—at the tumultuous twilight of Ptolemaic rule to defend the common people against the Order of the Ancients, a clandestine militant group which evolved into the Templar Order. Since then, the Assassins and the Templars have been sworn enemies, fighting a recondite shadow war for more than two millennia across the world, a conflict so intractable and immemorial that it is often thought to have instead spanned the entirety of recorded human history. Fundamental to this conflict is the Assassin conviction that the preservation of free will is a necessary condition for human fulfillment and harmony while the Templars believe that humanity can only find lasting peace through the imposition of a world government under their control.

In a development paralleling that of the Templars, the Hidden Ones emerged as the Assassins in the 11th century when Hassan-i Sabbāh fled Egypt and re-organized the order as a state in Alamut, where it could be protected by the northern mountains of Persia. Alamut remained the heartland of the Assassins until Al Mualim founded a branch in Masyaf and thereupon established a reputation feared by the Crusaders and Saracens alike, entering into public imagination. By then, the Assassins had become entrenched in traditional dogma, and under Al Mualim's successor, Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad, a wave of momentous reforms was enacted that were simultaneously progressive and returned the Assassins to the original principles of the Hidden Ones. Unable to withstand the onslaught of the Mongol Empire, the Assassins then relinquished their state, retreated into the shadows once more, and spread across the world, seeding their presence to regions like Italy and Spain, India and Japan, and reaching peoples as far-flung as the Kanien'kehá:ka and the Maya, becoming a truly multicultural and global network.

History[edit | edit source]

Main article: History of the Assassins

The Creed[edit | edit source]

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

The Order believes in a strong set of values that strictly govern their way of life, referred to as "the Creed". This Creed consists 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."[9]

These tenets permeate every aspect of the Assassins' daily life, as well as their fight for "peace in all things". The Assassins carry out their duties through political, strategic assassination in the hope that killing one individual will lead to the salvation of thousands. They also believe that they fight on the behalf of those who do not possess the abilities, resources, or knowledge to speak out against those who abuse their power.[1]

Philosophy and goals[edit | edit source]

"To recognize nothing is true and everything is permitted. That laws arise not from divinity, but reason. I understand now that our Creed does not command us to be free. It commands us to be wise."
―Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad, 1191[src]-[m]

Origins[edit | edit source]

Since its earliest beginnings, the Assassin Order has taken it upon themselves to be a force for the protection of humanity against social injustice, abuses of power, state terror, and enslavement. They have prided themselves on sacrificing their lives to "champion the poor and powerless"[11] while embracing human rights ideals such as equality, liberty, justice, and welfare. This premise can be traced back to the order's founding as the Hidden Ones by the last Medjay of Egypt, Bayek, and his wife Amunet. Recognizing that their sworn enemies, the Order of the Ancients, "work[ed] in the shadows of kings and queens" to control nations for their whims, Bayek advocated that there needed to be those who "work in the shadows. . .to defend the free will of the people".[12] True to his Medjay roots, Bayek was bringing to the fledgling group the principle of ma'at he had lived by in his service to Egypt.[13] His ardent belief was that the Medjay was not merely the protector of the pharaoh but the protector of the Egyptian people as well, especially the downtrodden among them. Nor did their duty stop at protection; it extended further to the advancement of their well-being.[14] It was the determination of the first Hidden Ones that their society's unity owed not to an exalted leader but in the shared values of their cause, encapsulated in the Creed.[12] An individual-centric, rather than a state-centric, orientation and the concept of peace as self-fulfillment rather than merely security are themes which have echoed through the ages in Assassin political action, undergirding their opposition to coercive authority.[15][16]

The Creed[edit | edit source]

"You cannot know anything, only suspect. You must expect to be wrong, to have overlooked something."
―Malik al-Sayf to Altaïr Ibn-La'ahad, 1191[src]-[m]

