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{{Era|Individuals|Ancients}}
{{Era|Individuals|Ancients}}
{{Stub}}
{{Quote|The Order condemns all men to pain, for all men are but a shadow of the perfection we should know.|Selwyn to Eivor Varinsdottir, 877.|Assassin's Creed: Valhalla|Choking the Gallows}}
{{Character Infobox
{{Character Infobox
|name = Selwyn
|native =
|image = ACV Selwyn.jpg
|image = ACV Selwyn.jpg
|death = 870s<br>[[Winchester|Wincestre]]
|birth =
|death = 877<br>[[Wincestre]], [[Wessex|Kingdom of Wessex]]
|species = [[Human]]
|species = [[Human]]
|database =
|affiliates = [[Order of the Ancients]]
|affiliates = [[Order of the Ancients]]
*[[Wardens of Faith]]}}
*[[Wardens of Faith]]
'''Selwyn''' (died 870s), also known as '''The Gallows''', was a [[Anglo-Saxons|Anglo-Saxon]] member of the [[Wardens of Faith]] sect of the [[Order of the Ancients]] in [[England]] during the 9th century. Holding the title of [[Palatinus]], Selwyn worked as a reeve in the town square, in the city of [[Winchester|Wincestre]].
}}
'''Selwyn''' (died 877), also known as '''The Gallows''', was an [[Anglo-Saxons|Anglo-Saxon]] member of the [[Wardens of Faith]] sect of the [[Order of the Ancients]]. Holding the rank of [[Palatinus]], he worked as a [[reeve]] in the city of [[Winchester|Wincestre]].


==Biography==
==Biography==
Selwyn came from fortunate beginnings, which showed him being accustomed to being superior over servants and serfs surrounding him. However, his disdain for his father's habits, such as cheating, drinking, and dwindling their monetary resources, made Selwyn disgusted with his own family line. He rose above such manners and unbecoming ways, which he believed was from giving the weak too much leeway. Thus, given the Order's backing, Selwyn abused his power to enforce laws and to enact rulings, as he was trying to destroy human effluence.<ref name="ACV">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[Breaking the Order]]</ref>
===Early life===
{{Quote|That hedge-pig has brought down laws like a hammer on Wincestre. Executing sinners on spurious charges in the square.|Goodwin describing Selwyn to Eivor, 877.|Assassin's Creed: Valhalla|The Reeve of Wincestre}}
Selwyn came from fortunate beginnings, something that made him accustomed to being superior over the various servants, serfs and ceorls around him. However, his father's habits of cheating, drinking and wasting money on such vices not only brought his family into disrepute, but also made a young Selwyn disgusted with them.<ref name="ACV">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[Breaking the Order]]</ref>


[[Vikings|Viking]] [[shieldmaiden]] [[Eivor Varinsdottir]] returned home to [[Ravensthorpe]] after securing certain alliances.  When [[Hidden Ones]] member and friend [[Hytham]] sent for her to talk, Eivor decided to meet and catch up with him. Hytham told Eivor to confer with [[Randvi]] on pledging towards Wincestre, as the "Poor Fellow-Soldier of Christ" contacted them once again about three more targets in the city. Conferring with Randvi, Eivor questioned the letter Hytham received and debated whether it would be a trap or not. Nevertheless, Eivor still pledged towards Wincestre.<ref name="TRW">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[The Reeve of Wincestre]]</ref> The details of the letter left a code to say when upon arrival: "When pride cometh, then cometh shame. But with the lowly cometh wisdom."
Selwyn rose above his family's shameful reputation and his father's demons, which he believed stemmed from giving the weak too much leeway. Thus, with the Order's backing, he abused his power, enforcing barbaric punishments for petty crimes in a misguided attempt to destroy human effluence.<ref name="ACV" />


