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'''Miriam Kurtz''' (c. 1920s — 1970s) was a woman living in [[Germany]] during [[World War II]] who was a part of the Navajo splinter of the {{Wiki|Edelweiss Pirates}} youth group. She and other Edelweiss Pirates were captured by Nazi soldiers and imprisoned in Cologne, for which she was thoroughly interrogated; even so, Miriam put up a stern resistance against the attempts at leveraging information from her.
'''Miriam Kurtz''' (unknown – 1970s) was a woman living in [[Germany]] during [[World War II]] who was a part of the Navajo splinter of the {{Wiki|Edelweiss Pirates}} youth group. She and other Edelweiss Pirates were captured by Nazi soldiers and imprisoned in Cologne, for which she was thoroughly interrogated; even so, Miriam put up a stern resistance against the attempts at leveraging information from her.


At an unspecified point, her leader {{Wiki|Barthel Schink}} told Miriam of an [[Pieces of Eden|artifact]] concealed in the spire of the St. Petrus Cathedral and ordered her to bring it to the [[Assassins]] in [[Paris]], despite her reluctance in wanting to know. However, the artifact was presumably found by the Third Reich sometime in 1940, as specified by the [[Abstergo Industries]] scientist [[Satish]].
At an unspecified point, her leader {{Wiki|Barthel Schink}} told Miriam of an [[Pieces of Eden|artifact]] concealed in the spire of the St. Petrus Cathedral and ordered her to bring it to the [[Assassins]] in [[Paris]], despite her reluctance in wanting to know. However, the artifact was presumably found by the Third Reich sometime in 1940, as specified by the [[Abstergo Industries]] scientist [[Satish]].

Revision as of 18:08, 23 March 2014

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Miriam Kurtz (unknown – 1970s) was a woman living in Germany during World War II who was a part of the Navajo splinter of the Edelweiss Pirates youth group. She and other Edelweiss Pirates were captured by Nazi soldiers and imprisoned in Cologne, for which she was thoroughly interrogated; even so, Miriam put up a stern resistance against the attempts at leveraging information from her.

At an unspecified point, her leader Barthel Schink told Miriam of an artifact concealed in the spire of the St. Petrus Cathedral and ordered her to bring it to the Assassins in Paris, despite her reluctance in wanting to know. However, the artifact was presumably found by the Third Reich sometime in 1940, as specified by the Abstergo Industries scientist Satish.

Miriam was the mother of Karl and the grandmother of Seamus. Her grandson's genetic memory was later used in Abstergo Industries' Surrogate Initiative in 1980, in which Miriam's memories were relived by Karl's ex-wife Aileen Bock, the project's lead.

Reference