Because of its symbolic role for the Assassins' values, the Creed, consisting of a central maxim and three proscriptive tenets, has served as the highest authority guiding the ethics of their actions and as their foundational code.[12][17] It has often been misinterpreted literally by their Templar enemies and third-parties alike to prescribe moral nihilism,[15] enable wanton hedonism,[18] and propagate the pursuit of absolute individual freedoms without a mind to the risk of "chaos".[19][20] While certain Assassins across history, such as Spanish Assassins María and Aguilar de Nerha, have been more dogmatic in their obeisance to it than others,[17] the Creed's maxim is fundamentally a descriptive claim about the nature of reality to be contemplated and not a doctrine to be followed.[21] For all their idealism, the Assassins' philosophy begins with epistemological principles and not normative ethics.

"Nothing is true, everything is permitted."

This claim pertains to philosophical skepticism and moral relativism. "Nothing is true" is an affirmation that Truth, as an absolute, flawless worldview applicable to all contexts, does not exist—or if it does, then human beings lack the capacity to know it. As the Mentor Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad reflected in his Codex, perfect objectivity is unachievable because the sheer amount of variables and formulae needed to construct an ideal paradigm for our world's quandaries and travails is infinitely great. The intricate depths of reality is awe-inspiring and fathomless, and its labyrinthine web of interconnections are impossible to thoroughly unravel. Humans can reach for perfection by employing the empirical process of information-gathering, thereby becoming ever more and more objective in our understandings, but Truth behaves asymptotically—it shall always remain elusive and just beyond our grasp.[15]

These limits of empiricism are given expression in the line "everything is permitted", which serves as a reminder that it is fallacious to presume the uniformity of nature. Patterns of the present are not proofs of the future, which can always be radically different from all that has preceded it. As teased by a message left by the Isu for humanity in Oun-mAa Niye Ressoot, all the regularities of sentient beings' lifelong experiences, too, cannot falsify the possibility that they exist only within a "masterfully crafted simulation" or a "dream within a dream".[22]

Confronted by this complexity of reality, humans are compelled to simplify it into comprehensible models, but some react with a more intense impulse: insecurity in the face of uncertainty. With this insecurity comes the desire to resolve it through the assumption of a truth and obtain a measure of certainty, a certainty that is inherently self-deceptive.[23] A danger arises when an individual, in their fixation on their truth, becomes convinced of its universality and strives to impose it onto the world as the grand solution, a project that inevitably involves the violent erasure of other epistemic communities.[15][23] Replication of this imaginary truth across the ages in the form of harmful discursive practices and repression of dissent can cement it in societal consciousness as a self-evident Truth—a "realization"[24]—but it will always remain fundamentally a falsehood. The Assassins identify this progression from fear of uncertainty to the imposition of an illusion for Truth as a destructive force to humanity and a recurring theme among authoritarians like their sworn enemies, the Templars.[15] When Al Mualim betrayed the Assassins in 1191, Altaïr recognized that their own leader had succumbed to this same temptation.[25]

As a result, Assassins teach their pupils that complex answers to life should be embraced,[15] and uncertainty should be accepted as natural.[23] Wisdom begins with uncertainty and not from self-assurance. While this pedagogical practice, alongside anti-authoritarianism, gives the Creed a normative slant, the starting Assassin premise against Templar ideology rests still on epistemic grounds. Many of the leading Assassins throughout history, such as Altaïr Ibn-La'ahad and Ezio Auditore reify their moral convictions to pluralism, humanitarianism, and egalitarianism by reference to the Creed, but the Creed itself may not necessarily entail these political stances. Its core argument remains that sentient beings do not truly know anything, and if the Templars are in error, that error lies not just in the inhumane consequences of their deeds but also in their self-denial that their own truth does not amount to universal reality, for it is not any more or less objective than the Assassins' own ethical values. The classic Templar conception of their perennial conflict with the Assassins hinges on false binaries such as "order" vs. "freedom", presupposing parity in incommensurable first-order claims. This narrative actually elides the proposition of fallibility central to Assassin thought, the admission that even the Assassin way is not absolute. Unlike the Templars, the Assassins engage in higher-order questions of meta-ethics.

