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[[File:Little Orelov.jpg|thumb|220px|right|A young Nadya]]
[[File:Little Orelov.jpg|thumb|220px|right|A young Nadya]]
'''Nadya Orelov''' (between 1908 to 1917 - unknown) was the daughter of [[Nikolai Orelov|Nikolai]] and [[Anna Orelov]].<ref name="ACTF3">''[[Assassin's Creed: The Fall]]'' - Issue #3</ref> She is also the elder sister of [[Innokenti Orelov]], and as such, a great-aunt to [[Daniel Cross]].<ref name="ACTC">''[[Assassin's Creed: The Chain]]''</ref>
'''Nadya Orelov''' (between 1908 to 1917 unknown) was the daughter of [[Nikolai Orelov|Nikolai]] and [[Anna Orelov]].<ref name="ACTF3">''[[Assassin's Creed: The Fall]]'' - Issue #3</ref> She is also the elder sister of [[Innokenti Orelov]], and as such, a great-aunt to [[Daniel Cross]].<ref name="ACTC">''[[Assassin's Creed: The Chain]]''</ref>


==Biography==
==Biography==

Revision as of 11:34, 9 July 2014

A young Nadya

Nadya Orelov (between 1908 to 1917 – unknown) was the daughter of Nikolai and Anna Orelov.[1] She is also the elder sister of Innokenti Orelov, and as such, a great-aunt to Daniel Cross.[2]

Biography

In 1917, Nadya was present with her parents when Nikolai exhumed the body of Grigori Rasputin, in order to obtain his shard of the Russian Imperial Sceptre, one of the Staves of Eden. They then proceeded to escape Russia, and migrate to the United States to begin new lives.[1]

During the Palmer Raids of 1919, Nadya and her mother were separated from her father and younger brother, and were deported back to Russia. The American Assassins later claimed that they had overseen Nadya and Anna's safe return to Russia, saying that "the Brotherhood takes care of its own."

Nadya married and had at least one child, a son. Many years later, in 2002, she met a young man in a church in Moscow, not realizing that it was her great-nephew Daniel Cross.[2] Without knowing it, she also possessed Rasputin's shard of the Imperial Sceptre, which had splintered from its parent Staff when the artifact was destroyed in the Tunguska explosion by her father.[2]

Trivia

  • Nadya is a diminutive of the Russian name Nadezhda, meaning "hope."

Gallery

References

Template:ACTF Template:ACTC