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Around 48 BCE, the [[Cult of Serqet]] used a [[Shrine of Serapis|shrine]] dedicated to Serapis in northern [[Kanopos Nome]] to perform one of their gruesome ceremonies, guided by their 'mission statement' that deemed they should gather ''"facets of the four gods -- [[Sekhmet]], mistress of the desert, Serapis, lord of transition, [[Sobek]], lord of the [[Nile]], and [[Horus]], lord of the sky. Their followers will be initiated into our order in their holy places."''<ref name="Taste of her Sting">''Assassin's Creed: Origins'' - [[Taste of her Sting]]</ref>
Around 48 BCE, the [[Cult of Serqet]] used a [[Shrine of Serapis|shrine]] dedicated to Serapis in northern [[Kanopos Nome]] to perform one of their gruesome ceremonies, guided by their 'mission statement' that deemed they should gather ''"facets of the four gods -- [[Sekhmet]], mistress of the desert, Serapis, lord of transition, [[Sobek]], lord of the [[Nile]], and [[Horus]], lord of the sky. Their followers will be initiated into our order in their holy places."''<ref name="Taste of her Sting">''Assassin's Creed: Origins'' - [[Taste of her Sting]]</ref>
==Trivia==
*In [[Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]], the same statue is used to represent [[Hades]], god of the [[Greece|greek]] underworld. This doesn't mean Serapis and Hades are one and the same.


==Appearances==
==Appearances==

Revision as of 00:52, 21 February 2019


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A statue of Serapis in the Library of Alexandria

Serapis was a Greco-Egyptian god worshipped in ancient Egypt.

The god was introduced by Ptolemy I Soter, the founder of the Ptolemaic dynasty of Egypt, who sought to accommodate the beliefs of both Greek and Egyptian culture, highlighting their similarities. To this end, he amalgamated the names of Osiris and Apis, forming the name "Serapis".[1]

By the 1st century BCE, the cult of Serapis was widespread across Egypt, with various towns and cities containing a temple or shrine dedicated to him, the most notable being the Serapeum of Alexandria.[2]

At some point before 48 BCE, the Saisian blacksmith Sokar crafted a fine spear he named The Serpent of Serapis out of meteorite metal, wrapping its shaft with water-hardened leather, for one of Apollodorus's captains at his villa. The captain was killed and the spear stolen by one of Sefetu's men, however, and Sokar fled Sais fearing for his own life.[3] In 48 BCE, Sokar met the Medjay Bayek of Siwa, who heard the tale of the spear, and offered to find the thief and take back the spear. Appreciating his offer, Sokar let him have the spear.[3]

Around 48 BCE, the Cult of Serqet used a shrine dedicated to Serapis in northern Kanopos Nome to perform one of their gruesome ceremonies, guided by their 'mission statement' that deemed they should gather "facets of the four gods -- Sekhmet, mistress of the desert, Serapis, lord of transition, Sobek, lord of the Nile, and Horus, lord of the sky. Their followers will be initiated into our order in their holy places."[4]

Appearances

References

  1. Assassin's Creed: OriginsDiscovery Tour
  2. Assassin's Creed: Origins
  3. 3.0 3.1 Assassin's Creed: Origins - Fair Trade
  4. Assassin's Creed: Origins - Taste of her Sting