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During the 1st century in {{Wiki|Ptolemaic dynasty|Ptolemaic}} [[Egypt]], the [[Medjay]], [[Bayek]] of [[Siwa]], alongside his ex-wife [[Amunet|Aya]] of [[Alexandria]], founded the [[Hidden Ones]], a precusor to the Assassin Brotherhood. In 38 BCE in [[Sinai]], while laying down the foundations that would become the Creed, Bayek declared to the Hidden Ones that Aya, now known as Amunet, was a Mentor to the brotherhood, thus marking the first time the term "Mentor" was used.<ref name="ACO">''[[Assassin's Creed: Origins]]''</ref>
During the 1st century in {{Wiki|Ptolemaic dynasty|Ptolemaic}} [[Egypt]], the [[Medjay]], [[Bayek]] of [[Siwa]], alongside his ex-wife [[Amunet|Aya]] of [[Alexandria]], founded the [[Hidden Ones]], a precusor to the Assassin Brotherhood. In 38 BCE in [[Sinai]], while laying down the foundations that would become the Creed, Bayek declared to the Hidden Ones that Aya, now known as Amunet, was a Mentor to the brotherhood, thus marking the first time the term "Mentor" was used.<ref name="ACO">''[[Assassin's Creed: Origins]]''</ref>


===Middle Ages===
===Viking Era===
During the 10th century, [[Torgny the Lawspeaker]], the advisor of the King [[Eric the Victorious|Eric]] of [[Sweden]], was the Mentor of the Proto-Assassins in Scandinavia. With his student [[Thorvald Hjaltason]], he fought the Proto-Templars [[Styrbjörn the Strong]] and [[Harald Bluetooth]] who invaded Sweden.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants – Fate of the Gods]]''</ref>
 
===Levantine Brotherhood===
[[File:Masyaf Confront.png|thumb|left|250px|Al Mualim attempting to sway Altaïr to his cause]]
[[File:Masyaf Confront.png|thumb|left|250px|Al Mualim attempting to sway Altaïr to his cause]]
The term was later used during the Crusades in the [[Levant]], where the leader of the [[Levantine Assassins]], referred to only as [[Al Mualim]], was most commonly referred to as "Al Mualim," Arabic for "the Mentor." When Al Mualim used his [[Apple of Eden 2|Apple of Eden]] to brainwash the Assassins in [[Masyaf]] and claim absolute control over them, he was confronted and killed by his student [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad]].<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed]]''</ref>
The term was later used during the Crusades in the [[Levant]], where the leader of the [[Levantine Assassins]], referred to only as [[Al Mualim]], was most commonly referred to as "Al Mualim," Arabic for "the Mentor." When Al Mualim used his [[Apple of Eden 2|Apple of Eden]] to brainwash the Assassins in [[Masyaf]] and claim absolute control over them, he was confronted and killed by his student [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad]].<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed]]''</ref>
Line 24: Line 27:


===Renaissance===
===Renaissance===
{{Quote|You will now be known as il Mentore, the guardian of our Order and our secrets.|Niccolò Machiavelli to Ezio Auditore.|Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood}}[[File:Ascension 5.png|thumb|250px|Ezio Auditore being promoted to Mentor]]
{{Quote|You will now be known as il Mentore, the guardian of our Order and our secrets.|Niccolò Machiavelli to Ezio Auditore.|Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood}}
In August 1503, [[Ezio Auditore da Firenze]] was promoted to the rank of Mentor of the [[Italian Brotherhood of Assassins|Italian Assassins]] by the ''de facto'' leader [[Niccolò Machiavelli]], for his years of exploits against the [[House of Borgia|Borgia]] family.<ref name="ACBH">''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]''</ref> He held this position for several years, and also acted as a leader and teacher to the [[Ottoman Brotherhood of Assassins|Ottoman Assassins]] during his time in [[Constantinople]].<ref name="ACR" />
At the end of the 15th century, the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] Grand Vizier [[Ishak Pasha]] became the Mentor of the [[Ottoman Brotherhood of Assassins]]. Until his death in 1497, he tried to establish a peace between the Ottoman Empire and the Assassins Brotherhood.<ref name="ACRB">''[[Assassin's Creed: Rebellion]]''</ref> Later, his apprentice [[Yusuf Tazim]] took his role as the leader of the guild without pretending to the title of Mentor.<ref name="ACR"/>


