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[[File:MemoryShroud01.jpg|framed|The Shroud of Turin.]]
[[File:MemoryShroud01.jpg|thumb|The Shroud of Turin]]
{{quote|A myth become miracle, the "holy winding sheet" has arrived...|An Assassin describing the Shroud.|Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy}}
The '''Shroud of Eden''', commonly known as the '''Shroud of Turin''', is a linen cloth bearing an image of a man suffering a physical trauma relevant to crucifixion. The Shroud, more specifically '''PE66''', is a [[Pieces of Eden|Piece of Eden]]. Many historical and religious figures like [[Jason]], [[Joseph]], [[David]], and Jesus have possessed it at a certain time. Its purpose still unknown although it was likely used to cure illness, wounds, and to resurrect the deceased. A characteristic of the shroud demonstrated in the story of the sick lady who touched Jesus' robe, whose health was then restored back to normal.
The '''Shroud of Eden''' is a linen cloth bearing the image of a man suffering from some physical trauma. Numbered PE66, it is one of the many [[Pieces of Eden]] of [[Those Who Came Before]].<ref name="AC2">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]''</ref>


The Shroud is based on a real object known as the Shroud of Turin. It is kept in the royal chapel of the [[Wikipedia:Turin Cathedral|Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist]] in [[Wikipedia:Turin|Turin]], northern [[Italy]]. Some say that the Shroud is the very same cloth placed on the body of [[Jesus Christ|Jesus]], with its image of the face being the [[Wikipedia:Holy Face of Jesus|Holy Face of Jesus]]. According to the ''Assassin's Creed'' games, the Shroud in Turin is a forgery of the real PoE 66, made by Assassins.
It is described generally as a white cloth stained with blood, and is usually kept in a simple wooden box. The shape of a seemingly tortured man is also burned onto its surface, positioned with arms to his sides and palms forward. However, Church records note that the man's visage has changed multiple times throughout history.<ref name="ACPL Christmas">''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]'' - [[Chapter 1 - Ghosts of Christmas Past]]</ref>


==History of the Shroud==
==History==
It's earliest appearance seems to have been the Golden Fleece of Greek myth. A legendary object of strange powers, it was recovered by [[Jason]], from a tree guarded by a serpent, reminiscent of the story of the Temptation of Eve.
===Greece===
The Shroud's earliest appearance seems to have been in Greek myth, where it was known as the Golden Fleece. A legendary object of strange power, it was recovered by [[Jason]] from a tree guarded by a serpent.<ref name="AC2" />


It was also the famous multicolored dream coat given to [[Joseph]] by his father Isaac, a story renowned in the Hebrew Bible.
===Rome===
[[File:Philippi, Macedonia.png|250px|thumb|The Shroud covering Brutus.]]
{{quote|Whatever power lies within this artifact, it has not returned our Brother to us.|An Assassin commenting on the failed resurrection of Brutus.|Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy}}
The Shroud later came into the possession of the [[Assassins]] of ancient [[Rome]] for some time. After the assassination of [[Gaius Julius Caesar|Julius Caesar]] in 44 BC, and the subsequent suicide of [[Marcus Junius Brutus|Brutus]] in 42 BC, his fellow Assassins tried to reanimate Brutus using the Shroud.<ref name="ACPL Christmas" />


Roughly around 1000 AD it was in the possession of [[David]], second king of [[Israel]]. It's possible the artifact aided him in his fight against Goliath.
Since they had never used it before, they feared its effects, but nevertheless wrapped Brutus in the cloth. Though the corpse opened its eyes and moved its arms, it neither breathed nor reacted to any touch, and eventually fell still in a seeming "second death." As some of the Assassins wept, Brutus was wrapped instead in a burial mantle, and the Shroud was returned to its wooden storage box.<ref name="ACPL Christmas" />