Arriving in Wincestre, Eivor looked for a man in white, as stated in the letter. Locating [[The Old Minster]], Eivor went inside, bypassing the [[Anglo-Saxons|Anglo-Saxon]] [[Soldier|soldiers]] roaming about the city. Inside the building, Eivor found the man in white, [[Sigebeald]], and relayed the code to him. After speaking the deeds of Christ in order, Eivor followed the [[priest]] silently towards a mysterious room. Inside, Eivor spoke with a mysterious figure behind a wall of scrolls. Eivor was shocked when she walked this wall and found [[Alfred the Great|King Aelfred]] to be the figure. Angry, Eivor warned Aelfred of his current danger of talking to her as she blamed him for gifting [[Sigurd Styrbjornsson|Sigurd]] to the Order's warrior, [[Fulke]]. However, although his paladin, Aelfred proclaimed that Fulke and the Order are enemies of [[Wessex]] and that he was glad that Fulke was no longer a threat. Aelfred then gave another letter of "Poor Fellow-Soldier of Christ" to Eivor and it stated that three members, The Gallows, The Quill, and The Seax, wanted to kill Aelfred. Debating whether to help him, Eivor conceded into ridding the Order's presence in this city. To help, Aelfred told Eivor that his trusted reeve [[Goodwin]] was missing and that she may need to check his house for further clues. When leaving, Eivor garnered a clue of The Gallows that stated The Gallows wanted to undermine the king's law reforms.<ref name="TRW" />
===Reeve of Wincestre and death===
{{Dialogue2|Selwyn|Perverter of justice! Who dares execute the King's noose?|Eivor|It is not in Aelfred's name that you carry out your work. You are The Order's executioner.|Ah. You peer through the veil, but you do not see clearly. Aelfred's laws are a slave's fever-dream. He offers shit-soaked beggars a seat at his table. Where the meek devour the strong. Who best to judge the fate of the wretched many, if not the strong and worthy few?|Selwyn to Eivor in the Memory Corridor, 877.|Assassin's Creed: Valhalla|Choking the Gallows}}
[[File:ACV Choking the Gallows 3.png|thumb|250px|left|Selwyn presiding over the trial of a couple]]
By the 870s, Selwyn came to serve as one of Wincestre's reeves alongside [[Goodwin]], upholding the city's law and order and answering directly to King [[Alfred the Great|Alfred]].<ref name="The Reeve of Wincestre">''Assassin's Creed: Valhalla'' – [[The Reeve of Wincestre]]</ref> Circa 877, Selwyn and two fellow Order members in Wincestre, [[Hilda]] and [[Ealhferth]], known in Order communications as The Quill and The Seax respectively, were assigned by the [[Maegester]] [[Fulke]] to kill Alfred due to his collaboration with the "Poor Fellow-Soldier of Christ", an informant who sought to undermine the Order in England.<ref name="Impaling the Seax">''Assassin's Creed: Valhalla'' – [[Impaling the Seax]]</ref>


Upon arriving at Goodwin's house, Eivor took care of the soldiers snooping around and investigated the premise. Eivor found another clue stating that The Gallows had the reeve imprisoned forcibly in a nearby garrison. Going to rescue Goodwin, Eivor came across [[Wincestre Garrison]] and looked for the reeve. Looking around the garrison, Eivor then came across disturbing news of reeve Selwyn, who ordered the death of a couple over mud-slinging and petty theft. Eivor then found Goodwin in an underground cell and freed him. After escaping the garrison together, Eivor and Goodwin then spoke with each other about the three targets. Primarly focusing on The Gallows, Goodwin and Eivor deduce that The Gallows is none than a fellow reeve, Selwyn.<ref name="TRW" />
While the others went about their own operations, Selwyn's first priority was to take down his fellow reeve Goodwin, a close confidant of King Alfred who had come close to learning about Selwyn's double life. He sent his men to Goodwin's home, where they arrested the reeve before bringing him to the [[Wincestre Garrison]]. He also ordered them to ransack the residence and destroy any evidence of Goodwin's investigations.<ref name="The Reeve of Wincestre" />


