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{{Era|AC2|ACB}}
{{Era|Locations}}{{WP-REAL}}
{{WP-REAL|Forlì}}
{{Quote|Take it to Forlì. The citadel's walls are protected by cannons and our ally controls it.|Mario Auditore about Forlì, 1488.|Assassin's Creed II|Play Along}}
{{WPlocations}}
{{Revamp}}
 
{{Location infobox
{{Location infobox
|name     = Forlì
|name = Forlì
|image     = forligatephoto.png
|image = Forli high.jpg
|imgdesc  =
|state = Forlì
|hidep    = No
|rulers = [[House of Sforza]]
|state     = Forlì
|founded = {{Wiki|Gaius Livius Salinator}}
|rulers   = [[Caterina Sforza]]
|date = 188 BCE
|factions  =  
|landmark = *[[Abbey of San Mercuriale|Abbazia di San Mercuriale]]
|hideh    = No
*[[Avamposto Veneziano]]
|founded  = Gaius Livius Salinator
*[[Palazzo Comunale (Forlì)|Palazzo Comunale]]
|date     = 188 B.C.
*[[Rocca di Ravaldino]]
|abandoned =
|hidea    = No
|landmark = *[[Palazzo Comunale (Forlì)|Palazzo Comunale]]
*[[Abbazia di San Mercuriale]]
|flags    =
|targets  = *[[Checco Orsi]]
*[[Ludovico Orsi]]
}}
}}
[[Forlì]] was a city in the region of [[Romagna]], and the home of [[Caterina Sforza]]. It was the location of the [[Battle of Forlì]]. It is surrounded by lots of marsh lands containing a few buildings scattered around.
'''Forlì''' is an [[Italy|Italian]] city located in the region of [[Romagna]] and the capital of the province of {{Wiki|Province of Forlì-Cesena|Forlì-Cesena}}. During the [[Renaissance]], it was the site of an eponymous battle, the [[Battle of Forlì]].


==History==
==History==
===Early development===
===Early development===
Database entry: ''Founded in 798,000 B.C.E. by Paleolithic cavemen who were interested in flint manufacturing, Forlì was an industrial center ever since. The name comes from the Romans (Forum Livii) who built the city in 188 B.C.E. along the Via Aemilia, one of several roads they laid after pacifying the Gauls in the region. After Roman rule, it went from Lombard hands into Church hands and then became an independant republic in 889, infuriating the Vatican, which spent the next 400 years trying to get it back.<ref name="ac2">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]''</ref>''
Forlì's immediate surroundings contain evidence of early [[human]] habitation in the form of [[flint]] {{Wiki|knapping}} fragments from the nearby Ca' Belvedere di {{Wiki|Monte Poggiolo}} that date to around 798,000 BCE in the {{Wiki|Paleolithic}} era,<ref>Peretto, Carlo (January/February 2006). "The first peopling of southern Europe: the Italian case", ''Comptes Rendus Palevol'', '''5'''(1–2). [[Paris]], {{Wiki|National Museum of Natural History, France|National Museum of Natural History}}. pg. 283–290. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.crpv.2005.11.006. Retrieved 14 August 2025.</ref> though this is hardly evidence of the later industrial city being properly "founded" as the [[Assassins|Assassin]] historian [[Shaun Hastings]] once sarcastically commented.<ref name="Database">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'' – [[Database: Forlì (Assassin's Creed II)|Database: Forlì]]</ref><ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Identity]] – [[Forlì – A Crimson Sunset]]'' – [[Database: Forlì (Identity)|Database: Forlì]]</ref>