Ezio resigned as Mentor upon returning to [[Italy]] from the [[Ottoman Empire]] in 1513, and assigned [[Lodovico Ariosto]] to become his successor.<ref name="ACR novel">[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations (novel)|''Assassin's Creed: Revelations'' novel]]</ref> As of 1511, a descendant of Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad, [[Iskender]], held the position of Mentor of the [[Egyptian Brotherhood of Assassins|Egyptian Assassins]]. Around this time, Iskender received aid from Ezio Auditore da Firenze after having been arrested and imprisoned.<ref name="ACR" />
By 1491, the [[Spanish Brotherhood of Assassins]] was led by the Mentor [[Benedicto]]. In 1492, he was captured by the [[Spanish Inquisition]] led by the [[Spanish Rite of the Templar Order|Spanish Templar]] [[Tomás de Torquemada]]. Branded as a heretic, he was burned at the stake in [[Seville]] before the King [[Ferdinand II of Aragon]] and Queen [[Isabella I of Castile]]. <ref>''[[Assassin's Creed (film)]]''</ref> Years later, [[Aguilar de Nerha]], who escaped from the pyre, became the new Mentor of the Spanish Brotherhood.<ref name="ACRB"/>
 
[[File:Ascension 5.png|thumb|250px|Ezio Auditore being promoted to Mentor]]
In August 1503, [[Ezio Auditore da Firenze]] was promoted to the rank of Mentor of the [[Italian Brotherhood of Assassins|Italian Assassins]] by the ''de facto'' leader [[Niccolò Machiavelli]], for his years of exploits against the [[House of Borgia|Borgia]] family.<ref name="ACBH">''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]''</ref> He held this position for several years, and also acted as a leader and teacher to the Ottoman Assassins during his time in [[Constantinople]].<ref name="ACR"/>
 
Ezio resigned as Mentor upon returning to [[Italy]] from the Ottoman Empire in 1513, and assigned [[Lodovico Ariosto]] to become his successor.<ref name="ACR novel">[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations (novel)|''Assassin's Creed: Revelations'' novel]]</ref> As of 1511, a descendant of Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad, [[Iskender]], held the position of Mentor of the [[Egyptian Brotherhood of Assassins|Egyptian Assassins]]. Around this time, Iskender received aid from Ezio Auditore da Firenze after having been arrested and imprisoned.<ref name="ACR"/>


Some time after Ezio's retirement from the Assassin Order, the [[Chinese Assassins|Chinese Assassin]] [[Shao Jun]] and [[Zhu Jiuyuan|her Mentor]] attempted to flee from [[China]], to escape from [[Jiajing Emperor|Emperor Jiajing]]'s [[Great Rites Controversy|purge]] of the country – which included Assassins – and request Ezio's aid. However, once the two of them had arrived in [[Venice]], Jiajing's Imperial soldiers caught up with the Assassins, and Jun's Mentor died while trying to secure her safety and escape. She eventually avenged her Mentor and later took on the role of Mentor herself.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Embers]]''</ref>
Some time after Ezio's retirement from the Assassin Order, the [[Chinese Assassins|Chinese Assassin]] [[Shao Jun]] and [[Zhu Jiuyuan|her Mentor]] attempted to flee from [[China]], to escape from [[Jiajing Emperor|Emperor Jiajing]]'s [[Great Rites Controversy|purge]] of the country – which included Assassins – and request Ezio's aid. However, once the two of them had arrived in [[Venice]], Jiajing's Imperial soldiers caught up with the Assassins, and Jun's Mentor died while trying to secure her safety and escape. She eventually avenged her Mentor and later took on the role of Mentor herself.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Embers]]''</ref>