The introspective quality of Assassin philosophy is evinced in the self-awareness by Rebecca Crane and Shaun Hastings that to be Assassins does not necessarily mean to be the "good guys"; they make no claims that they are a force of flawless, moral good, only that their way of life is chosen because they believe it is the best they can do to prevent greater harm to humanity. The introspection is again apparent in Altaïr's reflections of the "ironies" in their order's practices: that they murder while seeking to promote peace, that they mandate discipline to a code of rules while seeking to open minds, and that they embody ideals requiring leaps in faith despite warning against blind faith.[15]

The paradoxes between their theory and practice has not been lost on Assassins through the ages. To meditate on one's own internal contradictions, on the possibility of hypocrisy, is a central facet of their philosophy. In answering his own charge, Altaïr hazards to circle back to the Creed, for contained within it is the perception that polar opposites may be true simultaneously.[15] The nature of reality is paradoxical and that is why it is complex and full of uncertainties. When queried by the Maya Mentor Ah Tabai, Edward Kenway offered the insight that the Creed was "only the beginning of wisdom, and not its final form".[26] The affirmation that "nothing is true, everything is permitted" does not prevent an individual from developing their own value and belief system, but the Assassins hold that without prior acknowledgement of the subjective source of those convictions, there can be no wisdom no matter the content of those principles.

Goals[edit | edit source]

"What can be done to stop this? To encourage tolerance and equality? Some days we speak of education, believing that knowledge will free us from immorality. But as I walk the streets and see slaves sent off to auction—my heart grows cold. When I see the husband hurl abuses and stones at his wife, insisting she exists only to serve him—my fists clench. And when I see children torn from their parents so that another man might profit—sent off to suffer beneath the desert sun and die...
...On these days, I do not think that dialogue will make a difference. On these days, I can think only of how the perpetrators need to die"
―Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad[src]

In light of their antipathy for authoritarianism, the Assassins throughout history have fought under the banner of liberation for oppressed peoples. In spite of this, freedom was not at the heart of their ambitions, but peace. The Assassins aspire for the establishment of global prosperity and harmony, the genesis of what essentially amounts to a utopia. In this, they share with the Templars a sincere desire to resolve the chaos that plagues humanity. Their incompatible visions of the means by which such a utopia could be achieved dismantled this common spirit.[9]

Unlike the Templars, who condemn humanity as irredeemably weak-minded and corrupt, the Assassins uphold faith, even love, in humanity as one of their core ideals.[27] Their fundamentally skeptic Creed neither justifies the defeatism that is the hallmark of Templar ideology, nor endorses the notion that a single group can be wise enough to impose a correct way of life or belief on the people at large.[1] Consequently, they scorn the notion that a short-cut to universal peace, especially in the form of global enslavement or elitist control, could be a suitable solution to society's ills. Instead, they argue that humanity must be permitted to undergo the slow and arduous journey of developing tolerance for their myriad differences, a process derided as unrealistic and impossible by the Templars.

In the Assassin view, peace is a product of education, not force,[9] and this is only possible without the stringent control over information and society that authoritarians advocate. For this reason, and due to Altaïr's reformation of the Order and focus on free will, the Assassins have increasingly identified with the ideals of liberty over the centuries. This fixation on freedom and compassion led many Templars by the American Revolution, notably Grand Master Haytham Kenway, to erroneously accuse the Assassins of having abandoned their goal of peace in favour of absolute freedom as an end.[28][29]

