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{{Mission
==Biography==
|prev= [[Battle of Forlì]]
What follows is the legend of Jing Ke as recounted in [[Sima Qian]]'s ''[[Record of the Grand Historian|Records of the Grand Historian]]''.<ref name="Sima">Sima Qian. (94 BCE). "Biographies of Assassins". In ''Records of the Grand Historian''. ''Chinese Text Project''. Accessed 5 July 2023. https://ctext.org/shiji/ci-ke-lie-zhuan.</ref>
|conc= [[Granada War]]
|next= [[Battle of Granada]]
|name=
|imageBG=
|image=
|conflict= [[Spanish Inquisition]]
|objective= Rescue the [[Spanish Assassins]] arrested for heresy by the [[Spanish Inquisition]]
|date= 1491
|place=*[[Barcelona]], [[wikipedia:Principality of Catalonia|Principality of Catalonia]]
*[[Zaragoza]], [[wikipedia:Kingdom of Aragon|Kingdom of Aragon]]
|result=
*[[Ezio Auditore da Firenze]] manages to save one [[Assassins|Assassin]] in Barcelona and five of six in Zaragoza
*Death of leading Inquisitors in Barcelona and Zaragoza
|BG2=
|side1=Assassins
|side2=*Spanish Inquisition
*[[Spain|Crown of Aragon]]
----
*[[Templars]]
|side3=
|side4=
|commanders1=
|commanders2=*[[Tomás de Torquemada]]
*[[Ferdinand II of Aragon]]
----
*[[Rodrigo Borgia]]
|commanders3=
|commanders4=
|ppl1=*[[Ezio Auditore da Firenze]]
*[[Raphael Sánchez]]
|ppl2=*[[Gaspar Martínez]]&dagger;
*[[Pedro Llorente]]&dagger;
|ppl3=
|ppl4=
|casual1=*unknown number of Barcelonan Assassins
*1 Zaragozan Assassin
|casual2=*Gaspar Martínez
*Pedro Llorente
|casual3=
|casual4=
|civilian=}}


The '''Mission to Aragon?''' was an event which took place in 1491, after the [[Italian Assassins|Italian Assassin]] [[Ezio Auditore da Firenze]] assisted his allies, [[Luis de Santángel]] and [[Christopher Columbus]] in obtaining their atlas. The [[Assassins|Assassin]] arrived in [[Spain]] when he heard that his fellow Assassins were captured and imprisoned by the Inquisitor, [[Tomás de Torquemada]]. With the help of the [[Spanish Assassins|Spanish Assassin]], [[Raphael Sánchez]], he set out to free the Assassins and deal with those who had imprisoned them.
While Jing Ke was a native of {{wiki|Wey (state)|Wey}} (衛),<ref group="note" name="note1">The state Wèi (衛) is commonly spelled Wey in contravention of the {{wiki|Pinyin|Hanyu Pinyin}} romanization standard to distinguish from the more prominent state {{wiki|Wei (state)|Wèi}} (魏) because the two polities' modern {{wiki|Mandarin Chinese|Mandarin}} pronunciations are homophonic. In ancient times, their pronunciations were distinct and remain so in some other Chinese languages today.</ref> his ancestors originally lived in {{wiki|Qi (state)|Qi}}. To the people of Wey, he was called the Honorable Qing (慶卿). Only later among the people of {{wiki|Yan (state)|Yan}} (燕) was he known as the Honorable Jing (荊卿).<ref name="Sima" /> He was a well-educated adept of the [[sword]], but although he taught its art to Lord Yuan of Wey (衛元君), the ruler neglected to put it to use. Afterwards, [[Qin dynasty|Qin]] conquered the State of Wei (魏), established {{wiki|Dong Commandery}} (東郡, <small>lit.</small> "East Commandery") in its place, and forcibly relocated offspring of Lord Yuan residing there to {{wiki|Qinyang|Yewang}} (野王).<ref name="Sima" /><ref group="note" name="note2">These were specifically offspring not of Lord Yuan's legal wife.</ref>


==Barcelona==
Wandering to {{wiki|Yuci District|Yuci}} (榆次), Jing Ke engaged with a man named Gai Nie (蓋聶) in discourse about swordsmanship that soon turned sour. Noticing Gai Nie's angry glare, Jing Ke left. Someone suggested to Gai Nie that he call him back, to which Gai Nie replied, "''A moment ago as I talked swordsmanship with him, we found each other disagreeable, and I glared at him. You can try to go after him, but it was appropriate for him to leave, and he would not dare to stay.''" They sent a messenger to the host of Jing Ke's lodgings, but Jing Ke had already departed from Yuci on a [[wagon|carriage]]. When the messenger reported back, Gai Nie repeated, "''Of course he's gone. I frightened him away with my glare.''"<ref name="Sima" />
===Finding the Spanish Assassins' Guild===
As Ezio walked through the streets of [[Barcelona]], he noticed that the [[guards]] on duty seemed to be novices. Ezio set out to murder the two targets Antonio had mentioned, suspecting that at least one of them knew the current location of the captured Assassins.