===Colonial America===
===Colonial America===
By 1673, the [[Maya|Mayan]] [[Bahlam]] was the Mentor of the [[West Indies Brotherhood of Assassins]] in Tulum. He tried to find the [[Sage]] to protected the [[Observatory (Isu)|Observatory]] from the [[West Indies Rite of the Templar Order]]. By 1713, his son [[Ah Tabai]] took his mantle as Mentor and continued his work. As he was betrayed by the schemes of the Assassin turncoat [[Duncan Walpole]], Ah Tabai decided to move the headquarters of the Assassin. The Assassin and former [[Piracy|pirate]] [[Edward Kenway]] gave his hideout in [[Great Inagua]] to make amend to unwillingly participate to Walpole treason.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]''</ref>
In 1732, the Assassin and former [[Slavery|slave]] [[François Mackandal]] founded his [[Saint-Domingue Brotherhood of Assassins|own Brotherhood]] on the island of [[Haiti|Saint-Domingue]]. He liberated slaves to recruit them in his Brotherhood. While he collected different [[Piece of Eden|Pieces of Eden]], he also planed to poison all the white colonists of the island. In 1758, the Templars captured and burned him at the stake under the order of [[Madeleine de L'Isle]], leading to the collasping of the Brotherhood.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed III: Liberation]]''</ref>
Two decades later, [[Eseosa]], grandson of the Assassin and slave liberator [[Adéwalé]], rebuilt the Brotherhood and became the Mentor. He led the [[Haitian Revolution]] with his brothers.<ref>''[[Eseosa's Codex]]''</ref>
In 1740, Ah Tabai sent the Assassin [[Achilles Davenport]] in the [[United States|British colonies]] to found a new Brotherhood. There, he met [[John de la Tour]] an Assassin from [[Canada]] who searched [[Temple (Isu)|Isu Temples]]. Working together, they arrived in [[Louisbourg]] in 1745 during the [[Siege of Louisbourg]]. John gave the title of Mentor to Achilles before sacrificing himself to give enough time to the Assassin to leave the city.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]'' – [[War Letters]]</ref>
During the mid 18th century, Achilles recruited many apprentices in the [[American Brotherhood of Assassins|Colonial Brotherhood]], constructed a powerful fleet and collected the [[Precursor box]] and [[Voynich manuscript]]. In 1755, one of his apprentice [[Shay Cormac]] inadvertently triggered an [[1755 Lisbon earthquake|earthquake]] in [[Lisbon]] while exploring a [[Lisbon Temple|Isu Temple]]. As Achilles refused to believe it was the Temple who activated the earthquake, Shay stole the manuscript. Branded as a traitor, Shay was left for dead before he joined the [[American Rite of the Templar Order|Colonial Templars]]. Shay tracked his former brothers but spared the life of Achilles that the [[Grand Master of the Templar Order|Grand Master]] [[Haytham Kenway]] wanted dead. Haytham shot Achilles in the leg to impeach him to return on the field.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]''</ref>
[[File:ACIII-TriptoBoston 2.png|thumb|left|250px|Achilles and Connor in Boston]]
[[File:ACIII-TriptoBoston 2.png|thumb|left|250px|Achilles and Connor in Boston]]
During the later 18th century, most of the Assassins in Colonial America had been [[Colonial Assassin purge|wiped out]], leaving the survivor [[Achilles Davenport]] as the Mentor of the Colonial Brotherhood. During the time before the [[American Revolutionary War]], he was hesitant with training new Assassins, due to his agreement with the Templars concerning his life. Eventually though, he trained [[Ratonhnhaké:ton]] as a member of the order, leading him until his death.<ref name="AC3">''[[Assassin's Creed III]]''</ref>
In 1763, most of the Assassins in Colonial America had been [[Colonial Assassin purge|wiped out]], leaving as only survivor Achilles. During the time before the [[American Revolutionary War]], he was hesitant with training new Assassins, due to his agreement with the Templars concerning his life. Eventually though, he trained Haytham's son [[Ratonhnhaké:ton]] as a member of the Brotherhood, leading him until his death.<ref name="AC3">''[[Assassin's Creed III]]''</ref>


Under Achilles' reign, the Brotherhood regrew in the area, and the fight led by Ratonhnhaké:ton greatly diminished the influence of the Templar Order in the colonies. He led from his home in the manor atop the [[Davenport Homestead]], which overlooked the naval power that Achilles had created for the Brotherhood. Following Achilles' death, Ratonhnhaké:ton assassinated the remaining Templar conspirators, presumably becoming the ''de facto ''Mentor.<ref name="AC3" />
Under Achilles' reign, the Brotherhood regrew in the area, and the fight led by Ratonhnhaké:ton greatly diminished the influence of the Templar Order in the colonies. Following Achilles' death, Ratonhnhaké:ton assassinated the remaining Templar conspirators, presumably becoming the ''de facto'' Mentor.<ref name="AC3"/>