Ironically, in spite of the Assassins' optimistic view of humanity as a whole, they do not always retain the same faith for adversaries of human rights; this is the guiding force behind their operations, of which assassinations take primacy. Altaïr could not help but doubt the efficacy of persuasion, lamenting that many abusers were far too cemented in their ways to be redeemed through dialogue. Echoing Altaïr's sentiment, Rebecca Crane once explained to Desmond Miles that sometimes, "there's no other way." To protect the lives of innocents, the Assassins believe that realistically an ideal, noble resolution is not always possible, thus one may have to kill a perpetrator to save an innocent. For many members, compassion has acted as a key motivation, which has paradoxically translated into objectives very often revolving around murder.[1][9] Social justice is a powerful unifying theme among Assassins, and in this capacity they serve as a reactionary force against perceived oppression, tyranny, and abuses against humanity, becoming the mortal enemies of the Templars.[1][9][30][28]

Methods[edit | edit source]

"Cultures and religions and languages keep folks divided. But there's something in the Assassin's Creed that crosses all boundaries. A fondness for life and liberty."
―Mary Read, on the Assassin's Creed and society.[src]

Precision and stealth[edit | edit source]

Throughout the long centuries of war between the Assassins and Templars, members of both factions often mused on the similarity of their goals and the contrast between their means.[3][9] Even so, it was a frequent contention of Templars that the Assassins' methods were identical to their own in principle: "a minor evil, for a greater good."[9] Indeed, the Assassins extensively hunted and murdered key individuals they perceived to be corrupt or a danger to humanity, and this became one of their defining attributes.[1][9] A critical distinction, however, lay in the strict tenet that an Assassin must refrain from harming an innocent. As Altaïr reflected, the Templars were brutal and lacked precision in their methods: burning books wholesale, committing grand massacres, and in later histories, instigating nation-wide purges.[9]

Accordingly, precision was a guiding principle behind the Assassins' technique and a factor behind their focus on stealth and discretion. By reducing collateral damage and the chance of open conflict, casualties would be minimized. Such a tactic aligned with their traditional respect for humanity and life, and in theory (though not always in practice), assassinations were to be carried out only in cases of utmost necessity. Once a target had been killed, agents were dissuaded from rejoicing in the death, and some even adopted the practice of paying last respects, no matter how vile they held them to be.[1][31][28]

Although not every Assassin operated on the level of perfectionism exhibited by Francesco Vecellio,[32] prodigious information was expected to be gathered before an assassination is attempted. Failure to do so could yield catastrophic errors, such as Arno Dorian's mistaken murder of the Templar ally Chrétien Lafrenière.[8] For their investigations, Assassins referred to a variety of means including but not limited to: espionage, theft of documents, and mingling with locals.[1][9][30][32][8]

In some ways, the reforms of Altaïr promoted a greater level of stealth than under the tenure of his predecessor, Rashid ad-din Sinan. Previously, it was common practice for the Levantine Assassins to perform high-risk, near suicidal, yet awe-inspiring assassinations in crowded, public areas.[8] This tactic relied on shock to impress power—through fear—in the public imagination.[9] Under Altaïr's direction, the Assassins retreated further into the shadows, and this approach was generally discouraged, if not outright abolished, and restrictions on formerly banned methods such as poison were lifted. While some members were impatient with the secrecy demanded by the brotherhood, feeling that it hampered progress and influence, Altaïr feared the great risks of exposure to public society. Ever mindful that Assassins could be branded as madmen and destroyed if they remained an open target, as evident in the Fall of Masyaf to the Mongol Empire, Altaïr withdrew the brotherhood further into secrecy. Thus, security was another reason for the Assassins' policy of stealth.[9]

Despite this, it was not unknown for Assassins even after the High Middle Ages to resort to open conflict, and these uncommon tactics could range from the instigation of riots, employment of mercenaries, or even a direct militaristic assault on enemy bases.[3][28][29]

Social reforms[edit | edit source]

In Altaïr's time, the Assassins were markedly apprehensive that public promotion of their ideals could yield societal reforms. As a result, at first much of their activities revolved only around the elimination or sabotage of those they believed threatened the rights of humanity. With their dream that humanity arrive at utopia through free will, their way of guidance was often indirect, with an emphasis on individuals learning through self-experience. For instance, their way of teaching Ezio against the path of vengeance involved allowing him to experience that journey personally.