It was in possession of the Assassins of ancient Rome for some time. After the assassination of [[Gaius Julius Caesar|Julius Caesar]] in 44 BC and the subsequent suicide of [[Marcus Junius Brutus|Brutus]] in 42 BC, his fellow Assassins tried to reanimate him using the Shroud, but it failed.
{{-}}
It is perhaps most famous during it's possession by [[Jesus Christ]]. It is unknown when he obtained the Shroud, but it likely was the source of his many healing myths. Being responsible for Jesus' crucifixion under the guise of the [[Roman Empire]], the [[Templars]] sought to possess the Shroud. Jesus' disciples however, were somehow able to recover it and used it to resurrect him. After this, traces of the Shroud disappeared.
===Israel===
[[File:Glyph 7-2.jpg|250px|thumb|Christ's crucifixion, when the Shroud was taken.]]
In relation to the Hebrew Bible, the Shroud was known as the famous multicolored coat given to [[Joseph]] by his father Isaac, and was thought to be what aided [[David]], second king of Israel, in his fight against Goliath.<ref name="AC2" />


Eventually it came into the possession of [[Geoffroi de Charney]], a French knight of the mid-14th century. It was stolen from him by the Assassins of [[Monteriggioni]] (most likely by a close descendant of[[Domenico Auditore| Domenico Auditore]]), who replaced it with a forgery. The location of the Shroud was discovered by the Templars, at some point, seeing as the siege of Monteriggioni in 1454 was to gain access to the Shroud. [[Mario Auditore]] successfully repelled the attack, and through a confession of Luziano Pezatti, Mario learned that the siege was to gain access to something under Monteriggioni. When Mario and a team of soldiers excavated the well, they found a hidden chamber filled with traps. As they crossed the chamber, they suffered many casualties, and a trap even scarred Mario's eye. Eventually, Mario discovered the Shroud, but was attacked by his men because they wanted the Shroud for its healing capabilities. Scared of the Shroud's power, Mario sent for his brother [[Giovanni Auditore da Firenze|Giovanni]] to take it away. It is unknown what Giovanni Auditore did with the Shroud, but it eventually ended up in the hands of the Assassins in Agnadello.
At this time, the Shroud's most famous ownership was by [[Jesus Christ]]. It is unknown when he obtained the Shroud, but it was likely the source of his many healing myths. Upon discovering his ownership of the Shroud, the [[Templars]], under the guise of the [[Roman Empire]], had Jesus crucified. However, Jesus' disciples were somehow able to recover it, and used it to resurrect him. After this, traces of the Shroud disappeared.<ref name="AC2" />


[[Perotto Calderon]] traveled to Agnadello in order to save his deformed illegitimate son by using the Shroud. Perotto even killed and maimed several of his brotherhood to access it. The Shroud then somehow fell into the hands of [[Niccolò di Pitigliano]], likely during or around the [[Battle of Agnadello]], of which Pitigliano was a participant. In 1510, Assassin [[Francesco Vecellio]] was sent to kill Niccolò di Pitigliano and to retrieve the Shroud. Vecellio succeeded in striking a deadly blow; however, Pitigliano survived. Wounded and dying, Pitigliano retrieved the Shroud from its hiding place and wrapped himself in it in an attempt to save himself. However, the artifact turned against him and destroyed his body, finishing the Assassin's job. Vecellio, who had anticipated this, reappeared and took the shroud from his dying grip.
{{-}}
===Monteriggioni===
[[File:Monteriggioni, Italy.png|thumb|250px|The Assassins of Monteriggioni examining the Shroud in its box.]]
{{quote|What better place than our walled city to hide such abominations from mankind? We will bury it deep and set up measures to ensure it remains hidden.|An Assassin regarding the concealment of the Shroud.|Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy}}