[[File:Barcelona.png|thumb|left|Barcelona]]
Jing Ke travelled to {{wiki|Handan}}, where he and a man named Lu Goujian (魯勾踐) played a game of ''{{wiki|liubo|boxi}}'' (博戲) but ended up quarrelling over the way it should be played. His opponent furiously berated him, so Jing Ke silently slipped away never to meet him again. (i.e. He ghosted him!)<ref name="Sima" />
On his way, Ezio encountered a [[Civilians|civilian]] who stated nothing more than the location of a secret entrance, before walking away. Ezio trusted that the civilian was an ally, likely a [[Thieves|thief]] or an Assassin, and thus followed his instructions to the secret entrance.


Entering through a hatch on a rooftop, Ezio soon found himself in an abandoned Assassins' Guild, and was immediately saddened by the emptiness of the guild. He abruptly had to defend himself as four guards entered the room.
Arriving in Yan, he became intimate friends with a [[dog]] butcher and Gao Jianlei (高漸離), a musician skilled at playing the ''{{Wiki|zhu (string instrument|zhu}}''. He enjoyed [[alcohol]], and everyday he would drink with them in the [[Beijing|city]]. Whenever the wine was sweet, and they were drunk but high in spirits, Gao Jianlei would play the ''zhu'', and Jing Ke would join in with a song to the city. They would share in merriment with one another and then likewise cry their woes away together, paying no mind to anyone else in the world. Though he was an alcoholic, he remained fond of engrossing himself in books, and he had formed connections with many a heroic and eminent individual during his travels through the feudal lands. Being in Yan, the local retired knight Sir Tian Guang (田光) entreated with him, for he intuited that Jing Ke was no ordinary person.<ref name="Sima" />


Ezio dispatched them without mercy, but on his way out, he encountered a [[Brutes|brute]], much like the one in [[Venice]], albeit with a two-handed sword. The Brute charged Ezio, who quickly rolled past him and escaped from yet another brutal encounter. After exiting the guild, Ezio found a platoon of guards chasing him, and began running through the streets to escape.
Shortly after, Yan's crown prince {{wiki|Crown Prince Dan|Dan}} escaped from [[Qin dynasty|Qin]] to return home in violation of his status as a collateral to the Qin. Originally, he had been a political hostage in {{Wiki|Zhao (state)|Zhao}} (趙), where [[Qin Shi Huang|Zheng]], the future King of Qin, was born. In their youth, Zheng was amicable to Dan, but after Zheng became king and Dan his hostage in Qin, Zheng treated him derisively. The resentful Dan fled and returned to Yan to beseech for reprisals against Qin, yet Yan was a small state too weak to commit to such endeavours. Meanwhile, Qin was daily fielding armies east out of the mountains, unleashing invasions against {{Wiki|Qi (state)|Qi}}, {{Wiki|Chu (state)|Chu}}, and the {{Wiki|Jin (Chinese state)|Three Jin}}<ref group="note" name="note3">i.e. {{Wiki|Han (state)|Han}} (韓), {{Wiki|Zhao (state)|Zhao}} (趙), and {{Wiki|Wei (state)|Wei}} (魏)</ref> and little by little swallowing all the princely states until they fast approached Yan. Lords and subjects of Yan alike feared the calamity upon them. Himself filled with trepidation, Crown Prince Dan asked his {{wiki|Three Ducal Ministers|tutor}} Ju Wu (鞠武) for counsel. Ju Wu replied:<ref name="Sima" /><ref name="Burton 1961">Sima Qian. (1961). "The Biography of Ching K'o", translated by J.R. Hightower. In ''Records of the Grand Historian of China'', edited by Burton Watson. 1st ed. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, pp. 106–117.</ref>


Ezio took a detour through the Barcelona sewers, and began to recollect what had just happened. However, it was not long until Ezio felt the presence of another person, pausing as the man leapt in front of him and asked what he was doing. Ezio, thinking the man was merely a civilian, told him to step aside. As Ezio began to walk past him, the man asks him if he was a Venetian Assassin, causing Ezio to stop.
<blockquote>''Qin is expanding their territory across the world, menacing the Houses of Han, Zhao, and Wei. To their north, they have the strongholds at Sweet Springs (甘泉) and the Valley Mouth (谷口); to their south, the watery torrents of the {{wiki|Jing River|Jing}} (涇) and {{wiki|Wei River|Wei}} (渭). They boast the fertile soils of {{wiki|Ba (state)|Ba}} (巴) and {{wiki|Hanzhong|Han}} (漢); on their right, the mountains of {{wiki|Mount Liupan|Long}} (隴) and {{wiki|Shu (kingdom)|Shu}} (蜀); on their left, the chokepoints at the {{Wiki|Hangu Pass|[Hangu] Pass}} and {{wiki|Xiao Mountains|Mount Xiao}}. Their people are numerous, their troops rigorous, their implements of war in surplus. Should they have the intent to move further out, then there would be no place south of the [[Great Wall]] and north of the {{wiki|Yi County, Henan|Yi River}} (易水) that would be secure. So why would you desire to prick at their [[wikt:逆鱗|inverted scales]] just for having felt the sting of humiliation?!''<ref group="note" name="note4">"Inverted scales" is a metaphor for an individual's trigger. This line is translated less literally by J.R. Hightower in {{wiki|Burton Watson}}'s ''Records of the Grand Historian of China'' (1961) as: "''Angry as you are at the insults you have suffered, how can you dream of baiting such a dragon?''"</ref></blockquote>