===France===
===France===
During the Middle Ages, the Mentor of the French Brotherhood was [[Guillaume de Nogaret]], who most notably influenced King [[Philip IV of France]] into declaring the Templar Order illegal and assigned [[Master Assassin]] [[Thomas de Carneillon]] to lead the assault on the Templar headquarters. The raid was successful, with the Knights Templar disbanded and their Grand Master [[Jacques de Molay]] executed. Carneillon himself took the title of Mentor sometime after de Molay's execution.
During the Middle Ages, the Mentor of the [[Parisian Rite of the Templar Order|French Brotherhood]] was [[Guillaume de Nogaret]], who most notably influenced King [[Philip IV of France]] into declaring the Templar Order illegal and assigned [[Master Assassin]] [[Thomas de Carneillon]] to lead the assault on the Templar headquarters. The raid was successful, with the Knights Templar disbanded and their Grand Master [[Jacques de Molay]] executed. Carneillon himself took the title of Mentor sometime after de Molay's execution.<ref name="ACU">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]''</ref>
 
During the [[Hundred Years' War]], the Queen [[Yolande of Aragon]], mother-in-law of [[Charles VII of France]], became the Mentor of the French Brotherhood. She prevented the Templars controlling England to take back France after the purge of the Templars a century before. She also financed the army of [[Jeanne d'Arc]], recruiting her and training her to become an Assassin.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Heresy]]''</ref>
 
At the end of the 17th century, another [[French Mentor (1690)|Mentor]] led the French Brotherhood. He tasked [[Louis-Joseph d'Albert de Luynes]] to recruit [[Julie d'Aubigny]] in the Brotherhood but this attempt failed. At the beginning of the 18th century, [[Mireille]] was the leader of the French Brotherhood. She became the lover of the highwayman [[Louis-Dominique Cartouche]]. She saved him from his public execution and introduced in the Brotherhood.<ref name="ACU"/>


Many years later, during the French Revolution, the title was held by [[Honoré Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau]], a noted and venerated public speaker and one of the most famous contributors to the Revolution. His reign as Mentor saw two ultimately unsuccessful attempts to secure peace between the French Brotherhood and the Templars, the second of which resulted in Mirabeau's fatal poisoning by [[Pierre Bellec]], who opposed any such truce. Though leadership of the Brotherhood fell to Master Assassin [[Sophie Trenet]], it would appear she did not take the title of Mentor as she was never addressed as such.
During the [[French Revolution]], the title was held by [[Honoré Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau]], a noted and venerated public speaker and one of the most famous contributors to the Revolution. His reign as Mentor saw two ultimately unsuccessful attempts to secure peace between the French Brotherhood and the Templars, the second of which resulted in Mirabeau's fatal poisoning by [[Pierre Bellec]], who opposed any such truce. Though leadership of the Brotherhood fell to Master Assassin [[Sophie Trenet]], it would appear she did not take the title of Mentor as she was never addressed as such.<ref name="ACU"/>


===Indian Broterhood===
===Indian Broterhood===

Revision as of 18:08, 22 October 2019

Patience, brothers. Soon we will reveal the secrets of Assassin's Creed III: Liberation, Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag, Assassin's Creed Chronicles: India and Assassin's Creed: Initiates.

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It has been proposed that this page be merged with Assassin leader, under the article: Mentor. Discussion to this effect can be held on the former article's talk page.