Given the task to kill Reeve Selwyn, Eivor headed for the market, where the reeve was going to showcase the execution of the aforementioned couple.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[Choking the Gallows]]</ref> After witnessing the husband's execution and the audience's disrespect of the reeve, Eivor moved stealthily around Selwyn and then assassinated him. Thus, Eivor ended his abuse of power over Wincestre.
Certain that he had gotten rid of Goodwin's meddlings, Selwyn turned to his second priority, undermining the king's recent law reforms, which involved unjustly executing numerous citizens of Wincestre, often peasants, over petty, questionable or otherwise spurious charges in the city square. During one such trial, he was due to execute the commoner [[Leona]] and her husband [[Hubert]], for their comments towards a fellow Order member, the "dead" bishop Ealhferth.<ref name="Choking the Gallows">''Assassin's Creed: Valhalla'' – [[Choking the Gallows]]</ref>
 
[[File:ACV Choking the Gallows 8.png|thumb|250px|Selwyn in the Memory Corridor]]
After the husband's execution and the audience's taunting, Selwyn began to deliver a speech on the stage in the square, denouncing those he considered "criminals". While he was distracted, the [[Vikings|Viking]] [[Eivor Varinsdottir]], who had been enlisted by King Alfred to save Goodwin and aid his investigation of the Order, assassinated Selwyn, in full view of the public. She then fought his guards and made her escape.<ref name="Choking the Gallows" />


==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*Like other Order members, Selwyn's cutscene in the [[Memory Corridor]] differs. At the end of his confession, the darkened tree with hanged people started to lower its rope and then it hanged Selwyn, whose spirit immediately vanished after succumbing to its pull. Selwyn's [[Order of the Ancients medallion|medallion]] was dropped from his hands as he was hanged.
*Like other Order members, Selwyn's cutscene in the [[Memory Corridor]] differs. At the end of his confession, the darkened tree with hanged people starts to lower its rope until it hangs Selwyn, whose spirit immediately vanishes after succumbing to its pull. Selwyn's [[Order of the Ancients medallion|medallion]] is dropped from his hands as he is being hanged, allowing Eivor to claim it.
*Selwyn is one of few Order members that wanted and planned to kill Aelfred, such as [[Hilda|The Quill]], [[Ealhferth|The Seax]], and [[Fulke|The Instrument]].
*Selwyn shares several similarities with the character [[Majd Addin]] from the 2007 video game ''[[Assassin's Creed]]''. Both serve as a representative of the king—Alfred and [[Saladin]], respectively—in their cities and are overzealous executioners, though unlike Addin, Selwyn did not seem to sadistically enjoy the executions, nor did he have the crowd's wild support.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed]]'' – [[Assassination (Majd Addin)]]</ref>
*Selwyn's death also shares similarities with the assassination of fellow Order member [[Avgos Spearhand]], as both are killed during a speech, in full view of the public, while on-stage and surrounded by guards.
 
==Gallery==
<gallery captionalign="center" position="center" widths="180">
ACV Choking the Gallows 7.png|Selwyn assassinated by Eivor
ACV Choking the Gallows 9.png|Selwyn about to be hanged in the Memory Corridor
</gallery>


==Appearances==
==Appearances==
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' {{1st}}
*''[[The World of Assassin's Creed Valhalla: Journey to the North – Logs and Files of a Hidden One]]'' {{Mo}}


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}
{{ACV}}
{{ACV}}
[[Category:870s deaths]]
[[Category:877 deaths]]
[[Category:Individuals]]
[[Category:Individuals]]
[[Category:Anglo-Saxon people]]
[[Category:Anglo-Saxons]]
[[Category:Order of the Ancients members]]
[[Category:Reeves]]
[[Category:Wardens of Faith members]]
[[Category:Order of the Ancients]]
[[Category:Wardens of Faith]]
[[Category:Palatini]]

Latest revision as of 15:27, 7 May 2026

"The Order condemns all men to pain, for all men are but a shadow of the perfection we should know."
―Selwyn to Eivor Varinsdottir, 877.[src]-[m]

Selwyn (died 877), also known as The Gallows, was an Anglo-Saxon member of the Wardens of Faith sect of the Order of the Ancients. Holding the rank of Palatinus, he worked as a reeve in the city of Wincestre.