Ezio turned swiftly and corrected the man, stating he was Florentine, and questioned him of his knowledge of the Assassins. The man told Ezio to relax, stating that he had seen the mark of the Assassins on his finger, and that his clothing was a dead give-away. He then introduced himself as Raphael Sánchez, a fellow Assassin.
Dan asked, "''Then what should I do?''" to which his mentor responded, "''Please allow me to think it over.''"<ref name="Sima" />
A short while later, a Qin general, Fan Yuqi (樊於期), ran afoul of King Zheng and fled to Yan as well. Crown Prince Dan received him charitably, permitting him to make himself at home. Ju Wu remonstrated:<ref name="Sima" />
<blockquote>"''You cannot do this! With the Qin king's cruelty and the anger he has nursed against Yan, it is already enough to chill our hearts. And now you would even be receptive to General Fan being here? This is called 'Tossing meat onto the path of a hungry tiger'. There would certainly be no way to shake off the disaster! Even if you had {{wiki|Guan Zhong|Guan ''[Zhong]''}} and {{wiki|Yan Ying|Yan ''[Ying]''}} [for ministers], they still would not be able to concoct a plan out of it. I hope that the Crown Prince would send General Fan away to the [[Xiongnu]] to silence him and his affair. Please form a pact with the Three Jin to the west, connect with Qi and Chu to the south, and bargain with the Xiongnu to the north, after which we could then plan some more.''"</blockquote>
The crown prince replied:<ref name="Sima" />
<blockquote>"''The Grand Tutor's plan would extend the problem for far too many days. My mind is in turmoil. I fear I cannot last another moment. Besides, it is not solely because of this. General Fan, impoverished by hardship unto the very ends of the world, has turned himself over to me. I would never, for the sake of evading the powerful Qin, abandon a pitiable friend. To set him up to the Xiongnu must be when my life is at its end. I hope that the Grand Tutor will reconsider this.''"</blockquote>
Ji Wu remained displeased:<ref name="Sima" />
<blockquote>"''You tread in danger while asking for safety, foment disaster to beg for good fortune, are shallow in your plans yet deep in your grudges. You connect with one person, then call them a friend, without caring for the tremendous harm to the nation. This is called 'funding resentment to subsidize peril'. Torch a swan's feather on a charcoal stove, and it would be [gone in a wink] like nothing happened! Not to mention that with the raptor that is Qin driving its violent fury upon us, what road would there still be to walk?! Yan has one Sir Tian Guang, an individual with deep wisdom and profound courage. You might consult with him.''"</blockquote>
To this last advice, the crown prince was receptive: "''I would like to make the acquaintance of Sir Tian Guang through the Great Tutor. May I?''" "''You may''", said Ji Wu, and he went out to meet with Sir Tian, telling him, "''The Crown Prince wishes to plot a national affair with you, sir.''" Tian Guang replied, "''It would be my pleasure to advise,''" and accompanied him back to see the crown prince.<ref name="Sima" />


===The Assassination of Gaspar Martinez===
Crown Prince Dan courteously invited Tian Guang inside, where he knelt down to prepare a seat for him. Once Tian Guang had settled in his seat, and they had ensured that no one else was around, Dan came off his own to humbly begin making his request, "''Yan and Qin cannot coexist. I hope that you sir can pay mind to this.''" Understanding his meaning, Tian Guang offered an alternative:<ref name="Sima" />
{{Dialogue3|Ezio|What do you know of the Assassins?|Raphael|Only that I am one of them, sir. My name is Raphael Sánchez. I arrived here in Barcelona this morning, bound to the same errand as you.|Do you know who betrayed us to the Inquisitors?|Not yet, but we know the name of the Inquisitor Prosecutor responsible for their arrests. Gaspar Martinez.|Raphael sharing crucial information with Ezio Auditore|Assassin's Creed II: Discovery}}
<blockquote>"''I have heard that when fine steeds are at their prime, they can gallop 1,000 ''{{wiki|li (unit)|li}}'' in one day—until it has weakened with age, and then even the mangiest nag would advance ahead of it. Today, the Crown Prince has heard of the time when Tian Guang was at his prime, without knowing that his vigour has already withered away. Although I dare not plot a national affair with you, my good colleague the Honourable Jing may undertake this mission.''"</blockquote>
[[File:Raphael Sanchez.jpg|thumb|164px|Raphael Sánchez]]
As before, Crown Prince Dan asked, "''I would like to befriend the Honourable Jing through you, sir. May I?''" Tian Guang assented, and the two hastened out to find him. At Jing Ke's door, Dan warned Tian Guang, "''What I have reported to you and everything that you have said are vital affairs of the state. Please sir, do not divulge them to others!''" The old man bowed with a smile and said, "I promise".<ref name="Sima" />