Over time, the brotherhood's policies evolved and during the Italian Renaissance, the Assassins under the leadership of Ezio Auditore became more active at winning the hearts of the public. It was Ezio's conviction that the strength of the Assassins derived from the strength of the common people, a sentiment initially rebuffed by the cynical Mentor Niccolò Machiavelli. Accordingly, the Assassins' campaign in Rome was prolific in rehabilitating a city crumbling under the weight of Borgia corruption, such as funding renovations, sponsoring merchants, and rescuing civilians.[4][30]

The order continued to adapt and reform gradually through the centuries, and by the 20th century, their activities began to shift over to non-violent social reforms rather than aggressive enforcement. The transition was tenuous: certain branches, such as the fledgling branch established in North America by Achilles Davenport and the Assassin-sponsored movement Narodnaya Volya engaged in operations smacking of terrorism. It was only after World War II that the Assassins definitively refocused their activities towards inspiring change through example. Assassinations became far rarer, and until the Great Purge of 2000, the shadow war with the Templars defused to one waged through covert tampering of political elections instead.[4]

Practices[edit | edit source]

Initiation into the Order[edit | edit source]

Main article: Initiation into the Assassin Order
Claudia Auditore being inducted into the Assassin Order in 1503

There were two ways of entering into the Order: through birth, like Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad, Ezio Auditore and Desmond Miles,[9][1] or through recruitment, like Assassin apprentices, Edward Kenway and Shaun Hastings.[30][33][1]

After declaring oneself an Assassin under the Creed, a trainee would be tested to prove their worth over an unspecified period of time. For example, Ezio was tasked with hunting down Templar conspirators over years before he was officially inducted,[1] whereas Assassin apprentices had to gain enough experience in their contract missions across the world before joining the Assassins Guild as fully-fledged members.[30]

Training[edit | edit source]

The Assassins spent their entire lives training to kill.[9] From an early age, they were taught to observe their surroundings and plan ahead. Combat skills were essential and focused on bladed weaponry. However, the most important consideration in the Assassins' training was concealment. Stealth was the greatest weapon of the Assassins, and everything about their lives emphasized a devotion to it.[9][1] 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.[9]

Another significant focus of an Assassin's training was maneuverability. By the time an Assassin reached the rank of Master Assassin, they were also a master of freerunning. Widely seen as alien by the general populace, this method of movement allowed the Assassins to reach areas not otherwise accessible. Freerunning gave the Assassins a significant advantage over nearly all of their enemies and city guards, and could be used to traverse crowded urban environments quickly and efficiently.

Altaïr with the combat trainer at Masyaf

However, not all Assassins were trained from birth, particularly those recruited later in life. Trainees had to learn the ways of their craft through personal experience and the teachings from other Assassins in the field. For example, Ezio learned many techniques from other Assassins and allies like Paola, his uncle Mario Auditore and the thief Rosa, as well as several fundamental assassination techniques through reading Altaïr's Codex.[1] Centuries later, Edward Kenway used skills learned through piracy to better himself as an Assassin.[33]

Unlike certain other factions, the Assassins did not have a specific style of fighting. Aside from their signature Hidden Blade, each branch used weapons and fighting styles native to the area. For example, the Ottoman Assassins favored curved daggers,[3] while the Chinese Assassins were trained in wushu.[27]

Equipment[edit | edit source]

Throughout the ages, the Brotherhood has had many weapons at its disposal. During ancient times, the Assassins did not have any standard attire or equipment, but ancient Assassins were known for using spears, poisons, bows, and other armaments.[1] By the time of the High Middle Ages, they had assumed white as their general color and robes with beaked hoods as their common clothing.