Biography[edit | edit source]

Early life[edit | edit source]

"That hedge-pig has brought down laws like a hammer on Wincestre. Executing sinners on spurious charges in the square."
―Goodwin describing Selwyn to Eivor, 877.[src]-[m]

Selwyn came from fortunate beginnings, something that made him accustomed to being superior over the various servants, serfs and ceorls around him. However, his father's habits of cheating, drinking and wasting money on such vices not only brought his family into disrepute, but also made a young Selwyn disgusted with them.[1]

Selwyn rose above his family's shameful reputation and his father's demons, which he believed stemmed from giving the weak too much leeway. Thus, with the Order's backing, he abused his power, enforcing barbaric punishments for petty crimes in a misguided attempt to destroy human effluence.[1]

Reeve of Wincestre and death[edit | edit source]

Selwyn: "Perverter of justice! Who dares execute the King's noose?"
Eivor: "It is not in Aelfred's name that you carry out your work. You are The Order's executioner."
Selwyn: "Ah. You peer through the veil, but you do not see clearly. Aelfred's laws are a slave's fever-dream. He offers shit-soaked beggars a seat at his table. Where the meek devour the strong. Who best to judge the fate of the wretched many, if not the strong and worthy few?"
—Selwyn to Eivor in the Memory Corridor, 877.[src]-[m]
Selwyn presiding over the trial of a couple

By the 870s, Selwyn came to serve as one of Wincestre's reeves alongside Goodwin, upholding the city's law and order and answering directly to King Alfred.[2] Circa 877, Selwyn and two fellow Order members in Wincestre, Hilda and Ealhferth, known in Order communications as The Quill and The Seax respectively, were assigned by the Maegester Fulke to kill Alfred due to his collaboration with the "Poor Fellow-Soldier of Christ", an informant who sought to undermine the Order in England.[3]

While the others went about their own operations, Selwyn's first priority was to take down his fellow reeve Goodwin, a close confidant of King Alfred who had come close to learning about Selwyn's double life. He sent his men to Goodwin's home, where they arrested the reeve before bringing him to the Wincestre Garrison. He also ordered them to ransack the residence and destroy any evidence of Goodwin's investigations.[2]

Certain that he had gotten rid of Goodwin's meddlings, Selwyn turned to his second priority, undermining the king's recent law reforms, which involved unjustly executing numerous citizens of Wincestre, often peasants, over petty, questionable or otherwise spurious charges in the city square. During one such trial, he was due to execute the commoner Leona and her husband Hubert, for their comments towards a fellow Order member, the "dead" bishop Ealhferth.[4]

Selwyn in the Memory Corridor

After the husband's execution and the audience's taunting, Selwyn began to deliver a speech on the stage in the square, denouncing those he considered "criminals". While he was distracted, the Viking Eivor Varinsdottir, who had been enlisted by King Alfred to save Goodwin and aid his investigation of the Order, assassinated Selwyn, in full view of the public. She then fought his guards and made her escape.[4]

Trivia[edit | edit source]

  • Like other Order members, Selwyn's cutscene in the Memory Corridor differs. At the end of his confession, the darkened tree with hanged people starts to lower its rope until it hangs Selwyn, whose spirit immediately vanishes after succumbing to its pull. Selwyn's medallion is dropped from his hands as he is being hanged, allowing Eivor to claim it.
  • Selwyn shares several similarities with the character Majd Addin from the 2007 video game Assassin's Creed. Both serve as a representative of the king—Alfred and Saladin, respectively—in their cities and are overzealous executioners, though unlike Addin, Selwyn did not seem to sadistically enjoy the executions, nor did he have the crowd's wild support.[5]
  • Selwyn's death also shares similarities with the assassination of fellow Order member Avgos Spearhand, as both are killed during a speech, in full view of the public, while on-stage and surrounded by guards.

Gallery[edit | edit source]

Appearances[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Assassin's Creed: ValhallaBreaking the Order
  2. 2.0 2.1 Assassin's Creed: ValhallaThe Reeve of Wincestre
  3. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaImpaling the Seax
  4. 4.0 4.1 Assassin's Creed: ValhallaChoking the Gallows
  5. Assassin's CreedAssassination (Majd Addin)