Ezio questioned Raphael about the person who had betrayed the Assassins. Raphael replied that he did not know anything, save for the name of the Prosecutor responsible for their arrests - [[Gaspar Martínez|Gaspar Martinez]].
When Tian Guang saw Jing Ke, he arced his back low and said:<ref name="Sima" />
[[File:Gaspar.jpg|left|thumb|Gaspar Martinez]]
<blockquote>"''You and I have been cordial with one another—there is no one in Yan who does not know that. Now the Crown Prince had heard of the time when I was at my prime, without knowing that my physique is no longer up to par, and he honoured me with this instruction: 'Yan and Qin cannot coexist. I hope that you sir can pay mind to this.' I will not steal more of your time by treating you like a stranger. I have already spoken of you to the Crown Prince. Would you please go over to the Crown Prince at his palace?''"
</blockquote>
"''I would be much obliged,''" responded Jing Ke, and Tian Guang continued:<ref name="Sima" />
<blockquote>"''I have heard it said that when an elderly man takes action, he should not arouse others' suspicion. Today the Crown Prince told me, 'Everything we have said are vital affairs of the state. Please sir, do not divulge them to others!' This was the Crown Prince mistrusting me. For one to take action but arouse the suspicion of others, they would not be a [[youxia|hero]] of integrity.''"
</blockquote>
He wanted to use suicide to incite Jing Ke into action, and he gave him these final words, "''Please hurry over to the Crown Prince and tell him that Guang has already died, proving my silence.''" Thereupon, he slit his own throat and died.<ref name="Sima" />


Ezio, now on the Barcelona rooftops, began his hunt for Gaspar Martinez, whom he found standing on a balcony looking out over Barcelona. Ezio scaled up the building and onto the balcony, surprising Gaspar and causing him to retreat nervously back against the wall.
Jing Ke accordingly went to see the Crown Prince and inform him that Tian Guang had died, imparting as well his last words. The Crown Prince bowed twice and then sank to his knees breaking down in tears. After a while had passed, he finally spoke up, "''I warned Sir Tian not to chatter only because I wished for us to succeed in this great plot. That Sir Tian Guang used death today to prove his silence—could that truly have been my intention?!''"


Ezio approached Gaspar and asked him who had given him the names of the imprisoned Assassins, to which Gaspar simply responded, ''"What do you mean, 'Assassins'? My dungeons are for heretics."''
Jing Ke sat still as he vented, and then the Crown Prince got off from his seat and tipped his head to him. He said:<ref name="Sima" /><ref name="Burton 1961" />
<blockquote>"''Sir Tian, not knowing how unworthy I am, brought me before you so that I may be so bold as to confer with you. This must be Heaven's pity for Yan such that it will not forsake us to a lonesome fate. Today, Qin harbours a greedy heart, and their desires can never be satisfied. Without having conquered all the land in the world and made servants out of all rulers within the four seas, their ambition would never be sated. Now Qin has already captured the King of Han and annexed his entire territory. They have raised troops and marched them south to invade Chu. To their north, they are bearing down on Zhao. {{Wiki|Wang Jian}}, leading several tens of thousands of soldiers, has reached the {{wiki|Zhang River}} and {{wiki|Linzhang County|Ye County}} (鄴縣). And as for {{Wiki|Li Xin (Qin general)|Li Xin}}, he has marched out of [[Taiyuan]] and {{wiki|Yunzhong Commandery|Yunzhong}} (雲中).''"</blockquote>


Ezio sighed, but Gaspar stated that whoever those men were, it would not matter for much longer as they would soon be executed one by one.
==Appearances==
[[File:Gaspardie.jpg|thumb|The Assassination of Gaspar Martinez]]
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Dynasty]]'' {{Mo}}
He then told Ezio that an execution was being prepared for one of the heretics right at that moment. Gaspar laughed, but he was soon silenced as Ezio angrily told him that, if the man died, he would keep the stake fire burning until the whole city was a cinder, before plunging his blade into the Templar and killing him.


Ezio searched Gaspar's body and found a list of names, those of the captured Assassins. Ezio set out to save the current Assassin at risk, as well as find Raphael to show him the list.
==Notes==
<references group="note"/>


Ezio ran swiftly through the city streets in an effort to stop the Assassin from being burned at the stake, dodging guards who had been alerted to his presence and had given chase. Upon reaching the still unharmed Assassin, Ezio leapt down from a nearby rooftop and engaged in combat with the guards surrounding him.
==References==
 
{{Reflist}}
Ezio finally helped the captured Assassin to his feet, and they proceeded to Raphael, who had been watching on a nearby rooftop. Raphael thanked Ezio for his help, but Ezio simply gave him the list of names.
 
