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{{Era|LD|Assassins}}
{{Era|Individuals|Assassins}}
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{{Character Infobox
'''Kang''' was the [[China|Chinese]] [[Mentor]] of the [[Assassin Brotherhood]], active during the 13th century.  
|image=Wiki noimage.jpg
|active=1259<br>[[Song dynasty|Southern Song]]
|species=[[Human]]
|affiliates=[[Assassins]]
*[[Chinese Brotherhood of Assassins|Chinese Brotherhood]]
}}
'''Kang''' was the [[Mentor]] of the [[Chinese Brotherhood of Assassins|Chinese Brotherhood]] of [[Assassins]] during the twilight years of the [[Song dynasty]] as it desperately tried to hold off the [[Mongol Empire]].


At some point, Kang trained [[Zhang Zhi's father|an officer]] of the army of the Song Dynasty. After his death during the siege of the Daioyu Fortress in 1259, he also trained the officer's daughter, the vengeful [[Zhang Zhi]], to assassinate the [[Mongol Empire|Mongol invaders]]' leader, [[Möngke Khan]].
==Biography==
Among Kang's [[Assassin apprentices|disciples]] was a [[Zhang Zhi's father|man]] who simultaneously served as an officer in the Song army. After the apprentice fell at the [[Siege of Diaoyu Castle|Siege]] of [[Diaoyu Castle]] in 1259,<ref name="CH5">''[[Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants – Tomb of the Khan]]'' – Chapter Five</ref> Kang adopted his daughter [[Zhang Zhi]] into the Assassin Brotherhood despite his fears that her drive may be fueled by a lust for revenge.<ref name="CH6">''[[Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants – Tomb of the Khan]]'' – Chapter Six</ref> Accordingly, he pressed on her to always prioritize duty over vengeance, but later that year, she defied his orders and infiltrated the camp of [[Möngke Khan]]. Though she successfully assassinated the Great Khan, she was critically injured during her escape back to the fortress.<ref name="CH9">''[[Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants – Tomb of the Khan]]'' – Chapter Nine</ref>


== References ==
Recognizing that Zhi was forever crippled, Kang used this as a pretext to declare that she could never hope to be inducted into the Assassin Brotherhood. The true reason, however, was that he felt that her defiance in the name of vengeance disqualified her on ethical grounds. With that, he abandoned her to whatever her life was to take her next.<ref name="CH14">''[[Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants – Tomb of the Khan]]'' – Chapter Fourteen</ref>
* ''[[Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants - Tomb of the Khan]]''
 
[[Category:Chinese]]
==Personality and traits==
Unlike other Assassins in history, notably those of the [[Italian Brotherhood of Assassins|Italian Brotherhood]] who trained the legendary [[Ezio Auditore da Firenze]],<ref name="AC2">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]''</ref> Kang subscribed far more strictly to the ideal that vengeance is unbecoming of an Assassin.<ref name="CH6"/> Whereas Ezio's teachers tolerated his vindicative quest and, in Ezio's own words, guided him to learn to mature past it over time,<ref name="AC2" /> Kang saw vengeance as the unforgivable, bottom line. In his philosophy, vengeance was an irrevocable dereliction of one's duty as an Assassin, the ultimate proof that an individual lacked the moral discipline to be worthy of the name.<ref name="CH9"/>
 
As a result, he was suspicious of his apprentice Zhang Zhi from the start, from the sheer understanding that her passion for learning would be driven by the death of her father.<ref name="CH9"/> When she assassinated the khagan against his own commands, in this eyes, this critical victory was not enough to justify her disobedience. The intention and motive behind her deed weighed just as heavily to him, if not more, than the consequence, even if that consequence was the death of a dangerous enemy whose leadership threatened all of China. Being an Assassin to him meant cultivating strict, moral discipline, and Zhi's actions, though beneficial, proved to him that she was not ethically qualified to continue serving the Brotherhood.<ref name="CH14"/>
 
Consequently, Kang stood in contrast to not just Ezio's teachers of the Italian Brotherhood, but also to the Neo-Confucian Mentor [[Wang Yangming]]. While they all disapproved of vengeance as antithetical to an Assassin's character, the Italian Assassins and Yangming possessed the patience to see their apprentices learn to grow past the mentality through firsthand experience.<ref name="AC2" /><ref name="ACCC">''[[Assassin's Creed Chronicles: China]]''</ref>
 
==Appearances==
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants Tomb of the Khan]]''
 
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{ACLD}}
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[[Category:Individuals]]
[[Category:Individuals]]
[[Category:Song people]]
[[Category:Han Chinese]]
[[Category:Assassins]]
[[Category:Assassins]]
[[Category:Chinese Assassins]]
[[Category:Chinese Assassins]]
[[Category:Mentors]]
[[Category:Mentors]]

Latest revision as of 03:12, 14 May 2026

Kang was the Mentor of the Chinese Brotherhood of Assassins during the twilight years of the Song dynasty as it desperately tried to hold off the Mongol Empire.

Biography[edit | edit source]

Among Kang's disciples was a man who simultaneously served as an officer in the Song army. After the apprentice fell at the Siege of Diaoyu Castle in 1259,[1] Kang adopted his daughter Zhang Zhi into the Assassin Brotherhood despite his fears that her drive may be fueled by a lust for revenge.[2] Accordingly, he pressed on her to always prioritize duty over vengeance, but later that year, she defied his orders and infiltrated the camp of Möngke Khan. Though she successfully assassinated the Great Khan, she was critically injured during her escape back to the fortress.[3]

Recognizing that Zhi was forever crippled, Kang used this as a pretext to declare that she could never hope to be inducted into the Assassin Brotherhood. The true reason, however, was that he felt that her defiance in the name of vengeance disqualified her on ethical grounds. With that, he abandoned her to whatever her life was to take her next.[4]

Personality and traits[edit | edit source]

Unlike other Assassins in history, notably those of the Italian Brotherhood who trained the legendary Ezio Auditore da Firenze,[5] Kang subscribed far more strictly to the ideal that vengeance is unbecoming of an Assassin.[2] Whereas Ezio's teachers tolerated his vindicative quest and, in Ezio's own words, guided him to learn to mature past it over time,[5] Kang saw vengeance as the unforgivable, bottom line. In his philosophy, vengeance was an irrevocable dereliction of one's duty as an Assassin, the ultimate proof that an individual lacked the moral discipline to be worthy of the name.[3]

As a result, he was suspicious of his apprentice Zhang Zhi from the start, from the sheer understanding that her passion for learning would be driven by the death of her father.[3] When she assassinated the khagan against his own commands, in this eyes, this critical victory was not enough to justify her disobedience. The intention and motive behind her deed weighed just as heavily to him, if not more, than the consequence, even if that consequence was the death of a dangerous enemy whose leadership threatened all of China. Being an Assassin to him meant cultivating strict, moral discipline, and Zhi's actions, though beneficial, proved to him that she was not ethically qualified to continue serving the Brotherhood.[4]

Consequently, Kang stood in contrast to not just Ezio's teachers of the Italian Brotherhood, but also to the Neo-Confucian Mentor Wang Yangming. While they all disapproved of vengeance as antithetical to an Assassin's character, the Italian Assassins and Yangming possessed the patience to see their apprentices learn to grow past the mentality through firsthand experience.[5][6]

Appearances[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]