''On top of [[Rome]]'s constant manipulations, Forlì had to deal with a steady stream of Goth, Byzantine, Lombard and Frank marauders for the next few centuries, along with annual flooding, which was finally brought under control by diverting nearby rivers away from the city's center in 1050.<ref name="ac2">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]''</ref>''
Forlì's name is derived from the [[Rome|Romans]], who built the city named "''Forum Livii''" in 188 BCE along the ''{{Wiki|Via Aemilia}}'', one of several roads they laid after pacifying the local {{Wiki|Gauls}} as part of the regular {{Wiki|Roman–Gallic wars}}. After the [[Roman Republic|Roman rule]], it went from {{Wiki|Lombards|Lombard}} hands into [[church]] control. It became an independent republic in 889, infuriating the [[Vatican]], which spent the next 400 years trying to regain control over the city.<ref name="Database" />


''Like most independent republics, Forlì became a military dictatorship at the end of the 13th Century and then was passed to the Ordelaffi family. In 1480, with the Ordelaffi fighting amongst themselves over the chain of succession, the Pope stepped in and gave the city to his nephew, Girolamo Riario. But things didn't really go as planned for the Pope: when Girolamo was killed, the city passed to his wife, Caterina Sforza, the Amazon of Forlì, who fought tooth and nail to prevent the Vatican from taking control. Ultimately, however, Caterina was vanquished and Forlì passed into Church hands.<ref name="ac2">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]''</ref>''
===Middle Ages and early Renaissance===
Along with Rome's constant machinations, Forlì faced a steady stream of Goth, [[Byzantine Empire|Byzantine]], Lombard, and Frank marauders for the next few centuries. In addition, it faced annual flooding, which was finally brought under control by diverting nearby rivers away from the city center in 1050.<ref name="Database" />


==Memories==
Forlì became a military dictatorship at the end of the 13th century and power was then was passed to the Ordelaffi family. In 1480, with the Ordelaffi fighting amongst themselves over the chain of succession, [[Papacy|Pope]] [[Sixtus IV]] stepped in and gave the city to his nephew, [[Girolamo Riario]].<ref name="Database" /> In 1481, the [[Italian Brotherhood of Assassins|Italian Assassin]] [[Ezio Auditore da Firenze|Ezio Auditore]] visited Forlì while ''en route'' to [[Venice]] with [[Leonardo da Vinci]]. During the visit, Ezio rescued the countess [[Caterina Sforza]], Riario's wife, from a small island<ref>''Assassin's Creed II'' – [[Tutti a Bordo]]</ref> where Riario had intentionally stranded her after an argument.<ref name="Renaissance">''[[Assassin's Creed: Renaissance]]''</ref>


====Side-trip to Forlì====
===Battle of Forlì===
By the 15th century, Forlì was ruled by [[Girolamo Riario]], and was a part of [[Venice]]'s coastal defense network. [[Leonardo da Vinci]] and his friend [[Ezio Auditore da Firenze]] stopped in Forlì on their way to [[Venice]]. It was during this time that Ezio befriended [[Caterina Sforza]].<ref name="ac2memory">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'' - [[Tutti a Bordo]]</ref>
{{Main|Battle of Forlì}}
[[File:Godfather 2.png|thumb|250px|left|Checco and Ludovico threatening Ezio and Caterina]]
In 1488, Caterina hired the Orsi brothers, [[Checco Orsi|Checco]] and [[Ludovico Orsi|Ludovico]], to [[Assassination|assassinate]] Riario. At the time, Riario had joined the [[Roman Rite of the Templar Order|Italian Templars]] and had been developing a map of the fabled [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad's Codex|Codex]] pages' purported locations.<ref name="A Warm Welcome">''Assassin's Creed II – [[Battle of Forlì (DLC)|Battle of Forlì]]'' [[A Warm Welcome]]</ref>