Raphael stated that he knew the listed men and told Ezio that they were being held in [[Zaragoza]], in the kingdom of Aragon. Ezio told Raphael that Zaragoza would thus be his next destination, and asked if Raphael would join him. Raphael responded that, though his fighting skills were dwindling, he would provide aid as a guide, as well as find shelter for the freed Assassins.
 
Ezio and Raphael then began their long journey to Zaragoza.
 
==Zaragoza==
===Finding the Assassins===
[[File:Pedro.jpg|thumb|181px|Pedro Llorente]]
Upon arrival in Zaragoza, Ezio and Raphael parted ways. Before leaving, Raphael told Ezio to seek out the Inquisition's Calificador, [[Pedro Llorente]], saying that he might be "persuaded" to reveal where the six Assassins were being imprisoned. Ezio was then left to his own devices, as Raphael said that his face was known to the Inquisitors, and that he would need an alibi if Llorente was to suffer an untimely fate.
 
Ezio then began to prowl the city looking for his target, but finding Llorente turned out to be easier than Ezio thought. Not long into his search, he came across Llorente speaking to none other than Spain's Inquisitor General, [[Tomás de Torquemada]] himself. Llorente humbly welcomed his superior, who had arrived unexpectedly, but Torquemada rebuffed his pleasantries.
 
[[File:Tomas.jpg|thumb|left|The Inquisitor General, Tomas Torquemada]]
The two men turned their attention to an Assassin that had been recently captured, with Pedro stating that the prisoner had refused to "convert or confess." Incensed, Torquemada had the Assassin executed by a Brute, telling him before he died that other prisoners before him had been terrified, even though they felt God was on their side. Torquemada went on, saying that it was unbelievable that the Assassin was not afraid at all, considering that, like all his people, he refused the concept of God completely.
 
After the Assassin's execution, Torquemada was heard to say, ''"[[Rodrigo Borgia]] was right to have me arrest you and your cohorts... Your lack of faith is a disease."'' The Inquisitor General then left, remarking coldly, "Let the heretic bleed." For Ezio, this confirmed that Rodrigo was ordering the Spanish Inquisitors to destroy the Assassins in Spain to keep them from interrupting his plans. With his worst fears confirmed, Ezio raced to save the remaining five Assassins from sharing their brother's fate.
 
Ezio made his way through the sewers of Zaragoza to find and save the other Assassins. Unfortunately, guards were everywhere, but Ezio was able to dispatch them with ease. As he made his way through the tunnels, Ezio found the Assassins imprisoned at different points, stopping to save them one by one; though he was only able to free four of them.
 
News of Ezio's efforts spread quickly, and when Pedro caught word of the Assassins' escape, he was enraged. He then ordered his guard to keep watch over the last remaining prisoner, or else ''"Torquemada himself will personally supervise your disemboweling."'' However, the extra security proved useless, as Ezio was easily able to rescue the fifth and final Assassin. Ezio then made his escape via a [[Leap of Faith]].
 
===The Assassination of Pedro Llorente===
[[File:Pedrodie.jpg|thumb|180px|Pedro's final moment]]
Upon escaping the Inquisitor guards, Ezio met up again with Raphael Sánchez, who expressed gratitude on seeing that ''"the shadows of [his] city are moving again."'' Ezio shared what he had learned from his eavesdropping, and Raphael informed him of Torquemada's position.
 
Ezio mentioned that Rodrigo Borgia had ordered the imprisonment and execution of the Spanish Assassins' Guild, and at this, Raphael cursed their bad luck, stating that he and his fellows had suspected contact between the Templars and Inquisitors all along.
 
Raphael went on to say that Llorente would be easy to track in Zaragoza, but looking for Torquemada would be another story, to which Ezio replied, ''"I'm a patient man, Sánchez."'' Then he left to deal with Llorente.After sneaking past and killing numerous guards, Ezio confronted Pedro in the city square.
 
After being rebuked by the Inquisitor, Ezio demanded of Pedro how he had been contacted by the Templars. Pedro scoffed at Ezio's claims, insisting that the Templars had been disgraced and disbanded in 1312, quipping, ''"Rumors of their activities are as reliable as fairy tales."'' Ezio responded that, if that were the case, they couldn't be around to save Pedro. He then struck down the Inquisitor on the spot and retreated back to Raphael.
 
===Report to Raphael===
When the two met, Ezio reported his murder of Pedro, but also that he had not seen nor heard from Torquemada. Raphael replied that he had expected as much, adding that Queen Isabella hadn't told him that the Inquisitor General would be in town.
 