The Shroud was bought from a villager in [[Milan]] who was part of a group known as the Baguttiani, by a Templar agent during [[World War II]] for a large sum of money on Christmas day.
The Shroud eventually came into the possession of [[Geoffroi de Charney]], a French Templar of the mid-14th century. It was stolen from him by the Assassins of [[Monteriggioni]], who replaced it with a careful forgery. Upon confirming the Shroud's validity, an [[House of Auditore|Auditore]] Assassin (likely a close descendant of [[Domenico Auditore]]) decided that the Shroud needed to be hidden. After concealing the artifact with claims of fraud and falsified Church records, the city well was drained and excavated further in order to store the Shroud.<ref name="ACPL Christmas" /><ref name="ACPL Mario Auditore">''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]'' - [[Chapter 3 - Mario Auditore]]</ref>


==Side effects==
The Templars eventually discovered the location of the Shroud, thus, in 1454, the condottiero [[Federico da Montefeltro]] was sent to besiege the city. [[Mario Auditore]] successfully repelled the attack, and through a confession from an enemy spy, Luziano Pezatti, he learned that the siege had merely been an attempt to gain access to something hidden under Monteriggioni.<ref name="ACPL Mario Auditore" />
The use of the Shroud does not come without side effects. As demonstrated with both [[Francesco Vecellio]] and [[Perotto Calderon]] the shroud has several psychologically and physically damaging side effects with its use. Once in physical proximity the Shroud seems to "speak" to the user. When touched by Perotto Calderon it "told" him, through a voice in his head, that his son was "broken goods" and could not be healed. Francesco Vecellio experienced the same voice in his head as well as graphic hallucinations. Like other [[Pieces of Eden]], though more discernible than most known Pieces, The Shroud has even more detrimental effects when the user attempts to fully control its power. When Niccolò di Pitigliano attempted to control the Shroud, his body was smashed from inside-out by the Shroud's power.


In one of the Christmas memories for ''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy|Project Legacy]]'', a group of Assassins assess the Shroud and it's appearance. They have stated the image of a man imprinted on the cloth seems to have changed through out history to match the image of the last person to have been revived by it's power.
With a team of historians and architects, Mario searched for any record of the artifact, but only found vague references to the city well. He and a team of soldiers eventually found a hidden entrance on the back wall of the well, and were led into a narrow corridor filled with traps. As they passed through it, many men lost their lives to the razor wires, pitfalls and tripwire arrows, with Mario himself losing his left eye to a swinging pendulum.<ref name="ACPL Mario Auditore" />
 
[[File:PL Chasing Miracles.jpg|left|thumb|250px|The hidden Shroud in its box.]]
Eventually, the few remaining men reached the final room, which only contained a simple wooden box. All present heard a voice that promised to heal their injuries, but as Mario warned his men not to open the box, they attacked him. The condottiero was forced to kill them, and only just managed to return to the city, ignoring the screams and temptations projected into his mind by the artifact.<ref name="ACPL Mario Auditore" />
 
Fearing its powers, Mario hid the Shroud temporarily within [[Villa Auditore|his Villa]], then sent for his brother, [[Giovanni Auditore]], who took the Piece of Eden far away from Monteriggioni. The Shroud was no longer mentioned afterwards, and Mario dismissed it as ''"the Brotherhood's problem now."''<ref name="ACPL Mario Auditore" />
 
{{-}}
===Agnadello===
[[File:Revelation.jpg|250px|thumb|The Shroud covering Perotto's son, Giovanni Borgia.]]
{{quote|So... beautiful! It is a plain thing, carefully folded inside a simple wooden box, but it is also so much more!|Perotto Calderon first encountering the Shroud.|Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy}}
 
After fleeing his previous [[House of Borgia|Borgia]] masters, the Assassin [[Perotto Calderon]] traveled to Agnadello to seek out the Shroud. [[Giovanni Borgia|His son]], born to him illegitimately by [[Lucrezia Borgia]], had been birthed deformed, and had been diagnosed to die within a few days. Determined to save him, he sought out [[Rinaldo Vitturi]], who he knew was guarding the Shroud for the Brotherhood. Though he was forced to kill many of his own Brothers, Perotto successfully used the Shroud to heal his son, but was later executed by his fellow Assassins for breaking [[the Creed]].<ref name="ACPL Perotto Calderon">''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]'' - [[Chapter 4 - Perotto Calderon]]</ref>
 