====Battle of Forlì====
Later, in July 1488, Ezio returned to Forlì along with [[Niccolò Machiavelli]], intending to make the city's castle, the [[Rocca di Ravaldino]], a safe haven for the [[Apple of Eden 6|Apple of Eden]] he had obtained from [[Rodrigo Borgia]]. However, before the Apple could be secured, the Orsi brothers, working on behalf of the [[House of Borgia|Borgia]], seized not only Forlì,<ref name="A Warm Welcome" /> but also Caterina's two young children, [[Bianca Riario|Bianca]] and [[Ottaviano Riario|Ottaviano]]. The Orsi brothers held them as hostages, intending to trade the children for the Apple.<ref name="Godfather">''Assassin's Creed II – Battle of Forlì'' – [[Godfather]]</ref>
[[File:Threatsforza.jpg|thumb|298px|Checco and Ludovico threatening Ezio and Caterina.]]
{{Main|Battle of Forlì}}
Ezio returned to Forlì after obtaining the [[Ezio's Apple|Apple of Eden]] from [[Rodrigo Borgia]]. Here the [[Assassins]] agreed the Apple would be hidden in Forlì, but before the Apple could be secured the mercenary [[Orsi Brothers|Orsi brothers]], working on behalf of the [[House of Borgia]], seized not only Forlì but Caterina's two young children.<ref name="battle"/>


Ezio was able to save the Sforza children and kill the Orsi brothers, but was himself badly wounded by a dagger wielded by [[Checco Orsi]]. In the confusion a [[Girolamo Savonarola|black robed monk]] who was missing a finger was able to steal the Apple of Eden that Ezio held.<ref name="battle"/>
During the battle, Caterina was forced to order the [[cannon]]s to fire at Orsi troops inside the town walls. As a result, parts of the city were destroyed.<ref name="Renaissance"/> Meanwhile, Ezio was able to save the Sforza children and slay Ludovico easily,<ref name="Godfather" /> but Checco used the distraction to launch another attack and steal the Apple. Ezio went to recover the artifact and was badly wounded when Checco stabbed him with a [[Short blade|dagger]].<ref name="Checcomate">''Assassin's Creed II – Battle of Forlì'' – [[Checcomate]]</ref>


Caterina nursed Ezio back to health at the [[Palazzo Comunale (Forlì)|Palazzo Communale]]. Ezio learned from [[Darby O'Callahan]] and the monks of the [[Abbazia di San Mercuriale]] that the thief was Dominican friar [[Girolamo Savonarola]], whom Ezio tracked down to [[Florence]].<ref name="battle"/>
Despite his injury, Ezio managed to kill Checco and reclaim the artifact, but later succumbed to blood loss and fainted on the roadside. In the confusion that ensued, a black-robed [[monk]] found and stole the Apple still clutched in Ezio's hand.<ref name="Checcomate"/>


In the early 21st century, [[Abstergo Industries]], a front for the [[Templars]], used one of the many districts in Forlì as a simulated training ground for their recruits.
[[File:Checcomate 6.png|thumb|250px|Caterina treating an injured Ezio]]
Following the battle, Caterina nursed Ezio back to health at the [[Palazzo Comunale (Forlì)|Palazzo Communale]].<ref name="Checcomate" /> Ezio learned from [[Darby O'Callahan]] and the monks of the [[Abbey of San Mercuriale]] that the man who had stolen the Apple was a [[Dominican Order|Dominican]] friar by the name of [[Girolamo Savonarola]],<ref>''Assassin's Creed II'' – ''Battle of Forlì'' – [[Far From the Tree]]</ref> whom Ezio eventually [[Bonfire of the Vanities|tracked down and killed]] in [[Florence]], allowing him to reclaim the artifact.<ref>''Assassin's Creed II'' – ''[[Bonfire of the Vanities (DLC)|Bonfire of the Vanities]]'' – [[Mob Justice]]</ref>


==Landmarks==
===Papal rule===
Forlì's architecture is characterized by comparatively small buildings, greyish stonework, and flat rooftops and several guard towers.
After the battle, Forlì fell solely in the hands of Caterina, who fought to prevent the Vatican from re-taking control.<ref name="Database Caterina">''Assassin's Creed II'' – [[Database: Caterina Sforza (Assassin's Creed II)|Database: Caterina Sforza]]</ref> Ultimately, however, [[Cesare Borgia]] conquered Forli by taking the wider Romagna region,<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]'' – [[New Man in Town]]</ref> and had Caterina captured during the [[siege of Monteriggioni]]<ref>''Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood'' – [[Vilified]]</ref> and brought to the [[Castel Sant'Angelo]] in Rome as a prisoner.<ref>''Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood'' – [[Castello Crasher]]</ref> With Ezio's help,<ref>''Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood'' – [[Femme Fatale]]</ref> the Countess escaped confinement,<ref>''Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood'' – [[The Burdens We Carry]]</ref> but she was exiled to Florence, where she died of pneumonia within the decade.<ref name="Database Caterina"/>