Surprised and stunned, Ezio asked how Raphael was able to speak to the Queen of Spain, to which Raphael answered that he served her court as Royal Treasurer. Ezio expressed amazement that an Assassin was able to infiltrate the highest ranks of the Spanish Royal Court, as the Templars were more proficient at gaining favor and working their way into positions of power in [[Europe]].
 
Raphael assured him that Isabella and her husband, King Ferdinand, knew nothing of him being an Assassin, but also warned him that, though they held one of the Queen's ears, the Templars held the other. Raphael offered to explain more, but Ezio politely declined, saying it would be best that he returned home to [[Italy]].
 
Raphael, however, was adamant, insisting that the Templars had a horrible scheme in the works to assume control of Spain. Thus, putting his priorities aside and surrendering once more to his sense of duty, Ezio followed his brother Assassin south to the [[Moors|Moorish]] stronghold of [[Granada]].
 
==Granada==
===Weakening of Granada's finest===
Raphael and Ezio Auditore advanced towards the entrance of Granada, according to Raphael Granada (at the time) was unstable and minor battles and wars took place frequently. One side, the Moors, continued to fight; Raphael suggested that the Moors would soon have victory due to their nearly developed siege equipment.
 
Ezio shrugged and asked Raphael of the plan, to which he replied that "''it was nothing serious, but a mere sweep of the area.''" Their goal was to penetrate the guard forces and weaken their command, as well as scout a potential path in order to get closer to Ezio's target.
 
Being marked on his map, Ezio's prey, the captain guards, were easy to find. Stationed on rooftops, Ezio impaled, stabbed and pulled guards off ledges. He was soon approached by Raphael; who said that the job was soon to be done. He explained that almost all guard captains were dead; though some still remained, and that they were bashing civilians in an effort to interrogate them concerning the deaths of their fellow soldiers.
 
Ezio sought justice and Raphael sought peace and a better future for Granada. They both set out to save the civilians. Raphael told Ezio that they would meet in a chapel to the east when their work was done.
 
Hours had passed as Ezio finished the job; the majority of the civilians were saved. Soon before his arrival at the chapel, Ezio was ambushed by over a dozen soldiers. Ezio slew them all, but was almost bested. He walked into the outskirts of Granada, retaining some major injuries that would later be healed by Raphael Sánchez.
 
Upon his arrival at the chapel, Ezio was told by Raphael that a spy was in Granada, fetching information about his King for the Templars (who were to aid the Moors in their siege of Granada).
 
[[File:Juan.jpg|thumb|left|155px|Juan de Marillo, the spy]]Ezio traveled through the city of Granada to search for the spy, who escaped to the underground catacombs. Ezio then traversed the same catacombs to find [[Juan de Marillo]], the spy, and kill him. He stealthily came across Torquemada talking to him, saying that he was surprised that the Queen let the Moor King live. He ordered Juan to expel anyone who denied allegiance to the Pope and kill anyone who refused to leave. He left with Juan's guard captain, leaving the spy alone. Ezio ran up behind the spy and assassinated him before he could do any more harm.
 
He returned to Luis, only to find that Corombo had left for Paris to finance his journey. Ezio found him before he could be harmed and killed his attacker. With the Queen's change of heart, Corombo was financed to travel to the New World safely.
 
===The unexpected events===
[[File:Ezio and Torquemada.png|thumb|right|200px|Ezio confronting Torquemada]]
Ezio was about to leave for Italy to find the Apple, but before he could, Luis was alerted that Torquemada had sent Inquisitors to arrest him. Ezio went around the palace and sealed off all the doors to stop any further attacks. He saved Luis and then left the palace to rescue Raphael. Both told him to bring Torquemada to justice. He infiltrated Torquemada's palace and eventually found him, but before he could kill him some gates barred and blocked him from Torquemada. He then returned to Luis and Raphael with the news, and set off back to Italy.
 
==Reference==
*''[[Assassin's Creed II: Discovery]]''
{{AC2D}}
{{Timeline}}

Latest revision as of 04:32, 30 January 2024

Biography[edit | edit source]

What follows is the legend of Jing Ke as recounted in Sima Qian's Records of the Grand Historian.[1]

While Jing Ke was a native of Wey (衛),[note 1] his ancestors originally lived in Qi. To the people of Wey, he was called the Honorable Qing (慶卿). Only later among the people of Yan (燕) was he known as the Honorable Jing (荊卿).[1] He was a well-educated adept of the sword, but although he taught its art to Lord Yuan of Wey (衛元君), the ruler neglected to put it to use. Afterwards, Qin conquered the State of Wei (魏), established Dong Commandery (東郡, lit. "East Commandery") in its place, and forcibly relocated offspring of Lord Yuan residing there to Yewang (野王).[1][note 2]