This article is about the highest rank of the Assassin Brotherhood, sometimes referred to as "Grand Master". You may be looking for other uses of the title.
"The Mentor's role is to oversee and coordinate the actions of the Order in the pursuit of harmony through free will."
―The Mentor, 2000.[src]
File:AssassinLogo.png
The emblem of the Assassin Order

The title of Mentor was an honorific title given to leaders of the Assassin Order who had obtained an extraordinary amount of skill and wisdom, and subsequently used these skills to tutor aspiring apprentices.[1]

The Assassin leaders who were assigned to direct the branches of the Brotherhood spread around the globe were granted the title of Mentor, once they had trained a specific number of apprentices and attained a high amount of skill and wisdom themselves.[1]

In 2000, the title of Mentor had become official and singular, with only a single Mentor leading the entire Assassin Order.[1] Typically, the Mentor acted as a living conduit for all of their predecessors, possessing the sum total of all of their knowledge and experience, which was passed down from Mentor to Mentor.[2] However, following this Mentor's death, the Great Purge was enacted, with the leadership of the Assassin Order under a specified Mentor waylaid in efforts to evade detection by the Templars.

History

Classical Antiquity

During the 1st century in Ptolemaic Egypt, the Medjay, Bayek of Siwa, alongside his ex-wife Aya of Alexandria, founded the Hidden Ones, a precusor to the Assassin Brotherhood. In 38 BCE in Sinai, while laying down the foundations that would become the Creed, Bayek declared to the Hidden Ones that Aya, now known as Amunet, was a Mentor to the brotherhood, thus marking the first time the term "Mentor" was used.[3]

Viking Era

During the 10th century, Torgny the Lawspeaker, the advisor of the King Eric of Sweden, was the Mentor of the Proto-Assassins in Scandinavia. With his student Thorvald Hjaltason, he fought the Proto-Templars Styrbjörn the Strong and Harald Bluetooth who invaded Sweden.[4]

Levantine Brotherhood

Al Mualim attempting to sway Altaïr to his cause

The term was later used during the Crusades in the Levant, where the leader of the Levantine Assassins, referred to only as Al Mualim, was most commonly referred to as "Al Mualim," Arabic for "the Mentor." When Al Mualim used his Apple of Eden to brainwash the Assassins in Masyaf and claim absolute control over them, he was confronted and killed by his student Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad.[5]

Altaïr succeeded Al Mualim as Mentor, and made many reforms and innovations to the Assassin Order.[6] These changes along with his efforts to spread the influences of the Assassins made him the most legendary and respected Mentor of the entire Order.[7]

In 1227, Altaïr's childhood rival Abbas Sofian staged a coup d'état against Altaïr, resulting in the Levantine branch falling under Abbas' leadership and of Altaïr's self-imposed exile.[8] Usurping the title of Mentor,[7] Abbas tyrannically ruled the branch and its headquarters of Masyaf with a disregard for the Creed, until he was killed by Altaïr in 1247,[8] marking the return of Altaïr's rule as Mentor. Altaïr held this title for ten more years, until he disbanded the Levantine Assassins from Masyaf and passed away in his library during the Mongol attack on Masyaf on 12 August 1257.[7]

Renaissance

"You will now be known as il Mentore, the guardian of our Order and our secrets."
―Niccolò Machiavelli to Ezio Auditore.[src]

At the end of the 15th century, the Ottoman Grand Vizier Ishak Pasha became the Mentor of the Ottoman Brotherhood of Assassins. Until his death in 1497, he tried to establish a peace between the Ottoman Empire and the Assassins Brotherhood.[9] Later, his apprentice Yusuf Tazim took his role as the leader of the guild without pretending to the title of Mentor.[7]

By 1491, the Spanish Brotherhood of Assassins was led by the Mentor Benedicto. In 1492, he was captured by the Spanish Inquisition led by the Spanish Templar Tomás de Torquemada. Branded as a heretic, he was burned at the stake in Seville before the King Ferdinand II of Aragon and Queen Isabella I of Castile. [10] Years later, Aguilar de Nerha, who escaped from the pyre, became the new Mentor of the Spanish Brotherhood.[9]

Ezio Auditore being promoted to Mentor

In August 1503, Ezio Auditore da Firenze was promoted to the rank of Mentor of the Italian Assassins by the de facto leader Niccolò Machiavelli, for his years of exploits against the Borgia family.[11] He held this position for several years, and also acted as a leader and teacher to the Ottoman Assassins during his time in Constantinople.[7]

Ezio resigned as Mentor upon returning to Italy from the Ottoman Empire in 1513, and assigned Lodovico Ariosto to become his successor.[12] As of 1511, a descendant of Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad, Iskender, held the position of Mentor of the Egyptian Assassins. Around this time, Iskender received aid from Ezio Auditore da Firenze after having been arrested and imprisoned.[7]

