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{{Character Infobox
{{Character Infobox
|image =  
|image =  
|birth = 28 February 1705<br>{{Wiki|Paris}}, [[Spain|Kingdom of Spain]]
|birth = 28 February 1705<br>[[Paris]], [[France|Kingdom of France]]
|death = 11 September 1759 (aged 54) <br>{{Wiki|Cadiz}}, Kingdom of Spain
|death = 11 September 1759 (aged 54) <br>{{Wiki|Cadiz}}, [[Spain|Kingdom of Spain]]
|affiliates = [[French Navy]]
|affiliates = [[French Navy]]
|appear = ''[[Freedom Cry]]''
|appear = ''[[Freedom Cry]]''

Revision as of 22:28, 29 April 2014


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"Your name will go down in history with mine if you supply the funds and the ship!"
―Godin, seeking funding for his expedition.[src]


Louis Godin (1705 – 1759) was a French astronomer and geologist. Godin gained prominence in the scientific community when he published his astronomical tables in 1724, gaining him membership in the French Academy of Sciences. His success enabled him to participate in the French Geodesic Mission to Ecuador alongside his cousin, Jean, but he proved to be power-hungry and ineffective leader. When his expedition was stranded in Saint-Domingue in 1732, he fell in love with Guzan, one of the courtesans from La Dame en Rose, and misappropriated expedition funds by lavishing her with expensive gifts.

In mid 1735, Godin had returned to Saint-Domingue actively petitioning the French governor of Port-au-Prince, Pierre, Marquis de Fayet, to provide more funding and to allow the use of a French warship in the Geodesic Mission, rather than wait for an available Spanish ship. Though de Fayet was able to correctly deduce that Godin had embezzled from his own expedition and was planning on using the mission as a front for smuggling, he ultimately agreed to Godin's requests, as the expedition would make the slave trade more efficient.

After spending six months in Saint-Domingue, Godin was eventually granted a French schooner, the Vautour, under the stipulation that his Spanish chaperones, Antonio de Ulloa and Jorge Juan y Santacilia, be allowed on board. As Godin oversaw the final details of his voyage with a harbormaster, the Assassin Adéwalé swapped out the Vautour's manifest, ensuring that his recruits could infiltrate Godin's expedition and share its findings with the Assassins and the Maroon rebellion.

As the Vautour left Saint-Domingue, she came under attack by pirates. Timely intervention by the Experto Crede saved the Vautour, with Godin likely not realizing who it was that saved him. Though the expedition was ultimately successful, much of his findings were overshadowed by a concurrent expedition to the North Pole.

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