*[[Rocca di Ravaldino]] was the heavily walled and cannoned fortress of Forlì, a citadel of strategic importance to the defense of the city. The [[Piece of Eden|Apple of Eden]] was briefly held here for safekeeping upon its recovery by the [[Assassins|Assassins' Order]]. It serves as a [[Secret Location]].
With Cesare having taken the land for the [[Papacy]], his death in 1507 during his [[Siege of Viana|siege]] of the [[Spain|Spanish]] town [[Viana]]<ref>''Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood'' – [[Pax Romana]]</ref> meant that Forlì returned to Church possession despite Ottaviano's attempts to reclaim it from Pope [[Julius II]].<ref>{{WP|Ottaviano Riario}}</ref>
*[[Avamposto Veneziano]]
*[[Abbazia di San Mercuriale]]
*[[ Palazzo Comunale|Palazzo Comunale]]


==Assassination Targets==
===Modern times===
*[[Ludovico Orsi]]: The captor of [[Ottaviano Riario]] (DNA Sequence 12: Battle of Forlì)
In 2012, [[Abstergo Industries]] used Forlì as a simulated training location during the [[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood|first]] stage of their [[Animi Training Program]]. The simulation depicted the Abbazia di San Mercuriale and the surrounding area, which contained mostly housing, some of it in poor state, as well as plenty of market stalls. Forlì's streets were mostly spacious and long, with little alleyways connecting the more open areas, of which one was dedicated to the keeping of [[horse]]s, with several [[stable]]s present, as well as [[Hiding spots|haystacks]] and watering troughs. Due to the low tide, the city drains were empty of water, turning one of the city's wells into a possible escape route. Forlì was not programmed to have aesthetic variations. As a result, it could only be used during the day.<ref name="Multiplayer">''Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood'' – [[Multiplayer/ACBH|Multiplayer]]</ref>
*[[Checco Orsi]]: Responsible for stealing the Apple (DNA Sequence 12: Battle of Forlì)


==Trivia==
In 2016, Abstergo's subsidiary [[Abstergo Entertainment]] reused Forlì as a simulated location for their [[Identity Project]]. Like most of the simulated locations in the Project, Forlì had two aesthetic variations, and as such could be utilized during a siege or at dusk.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Identity]]'' [[Contracts (Identity Project)|Contracts]]</ref>
*Caterina Sforza, who is featured in the game, was Countess of Forlì from 1480 until 1500. Her legendary quotes are featured in the Battle of Forlì DLC. In 1488, her husband, Girolamo Riario, was assassinated in a conspiracy led by the [[House of Orsi|Orsi]], a noble family of the city, and she and her children were made prisoners. Since the fortress of Ravaldino refused to surrender, Caterina offered to go to convince the Castellan, Tommaso Feo, to yield. The Orsinis believed the good intentions of Caterina because she left her children as hostages, but once inside the safety of the fortress, she let loose a barrage of threats and promises of vengeance against her former captors. When they threatened to kill her still-captive children, she exposed her genitals from the fortress walls saying: "''Ho con me lo stampo per farne degli altri!''" (I have the instrument to bear more!). With an action of flashing her skirt to hint.<ref name="wikipedia">Wikipedia article on [[wikipedia:Forlì|Forlì]]</ref>
*Forlì was a very provincial town, but the Fortress of Forlì was one of the most fortified citadels in [[Italy]], one that was protected by numerous, very large cannons.<ref name="wikipedia"/> In ''[[Assassin's Creed: Renaissance]]'', when the [[Orsi Brothers]] attack Forlì, Caterina Sforza is forced to order the cannons to fire at enemy targets inside the town walls. As a result, parts of the city were destroyed.
*It is in Forlì that the player can [[customization|dye]] Ezio's robes with the tints "Wetlands Ebony" and "Wetlands Ivory" to achieve the "[[Assassin's Creed II Achievements#Perfect Harmony|Perfect Harmony]]" Trophy/[[Achievement]].
*After completing the [[Battle of Forlì]], the [[Flying Machine]] may be used in Forlì at any time.<ref name="battle">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'' - [[Battle of Forlì (DLC)]]</ref> It is located at the lighthouse on the north east of the map.