This age also marked the appearance of the Assassins' signature weapon, the Hidden Blade, a retractable blade first conceptualized by Darius. Other weapons used by the Assassins included swords, short blades and throwing knives, though the Order forbade the use of poison as "a coward's tool". Many such rules changed under the leadership of Altaïr, who pioneered several inventions and techniques with the assistance of an Apple of Eden. These included the Poison Blade, the Hidden Gun, and new types of assassinations which dramatically altered the practices of the Order.[9]

From the Renaissance onward, the Assassins' equipment did not change significantly, but some weapons were added to their arsenal. The use of armor over robes had become popular, although the white robes with beaked hoods persisted. Ezio Auditore and other Italian Assassins used a Hidden Gun, crossbow, poison darts, smoke bombs, and a secondary Hidden Blade, among more conventional weapons like swords and knives. Some regions also had unique weapons not seen elsewhere, like the tomahawk of Ratonhnhaké:ton or Hookblades used in the early 16th century Ottoman Empire. Still others, such as the Caribbean Assassins, did not have beaked hoods as part of their standard attire.

Under the Mentorship of the Sikh Jayadeep Mir, the British Brotherhood adopted the fear tactics developed by the Indian Brotherhood, began utilizing fear tactics through the employment of hallucinogens and fear bombs. By scaring enemies from battle, the Indian and British Assassins could avoid being forced to kill them, thereby mitigating casualties.

In modern times, Assassins followed the rest of society into the new era. As technology progressed, guns became commonplace and computers became prevalent, with Assassins like Rebecca Crane and Hannah Mueller specializing in their use.[1][28][34] While Desmond Miles was being held by Abstergo Industries within their Roman facility, a small group of Assassins attempted to rescue him, armed with automatic weapons.[9]

Specializations[edit | edit source]

While the classical Assassin is a parkour expert who specializes in eliminating targets in stealth operations, not all Assassins fit this archetypal mold. These are commonly termed field agents,[7] but more than a paramilitary organization, the Assassin Brotherhood was a transnational state within itself, composed of entire families born into the order with a diverse range of skill sets, not all of them combat-oriented.[1][35] Many Assassins serve in support roles, such as Shaun Hastings, whose specialty is as a history analyst, and Rebecca Crane, a security expert and computer technician.[30] Within their team, Desmond Miles and later Galina Voronina acted as their field operative.[28][7]

Even among Assassins primarily trained for combat roles, there has been much variation in specialization. The Italian Brotherhood of the early 16th century deployed teams such as that of Francesco Vecellio which had among its members Tessa Varzi, a herbalist with an unrivaled knowledge of concocting poisons, and Cipriano Enu, a masterful archer.[32]

Italian Brotherhood system[edit | edit source]

The enclosed content is of ambiguous canonicity.

During the Renaissance in the Italian peninsula some assassins like Lo Sparviero were typed as Berserker, Shadowblade, Trickster, Thief, or some dual combination there of. Berserkers focused on attack and defense, using heavy damage to stun, knock over, and shred armor of multiple opponents at a time, and were equipped with splinter bombs to cause bleeding. Shadowblades were masters of stealth, able to remain incognito for longer periods while under scrutiny, using throwing knives to silence and blind enemies or deal precision strikes, and smokbombs to extricate themselves from battle. Trickster were skilled in guile and creating diversions, able to disguise themselves as guards, lure or distract targets with whistling or coins, and employed sticky bombs and the explosive jack in the box to kill from a distance. Thieves were adept pickpocket who used sand and fast strikes to blind and overwhelm opponents, relied on precision and agility to reduce noteriety and fall damage, and set trip-wire bombs to frighten and cause bleeding.[36]

Spanish Brotherhood system[edit | edit source]

Depending on the branch, specializations differed and could be more formalized. During the era of the Spanish Inquisition, the Spanish Brotherhood classified its agents as either Shadow, Enforcer, or Specialist with each further broken down into three subdivisions. Shadows could focus their training more exclusively towards pure stealth, the art of assassination, or freerunning. Enforcers were warriors whose approach could be geared more towards an offensive style, defensive style, or employing crowd control tactics. Specialists provided field support as medics, saboteurs who disarmed traps, or in other miscellaneous roles.[37]