Wandering to Yuci (榆次), Jing Ke engaged with a man named Gai Nie (蓋聶) in discourse about swordsmanship that soon turned sour. Noticing Gai Nie's angry glare, Jing Ke left. Someone suggested to Gai Nie that he call him back, to which Gai Nie replied, "A moment ago as I talked swordsmanship with him, we found each other disagreeable, and I glared at him. You can try to go after him, but it was appropriate for him to leave, and he would not dare to stay." They sent a messenger to the host of Jing Ke's lodgings, but Jing Ke had already departed from Yuci on a carriage. When the messenger reported back, Gai Nie repeated, "Of course he's gone. I frightened him away with my glare."[1]

Jing Ke travelled to Handan, where he and a man named Lu Goujian (魯勾踐) played a game of boxi (博戲) but ended up quarrelling over the way it should be played. His opponent furiously berated him, so Jing Ke silently slipped away never to meet him again. (i.e. He ghosted him!)[1]

Arriving in Yan, he became intimate friends with a dog butcher and Gao Jianlei (高漸離), a musician skilled at playing the zhu. He enjoyed alcohol, and everyday he would drink with them in the city. Whenever the wine was sweet, and they were drunk but high in spirits, Gao Jianlei would play the zhu, and Jing Ke would join in with a song to the city. They would share in merriment with one another and then likewise cry their woes away together, paying no mind to anyone else in the world. Though he was an alcoholic, he remained fond of engrossing himself in books, and he had formed connections with many a heroic and eminent individual during his travels through the feudal lands. Being in Yan, the local retired knight Sir Tian Guang (田光) entreated with him, for he intuited that Jing Ke was no ordinary person.[1]

Shortly after, Yan's crown prince Dan escaped from Qin to return home in violation of his status as a collateral to the Qin. Originally, he had been a political hostage in Zhao (趙), where Zheng, the future King of Qin, was born. In their youth, Zheng was amicable to Dan, but after Zheng became king and Dan his hostage in Qin, Zheng treated him derisively. The resentful Dan fled and returned to Yan to beseech for reprisals against Qin, yet Yan was a small state too weak to commit to such endeavours. Meanwhile, Qin was daily fielding armies east out of the mountains, unleashing invasions against Qi, Chu, and the Three Jin[note 3] and little by little swallowing all the princely states until they fast approached Yan. Lords and subjects of Yan alike feared the calamity upon them. Himself filled with trepidation, Crown Prince Dan asked his tutor Ju Wu (鞠武) for counsel. Ju Wu replied:[1][2]

Qin is expanding their territory across the world, menacing the Houses of Han, Zhao, and Wei. To their north, they have the strongholds at Sweet Springs (甘泉) and the Valley Mouth (谷口); to their south, the watery torrents of the Jing (涇) and Wei (渭). They boast the fertile soils of Ba (巴) and Han (漢); on their right, the mountains of Long (隴) and Shu (蜀); on their left, the chokepoints at the [Hangu] Pass and Mount Xiao. Their people are numerous, their troops rigorous, their implements of war in surplus. Should they have the intent to move further out, then there would be no place south of the Great Wall and north of the Yi River (易水) that would be secure. So why would you desire to prick at their inverted scales just for having felt the sting of humiliation?![note 4]

Dan asked, "Then what should I do?" to which his mentor responded, "Please allow me to think it over."[1] A short while later, a Qin general, Fan Yuqi (樊於期), ran afoul of King Zheng and fled to Yan as well. Crown Prince Dan received him charitably, permitting him to make himself at home. Ju Wu remonstrated:[1]

"You cannot do this! With the Qin king's cruelty and the anger he has nursed against Yan, it is already enough to chill our hearts. And now you would even be receptive to General Fan being here? This is called 'Tossing meat onto the path of a hungry tiger'. There would certainly be no way to shake off the disaster! Even if you had Guan [Zhong] and Yan [Ying] [for ministers], they still would not be able to concoct a plan out of it. I hope that the Crown Prince would send General Fan away to the Xiongnu to silence him and his affair. Please form a pact with the Three Jin to the west, connect with Qi and Chu to the south, and bargain with the Xiongnu to the north, after which we could then plan some more."

The crown prince replied:[1]

"The Grand Tutor's plan would extend the problem for far too many days. My mind is in turmoil. I fear I cannot last another moment. Besides, it is not solely because of this. General Fan, impoverished by hardship unto the very ends of the world, has turned himself over to me. I would never, for the sake of evading the powerful Qin, abandon a pitiable friend. To set him up to the Xiongnu must be when my life is at its end. I hope that the Grand Tutor will reconsider this."

Ji Wu remained displeased:[1]

"You tread in danger while asking for safety, foment disaster to beg for good fortune, are shallow in your plans yet deep in your grudges. You connect with one person, then call them a friend, without caring for the tremendous harm to the nation. This is called 'funding resentment to subsidize peril'. Torch a swan's feather on a charcoal stove, and it would be [gone in a wink] like nothing happened! Not to mention that with the raptor that is Qin driving its violent fury upon us, what road would there still be to walk?! Yan has one Sir Tian Guang, an individual with deep wisdom and profound courage. You might consult with him."