Some time after Ezio's retirement from the Assassin Order, the Chinese Assassin Shao Jun and her Mentor attempted to flee from China, to escape from Emperor Jiajing's purge of the country – which included Assassins – and request Ezio's aid. However, once the two of them had arrived in Venice, Jiajing's Imperial soldiers caught up with the Assassins, and Jun's Mentor died while trying to secure her safety and escape. She eventually avenged her Mentor and later took on the role of Mentor herself.[13]

Colonial America

By 1673, the Mayan Bahlam was the Mentor of the West Indies Brotherhood of Assassins in Tulum. He tried to find the Sage to protected the Observatory from the West Indies Rite of the Templar Order. By 1713, his son Ah Tabai took his mantle as Mentor and continued his work. As he was betrayed by the schemes of the Assassin turncoat Duncan Walpole, Ah Tabai decided to move the headquarters of the Assassin. The Assassin and former pirate Edward Kenway gave his hideout in Great Inagua to make amend to unwillingly participate to Walpole treason.[14]

In 1732, the Assassin and former slave François Mackandal founded his own Brotherhood on the island of Saint-Domingue. He liberated slaves to recruit them in his Brotherhood. While he collected different Pieces of Eden, he also planed to poison all the white colonists of the island. In 1758, the Templars captured and burned him at the stake under the order of Madeleine de L'Isle, leading to the collasping of the Brotherhood.[15]

Two decades later, Eseosa, grandson of the Assassin and slave liberator Adéwalé, rebuilt the Brotherhood and became the Mentor. He led the Haitian Revolution with his brothers.[16]

In 1740, Ah Tabai sent the Assassin Achilles Davenport in the British colonies to found a new Brotherhood. There, he met John de la Tour an Assassin from Canada who searched Isu Temples. Working together, they arrived in Louisbourg in 1745 during the Siege of Louisbourg. John gave the title of Mentor to Achilles before sacrificing himself to give enough time to the Assassin to leave the city.[17]

During the mid 18th century, Achilles recruited many apprentices in the Colonial Brotherhood, constructed a powerful fleet and collected the Precursor box and Voynich manuscript. In 1755, one of his apprentice Shay Cormac inadvertently triggered an earthquake in Lisbon while exploring a Isu Temple. As Achilles refused to believe it was the Temple who activated the earthquake, Shay stole the manuscript. Branded as a traitor, Shay was left for dead before he joined the Colonial Templars. Shay tracked his former brothers but spared the life of Achilles that the Grand Master Haytham Kenway wanted dead. Haytham shot Achilles in the leg to impeach him to return on the field.[18]

Achilles and Connor in Boston

In 1763, most of the Assassins in Colonial America had been wiped out, leaving as only survivor Achilles. During the time before the American Revolutionary War, he was hesitant with training new Assassins, due to his agreement with the Templars concerning his life. Eventually though, he trained Haytham's son Ratonhnhaké:ton as a member of the Brotherhood, leading him until his death.[19]

Under Achilles' reign, the Brotherhood regrew in the area, and the fight led by Ratonhnhaké:ton greatly diminished the influence of the Templar Order in the colonies. Following Achilles' death, Ratonhnhaké:ton assassinated the remaining Templar conspirators, presumably becoming the de facto Mentor.[19]

France

During the Middle Ages, the Mentor of the French Brotherhood was Guillaume de Nogaret, who most notably influenced King Philip IV of France into declaring the Templar Order illegal and assigned Master Assassin Thomas de Carneillon to lead the assault on the Templar headquarters. The raid was successful, with the Knights Templar disbanded and their Grand Master Jacques de Molay executed. Carneillon himself took the title of Mentor sometime after de Molay's execution.[20]

During the Hundred Years' War, the Queen Yolande of Aragon, mother-in-law of Charles VII of France, became the Mentor of the French Brotherhood. She prevented the Templars controlling England to take back France after the purge of the Templars a century before. She also financed the army of Jeanne d'Arc, recruiting her and training her to become an Assassin.[21]