French Brotherhood system[edit | edit source]

The French Brotherhood utilized a similar system of nine classes which recognized a wide range of operational styles. Derived from four parameters, combat, stealth, parkour, and tactics (i.e. relying on tools), eight of the classes corresponded to either one of these specializations or was a hybrid of two; the ninth was a generalist field that encompassed all in equal measure as a jack of all trades. These classes are as follows:[8][35]

  • Prowlers who focused all their training on mastering the art of social stealth relied almost exclusively on slow and steady, low-profile assassinations rather than the swift, high-profile assassinations of popular imagination.
  • Brawlers, being combat purists, were akin to the Enforcers of the Spanish Brotherhood. An exception to the stealth ethos of the Assassins, Brawlers engaged in direct combat equipped with heavy plate and mail armor and often a heavy weapon such as a two-handed sword. Their role was to defend their comrades as a tank or create a diversion with their own presence.
  • Daredevils who mastered freerunning exclusively took a pacifistic approach where their speed and navigational expertise facilitated swift entries and getaways without ever engaging with hostiles.
  • Tricksters were essentially snipers armed with a musket or rifle to shoot enemies from afar. Much like archers of an older age, they provided long range cover for their squad mates, cleared rooftops of enemies, or performed assassinations from a safe distance.
  • Infilitrators were those who employed the traditional methods iconic with the Assassins: a fast-paced yet meticulous fusion of parkour and stealth for swift and precise assassinations. These Assassins had to be able to rapidly shift between the demands of remaining undetected and acting quickly and efficiently as the situation develops.
  • Rioters were what the French Brotherhood called those who relied upon guerrilla warfare. They sprung from hiding to ambush enemies in berserker-like fashion before merging back into the environment.
  • Tormentors were so-called because they sowed chaos in their enemies by manipulating the environment from the shadows. They relied upon gadgets such as bombs and the Phantom Blade to rain confusion and strike terror of an impending yet undetectable danger looming around them.
  • Handlers were soldiers with light equipment, such as a single cuirass, a sword, and a pistol who fought conventionally against enemies.

These classes were not necessarily rigid, serving more as templates which permitted flexibility to accommodate the unique skills and sensibilities of French Assassins. They illustrate that although mainstream Assassin methodology mandated discretion, there has historically been a recognition of the need for specialized roles which did not conform strictly with the classical approach. Exceptions were allowed for Assassins to be battle specialists, such as the Spanish Enforcers or French Brawlers, who confronted enemies aggressively and directly, particularly as part of a larger strategem to divert attention away from fellow Assassins in charge of stealth infiltration.[8] Such tactics were not unprecedented and were akin to the way mercenaries were hired and employed by the Italian Brotherhood.[30][1]

Burial system[edit | edit source]

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

For all assassination targets, unless circumstances prevented, Assassins would give them their last rites after they had passed away. Early in his career as an Assassin, Ezio Auditore was reprimanded by his uncle Mario for disrespecting the corpse of his target and longtime rival Vieri de' Pazzi, instilling in him a respect for the dead.[1]

Expulsion and Reinstatement[edit | edit source]

It is possible for members of the Order to be expelled for various reasons, including but not limited to breaking the tenents of the Creed. In such situations, the Assassin Council could call for a vote of expulsion. After being expelled, the Assassin would be stripped of their rank and exiled from the Brotherhood.

The Assassin Arno Dorian was expelled from the Order, after he had defied the Council's orders, performed several assassinations without the Council's consent and in their words "flouted the Creed at every step". Arno would be welcomed back into the Order, however, after he later reformed and demonstrated true fidelity to the Creed.[8]

In cases of extreme disregard for the Creed's tenets, an expelled member may further become the target of assassination by their former comrades, such examples being Perotto Calderon for the theft of the Shroud of Eden, and Shay Cormac for the theft of the Voynich manuscript.