To this last advice, the crown prince was receptive: "I would like to make the acquaintance of Sir Tian Guang through the Great Tutor. May I?" "You may", said Ji Wu, and he went out to meet with Sir Tian, telling him, "The Crown Prince wishes to plot a national affair with you, sir." Tian Guang replied, "It would be my pleasure to advise," and accompanied him back to see the crown prince.[1]

Crown Prince Dan courteously invited Tian Guang inside, where he knelt down to prepare a seat for him. Once Tian Guang had settled in his seat, and they had ensured that no one else was around, Dan came off his own to humbly begin making his request, "Yan and Qin cannot coexist. I hope that you sir can pay mind to this." Understanding his meaning, Tian Guang offered an alternative:[1]

"I have heard that when fine steeds are at their prime, they can gallop 1,000 li in one day—until it has weakened with age, and then even the mangiest nag would advance ahead of it. Today, the Crown Prince has heard of the time when Tian Guang was at his prime, without knowing that his vigour has already withered away. Although I dare not plot a national affair with you, my good colleague the Honourable Jing may undertake this mission."

As before, Crown Prince Dan asked, "I would like to befriend the Honourable Jing through you, sir. May I?" Tian Guang assented, and the two hastened out to find him. At Jing Ke's door, Dan warned Tian Guang, "What I have reported to you and everything that you have said are vital affairs of the state. Please sir, do not divulge them to others!" The old man bowed with a smile and said, "I promise".[1]

When Tian Guang saw Jing Ke, he arced his back low and said:[1]

"You and I have been cordial with one another—there is no one in Yan who does not know that. Now the Crown Prince had heard of the time when I was at my prime, without knowing that my physique is no longer up to par, and he honoured me with this instruction: 'Yan and Qin cannot coexist. I hope that you sir can pay mind to this.' I will not steal more of your time by treating you like a stranger. I have already spoken of you to the Crown Prince. Would you please go over to the Crown Prince at his palace?"

"I would be much obliged," responded Jing Ke, and Tian Guang continued:[1]

"I have heard it said that when an elderly man takes action, he should not arouse others' suspicion. Today the Crown Prince told me, 'Everything we have said are vital affairs of the state. Please sir, do not divulge them to others!' This was the Crown Prince mistrusting me. For one to take action but arouse the suspicion of others, they would not be a hero of integrity."

He wanted to use suicide to incite Jing Ke into action, and he gave him these final words, "Please hurry over to the Crown Prince and tell him that Guang has already died, proving my silence." Thereupon, he slit his own throat and died.[1]

Jing Ke accordingly went to see the Crown Prince and inform him that Tian Guang had died, imparting as well his last words. The Crown Prince bowed twice and then sank to his knees breaking down in tears. After a while had passed, he finally spoke up, "I warned Sir Tian not to chatter only because I wished for us to succeed in this great plot. That Sir Tian Guang used death today to prove his silence—could that truly have been my intention?!"

Jing Ke sat still as he vented, and then the Crown Prince got off from his seat and tipped his head to him. He said:[1][2]

"Sir Tian, not knowing how unworthy I am, brought me before you so that I may be so bold as to confer with you. This must be Heaven's pity for Yan such that it will not forsake us to a lonesome fate. Today, Qin harbours a greedy heart, and their desires can never be satisfied. Without having conquered all the land in the world and made servants out of all rulers within the four seas, their ambition would never be sated. Now Qin has already captured the King of Han and annexed his entire territory. They have raised troops and marched them south to invade Chu. To their north, they are bearing down on Zhao. Wang Jian, leading several tens of thousands of soldiers, has reached the Zhang River and Ye County (鄴縣). And as for Li Xin, he has marched out of Taiyuan and Yunzhong (雲中)."

Appearances[edit | edit source]

Notes[edit | edit source]

  1. The state Wèi (衛) is commonly spelled Wey in contravention of the Hanyu Pinyin romanization standard to distinguish from the more prominent state Wèi (魏) because the two polities' modern Mandarin pronunciations are homophonic. In ancient times, their pronunciations were distinct and remain so in some other Chinese languages today.
  2. These were specifically offspring not of Lord Yuan's legal wife.
  3. i.e. Han (韓), Zhao (趙), and Wei (魏)
  4. "Inverted scales" is a metaphor for an individual's trigger. This line is translated less literally by J.R. Hightower in Burton Watson's Records of the Grand Historian of China (1961) as: "Angry as you are at the insults you have suffered, how can you dream of baiting such a dragon?"

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 Sima Qian. (94 BCE). "Biographies of Assassins". In Records of the Grand Historian. Chinese Text Project. Accessed 5 July 2023. https://ctext.org/shiji/ci-ke-lie-zhuan.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Sima Qian. (1961). "The Biography of Ching K'o", translated by J.R. Hightower. In Records of the Grand Historian of China, edited by Burton Watson. 1st ed. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, pp. 106–117.