At the end of the 17th century, another Mentor led the French Brotherhood. He tasked Louis-Joseph d'Albert de Luynes to recruit Julie d'Aubigny in the Brotherhood but this attempt failed. At the beginning of the 18th century, Mireille was the leader of the French Brotherhood. She became the lover of the highwayman Louis-Dominique Cartouche. She saved him from his public execution and introduced in the Brotherhood.[20]

During the French Revolution, the title was held by Honoré Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau, a noted and venerated public speaker and one of the most famous contributors to the Revolution. His reign as Mentor saw two ultimately unsuccessful attempts to secure peace between the French Brotherhood and the Templars, the second of which resulted in Mirabeau's fatal poisoning by Pierre Bellec, who opposed any such truce. Though leadership of the Brotherhood fell to Master Assassin Sophie Trenet, it would appear she did not take the title of Mentor as she was never addressed as such.[20]

Indian Broterhood

During the mid-19th century, the Mentor of the Indian Brotherhood of Assassins was Hamid. Under the leadership of Hamid, the Assassins were a strong presence in the Sikh Empire. Hamid instructed Assassin Arbaaz Mir to find a Piece of Eden known as the Koh-i-Noor. Located in the palace of Maharaja Ranjit Singh, the Piece of Eden was said to hold an immense amount of power and was sought heavily by the Assassins as well as the Templars.[22]

Modern time

Daniel Cross killing the Mentor

During the 20th century, the entire Assassin Order was united under a single Mentor.[1] By 1998, an individual known only as "the Mentor" led the Order, though his name and location were always kept secret – even from the Assassins themselves – for safety concerns, and he always stayed mobile to avoid being located. In November 2000, the Mentor invited Daniel Cross into his secret Dubai headquarters after having monitored his actions for two years, believing him to be a worthy apprentice.[2]

However, Daniel, whose brain had been unknowingly experimented upon by Abstergo Industries and imprinted with an impulse to kill the Mentor, subsequently assassinated him after having been rewarded with a Hidden Blade. Following this, the Assassins were thrown into disarray and forced underground,[2] and the mantle of leader was eventually picked up by William Miles.[7]

Known Mentors

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Assassin's Creed Encyclopedia
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Assassin's Creed: The Fall – Issue #3
  3. Assassin's Creed: Origins
  4. Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants – Fate of the Gods
  5. Assassin's Creed
  6. Assassin's Creed II
  7. 7.00 7.01 7.02 7.03 7.04 7.05 7.06 7.07 7.08 7.09 7.10 7.11 Assassin's Creed: Revelations
  8. 8.0 8.1 Assassin's Creed: The Secret Crusade
  9. 9.0 9.1 Assassin's Creed: Rebellion
  10. Assassin's Creed (film)
  11. 11.0 11.1 Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood
  12. 12.0 12.1 Assassin's Creed: Revelations novel
  13. Assassin's Creed: Embers
  14. Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag
  15. Assassin's Creed III: Liberation
  16. Eseosa's Codex
  17. Assassin's Creed: RogueWar Letters
  18. Assassin's Creed: Rogue
  19. 19.0 19.1 19.2 Assassin's Creed III
  20. 20.0 20.1 20.2 20.3 20.4 20.5 20.6 20.7 Assassin's Creed: Unity
  21. Assassin's Creed: Heresy
  22. 22.0 22.1 Assassin's Creed: Brahman
  23. 23.0 23.1 Assassin's Creed: Origins – The Hidden Ones
  24. Assassin's Creed: Last DescendantsFate of the Gods
  25. Assassin's Creed: Memories
  26. Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants – Tomb of the Khan
  27. Assassin's Creed: Heresy
  28. 28.0 28.1 Assassin's Creed: Rebellion
  29. Assassin's Creed (film)
  30. Assassin's Creed: Memories
  31. 31.0 31.1 31.2 Assassin's Creed Chronicles: China
  32. 32.0 32.1 32.2 Assassin's Creed: Initiates – Surveillance
  33. Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag
  34. Assassin's Creed: The Official Movie Novelization
  35. 35.0 35.1 Assassin's Creed III: Liberation
  36. Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants
  37. Assassin's Creed: The Fall – Issue #1
  38. Assassin's Creed: SyndicateDatabase: Galina Voronina
  39. Assassin's Creed: Syndicate - Database: Shaun Hastings

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