==References==
==Behind the scenes==
{{reflist}}
In ''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'', Forlì is depicted as being directly on the coastline. In reality, it is several kilometers away from any large bodies of water. Forlì also serves as the main setting of ''[[Assassin's Creed: Identity]]''{{'}}s [[Assassin's Creed: Identity downloadable content|downloadable]] expansion ''[[Forlì – A Crimson Sunset]]'', which depicts an alternate version of the Battle of Forlì. However, since this version of the conflict is set after the Siege of Monteriggioni and is drastically different from the one seen in ''Assassin's Creed II'', it is considered non-canon.


==Gallery==
==Gallery==
<gallery captionalign="left">
<tabber>
2323 480x270.jpg|Ezio firing his hidden gun in the Rocca di Ravaldino
|-|Concept art=
Scan0007-1.jpg|Map of Forlì and surrounding areas
<gallery captionalign="center" position="center" widths="180">
www.totalvideogames.com_AC2_S_084_Wetlands_ToeChop_69741__size_655_1500.jpg|Ezio fighting in the countryside just outside Forlì
AC2 forli concept.png|Concept art of Forlì
z_9e84395f.jpg|Map of Forlì for ''Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood'' multiplayer.
Christian-schob-forli-battle-mood-thumb.jpg|Concept art of Forlì
Christian-schob-image-location-forli-battle-mood-thumb1.jpg|Concept art of Forlì
Christian-schob-image-location-forli-battle-mood-thumb2.jpg|Concept art of Forlì
Christian-schob-image-location-forli-battle-mood-thumb3.jpg|Concept art of Forlì
The Nest of the Bird.png|Concept art of an Assassin in Forlì
A Grey Sky.png|Concept art of the Battle of Forlì
</gallery>
|-|Screenshots=
<gallery captionalign="center" position="center" widths="180">
Scan0007-1.jpg|Map of Forlì in ''Assassin's Creed II''
AC2 Map Forli.png|An [[Animus]] map of Forlì
ACI Map Forli.png|Map of Forlì in ''Assassin's Creed: Identity''
Forli outer walls.png|Forlì's outer walls
Bodyguard 4.png|Forlì being invaded by enemy troops
Forli - multiplayer.jpg|A simulation of Forlì
ACBMP Aerial View Forli.jpg|An aerial view of the Forlì map used in the Animi Training Program, with [[chase breakers]] marked
Hidden gun in multiplayer.jpg|The [[Prowler]] shooting the [[Barber]] from afar with the [[Hidden Gun]]
Multiplayer New 2.jpg|The [[Captain]], having thrown down a [[Bombs#Smoke bombs|smoke bomb]], attempts to escape the [[Harlequin]]
ACII DB Forlì.png|Database image of Forlì in ''Assassin's Creed II''
An Unexpected Summon.png|Database image of Forlì in ''Identity''
</gallery>
</gallery>
</tabber>
==Appearances==
*''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'' {{1st}}
**''[[Battle of Forlì (DLC)|Battle of Forlì]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Renaissance]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]'' {{Mo}}
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Identity]]'' – ''[[Forlì - A Crimson Sunset]]'' {{C|non-canon}}