Trivia[edit | edit source]

  • In the High Middle Ages, an Assassin would prove one's target had been slain by dipping a white feather in their target's blood. This practice had fallen out of use by the Renaissance, but appeared to have been revived by the Victorian Era. Both Jacob and Evie Frye engaged in the practice, though they used white handkerchiefs rather than feathers.
  • Rebecca Crane noted that both the Assassin and Templar Orders had existed since before the formation of the Hashshashin and Order of the Knights Templar respectively, and queried what the two organizations called themselves beforehand.[38]
    • However, such an instance of the Assassins' earlier name is known: the Roman Assassins called themselves Liberalis Circulum, Latin for Circle of Liberals.
    • Historically, the Hashashin were a sect of radical Persian Shia Muslims who, under Hassan-i Sabbāh, were said to be given a drug called hashish, under the influence of which they experienced "the Garden of Paradise". In exchange, they were expected to murder Sabbah's religious and political rivals, and due to the euphoria they experienced as an effect of the drug, they became unwaveringly loyal to Sabbah.
    • The word Hashashin also gave rise to the word 'assassin'.
    • The first and the third tenets of the Creed are mostly based upon the sayings of Islam. The first tenet of not to kill innocents matches with many hadeeths and verses of the Quran. The third and last tenet of the Creed, compromising the Brotherhood, refers to waging war against God in Islam and breaking the trust of other people. In both the Brotherhood and Islam, the punishment for violating these rulings is death.

Appearances[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  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 Assassin's Creed II
  2. Assassin's Creed: Origins
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Assassin's Creed: Revelations
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Assassin's Creed: The Fall
  5. Assassin's Creed: Project LegacyRome: Chapter 2 – Giovanni Borgia
  6. Assassin's Creed 3: Accipiter
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Assassin's Creed: Syndicate
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 8.7 8.8 Assassin's Creed: Unity
  9. 9.00 9.01 9.02 9.03 9.04 9.05 9.06 9.07 9.08 9.09 9.10 9.11 9.12 9.13 9.14 9.15 9.16 9.17 9.18 9.19 Assassin's Creed
  10. Although the organization is irreligious and professes to an agnostic philosophy, Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad and Arno Dorian described the creed in strongly atheist terms as well, having specifically been agnostic atheists. Despite this, individual members may practice various faiths—an example being Luis de Santángel who was a Jew.
  11. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsThe Guardian, Part 2
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 Assassin's Creed: OriginsThe Aftermath
  13. Assassin's Creed: OriginsBayek's Promise
  14. Assassin's Creed: OriginsThe False Oracle
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 15.4 15.5 15.6 15.7 Assassin's Creed IIAltaïr Ibn-La'Ahad's Codex
  16. Assassin's Creed IIPower to the People
  17. 17.0 17.1 Assassin's Creed: The Movie
  18. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagNothing Is True...
  19. Assassin's Creed IIIFather and Son
  20. Assassin's Creed: RogueWe the People
  21. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsA Homecoming
  22. Assassin's Creed: OriginsThe Empirical Truth
  23. 23.0 23.1 23.2 Assassin's Creed: Forsaken
  24. Assassin's Creed IIILee's Last Stand
  25. Assassin's CreedAssassination (Al Mualim)
  26. Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag...Everything Is Permitted
  27. 27.0 27.1 Assassin's Creed: Embers
  28. 28.0 28.1 28.2 28.3 28.4 28.5 Assassin's Creed III
  29. 29.0 29.1 Assassin's Creed: Rogue
  30. 30.0 30.1 30.2 30.3 30.4 30.5 30.6 Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood
  31. Assassin's Creed: Altaïr's Chronicles
  32. 32.0 32.1 32.2 Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy
  33. 33.0 33.1 Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag
  34. Assassin's Creed: The Fall - Issue #2
  35. 35.0 35.1 Assassin's Creed: Initiates
  36. Assassin's Creed: Identity
  37. Assassin's Creed: Rebellion
  38. Assassin's Creed: SyndicateDatabase: The Assassin Brotherhood