{{ACII}}
==References==
[[Category:Assassin's Creed II Locations]]
{{Reflist}}
[[Category:Italy]]
{{AC2}}
[[Category:Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood Multiplayer Locations]]
{{ACID}}
[[Category:Cities of Europe]]
<!--[de:Forlì]
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[fr:Forlì]
[hu:Forlì]
[it:Forlì]
[nl:Forlì]
[pl:Forlì]
[pt-br:Forlì]
[ru:Форли]
[zh:弗利]-->
[[Category:Cities in Italy]]
[[Category:Forlì| ]]
[[Category:Animi virtual locations]]
[[Category:Primary stage locations]]
[[Category:Cities in Ancient Rome]]

Latest revision as of 15:05, 28 May 2026

"Take it to Forlì. The citadel's walls are protected by cannons and our ally controls it."
―Mario Auditore about Forlì, 1488.[src]-[m]

Forlì is an Italian city located in the region of Romagna and the capital of the province of Forlì-Cesena. During the Renaissance, it was the site of an eponymous battle, the Battle of Forlì.

History[edit | edit source]

Early development[edit | edit source]

Forlì's immediate surroundings contain evidence of early human habitation in the form of flint knapping fragments from the nearby Ca' Belvedere di Monte Poggiolo that date to around 798,000 BCE in the Paleolithic era,[1] though this is hardly evidence of the later industrial city being properly "founded" as the Assassin historian Shaun Hastings once sarcastically commented.[2][3]

Forlì's name is derived from the Romans, who built the city named "Forum Livii" in 188 BCE along the Via Aemilia, one of several roads they laid after pacifying the local Gauls as part of the regular Roman–Gallic wars. After the Roman rule, it went from Lombard hands into church control. It became an independent republic in 889, infuriating the Vatican, which spent the next 400 years trying to regain control over the city.[2]

Middle Ages and early Renaissance[edit | edit source]

Along with Rome's constant machinations, Forlì faced a steady stream of Goth, Byzantine, Lombard, and Frank marauders for the next few centuries. In addition, it faced annual flooding, which was finally brought under control by diverting nearby rivers away from the city center in 1050.[2]

Forlì became a military dictatorship at the end of the 13th century and power was then was passed to the Ordelaffi family. In 1480, with the Ordelaffi fighting amongst themselves over the chain of succession, Pope Sixtus IV stepped in and gave the city to his nephew, Girolamo Riario.[2] In 1481, the Italian Assassin Ezio Auditore visited Forlì while en route to Venice with Leonardo da Vinci. During the visit, Ezio rescued the countess Caterina Sforza, Riario's wife, from a small island[4] where Riario had intentionally stranded her after an argument.[5]

Battle of Forlì[edit | edit source]

Main article: Battle of Forlì
Checco and Ludovico threatening Ezio and Caterina

In 1488, Caterina hired the Orsi brothers, Checco and Ludovico, to assassinate Riario. At the time, Riario had joined the Italian Templars and had been developing a map of the fabled Codex pages' purported locations.[6]

Later, in July 1488, Ezio returned to Forlì along with Niccolò Machiavelli, intending to make the city's castle, the Rocca di Ravaldino, a safe haven for the Apple of Eden he had obtained from Rodrigo Borgia. However, before the Apple could be secured, the Orsi brothers, working on behalf of the Borgia, seized not only Forlì,[6] but also Caterina's two young children, Bianca and Ottaviano. The Orsi brothers held them as hostages, intending to trade the children for the Apple.[7]

During the battle, Caterina was forced to order the cannons to fire at Orsi troops inside the town walls. As a result, parts of the city were destroyed.[5] Meanwhile, Ezio was able to save the Sforza children and slay Ludovico easily,[7] but Checco used the distraction to launch another attack and steal the Apple. Ezio went to recover the artifact and was badly wounded when Checco stabbed him with a dagger.[8]

Despite his injury, Ezio managed to kill Checco and reclaim the artifact, but later succumbed to blood loss and fainted on the roadside. In the confusion that ensued, a black-robed monk found and stole the Apple still clutched in Ezio's hand.[8]

Caterina treating an injured Ezio

Following the battle, Caterina nursed Ezio back to health at the Palazzo Communale.[8] Ezio learned from Darby O'Callahan and the monks of the Abbey of San Mercuriale that the man who had stolen the Apple was a Dominican friar by the name of Girolamo Savonarola,[9] whom Ezio eventually tracked down and killed in Florence, allowing him to reclaim the artifact.[10]

Papal rule[edit | edit source]

After the battle, Forlì fell solely in the hands of Caterina, who fought to prevent the Vatican from re-taking control.[11] Ultimately, however, Cesare Borgia conquered Forli by taking the wider Romagna region,[12] and had Caterina captured during the siege of Monteriggioni[13] and brought to the Castel Sant'Angelo in Rome as a prisoner.[14] With Ezio's help,[15] the Countess escaped confinement,[16] but she was exiled to Florence, where she died of pneumonia within the decade.[11]

With Cesare having taken the land for the Papacy, his death in 1507 during his siege of the Spanish town Viana[17] meant that Forlì returned to Church possession despite Ottaviano's attempts to reclaim it from Pope Julius II.[18]

Modern times[edit | edit source]

In 2012, Abstergo Industries used Forlì as a simulated training location during the first stage of their Animi Training Program. The simulation depicted the Abbazia di San Mercuriale and the surrounding area, which contained mostly housing, some of it in poor state, as well as plenty of market stalls. Forlì's streets were mostly spacious and long, with little alleyways connecting the more open areas, of which one was dedicated to the keeping of horses, with several stables present, as well as haystacks and watering troughs. Due to the low tide, the city drains were empty of water, turning one of the city's wells into a possible escape route. Forlì was not programmed to have aesthetic variations. As a result, it could only be used during the day.[19]

In 2016, Abstergo's subsidiary Abstergo Entertainment reused Forlì as a simulated location for their Identity Project. Like most of the simulated locations in the Project, Forlì had two aesthetic variations, and as such could be utilized during a siege or at dusk.[20]

Behind the scenes[edit | edit source]

In Assassin's Creed II, Forlì is depicted as being directly on the coastline. In reality, it is several kilometers away from any large bodies of water. Forlì also serves as the main setting of Assassin's Creed: Identity's downloadable expansion Forlì – A Crimson Sunset, which depicts an alternate version of the Battle of Forlì. However, since this version of the conflict is set after the Siege of Monteriggioni and is drastically different from the one seen in Assassin's Creed II, it is considered non-canon.

Gallery[edit | edit source]

Appearances[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. Peretto, Carlo (January/February 2006). "The first peopling of southern Europe: the Italian case", Comptes Rendus Palevol, 5(1–2). Paris, National Museum of Natural History. pg. 283–290. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.crpv.2005.11.006. Retrieved 14 August 2025.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Assassin's Creed IIDatabase: Forlì
  3. Assassin's Creed: IdentityForlì – A Crimson SunsetDatabase: Forlì
  4. Assassin's Creed IITutti a Bordo
  5. 5.0 5.1 Assassin's Creed: Renaissance
  6. 6.0 6.1 Assassin's Creed II – Battle of ForlìA Warm Welcome
  7. 7.0 7.1 Assassin's Creed II – Battle of ForlìGodfather
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 Assassin's Creed II – Battle of ForlìCheccomate
  9. Assassin's Creed IIBattle of ForlìFar From the Tree
  10. Assassin's Creed IIBonfire of the VanitiesMob Justice
  11. 11.0 11.1 Assassin's Creed IIDatabase: Caterina Sforza
  12. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodNew Man in Town
  13. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodVilified
  14. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodCastello Crasher
  15. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodFemme Fatale
  16. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodThe Burdens We Carry
  17. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodPax Romana
  18. Ottaviano Riario on Wikipedia
  19. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodMultiplayer
  20. Assassin's Creed: IdentityContracts