{{-}}
===Lonigo===
[[File:White2.png|250px|thumb|Niccolò di Pitigliano wrapped in the Shroud.]]
{{quote|I have no choice. Whatever power this thing holds, I must try to unleash it!|Niccolò di Pitigliano, just before attempting to use the Shroud.|Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy}}
The Shroud then fell into the hands of [[Niccolò di Pitigliano]], likely during or around the [[Battle of Agnadello]], of which he was a participant. In 1510, the Assassin [[Francesco Vecellio]] was sent to kill Niccolò, and to retrieve the Piece of Eden.<ref name="ACPL Francesco Vecellio">''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]'' - [[Chapter 2 - Francesco Vecellio]]</ref>
 
Though Francesco succeeded in striking a deadly blow, Niccolò survived. Wounded and dying, he retrieved the Shroud from its hiding place and wrapped himself in it in an attempt to save his life. However, the artifact turned against him and destroyed his body, finishing the Assassin's job. Francesco, who had anticipated this, reappeared and took the Shroud from his dying grip.<ref name="ACPL Francesco Vecellio" />
 
{{-}}
===Milan===
[[File:Milan, Italy.png|thumb|250px|The sale of the Shroud in Milan.]]
{{quote|Goose chase in the middle of a warzone while our own boys are dropping the bombs on me. For what? Chance that it may be the real thing? Right... been at this nearly twenty years and I don't even believe it exists.|The Templar agent sent to search for the Shroud.|Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy}}
On Christmas day of 1944, in the middle of [[World War II]], a Templar agent was directed to a restaurant in Milan, in order to purchase an artifact claimed to be the Shroud. Though dubious, he brought a large sum of money through the war zone and met with one of the Baguttiani family, who showed him a folded cloth in a wooden box. To his surprise, the agent was able to confirm the truth of the Piece of Eden's identity using a metal company logo keychain, which vibrated upon being brought near the Shroud.<ref name="ACPL Christmas" />
 
==Use and Side effects==
[[File:Sideeffects.png|thumb|250px|The Shroud destroying Niccolò di Pitigliano.]]
{{quote|The voice does not seem hostile, despite its urgency. Perhaps it does only wish to heal, but I will not take a chance!|Mario Auditore, regarding the use of the Shroud.|Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy}}
 
The Shroud has been used to heal wounds of varying severity, mending injuries ranging from stab wounds to birth defects. It speaks in an almost kind voice that constantly offers healing, and urges its users to not believe in their own frailty. However, it is also known to cause severe hallucinations, and (in extreme cases, such as that of Niccolò di Pitigliano) can also seem to tear a person from the inside out.<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy">''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]''</ref>
 
Giovanni Borgia in particular suffered lasting effects from the Shroud. Though the artifact gave him renewed life as a baby, he was left mentally unstable; and throughout his childhood, he would have vivid dreams of the memories of his ancestors, such as his father and Marcus Junius Brutus. Additionally, he frequently spoke with a being no one else could see, one he called [[Giovanni Borgia#Consus|Consus]]. In his later life, he would be known as one who "spoke" with Pieces of Eden, and was particularly receptive to their presence, leading to him being sent on a mission to identify and retrieve [[Crystal Skulls|one such artifact]] in [[wiki:Tenochtitlan|Tenochtitlan]].<ref name="ACPL Giovanni Borgia">''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]'' - [[Chapter 2 - Giovanni Borgia]]</ref>


==Status==
==Status==
Under Templar possession in 1944
Under Templar possession in 1944.


==Owners==
==Owners==
*[[Those Who Came Before]] (? - ?)<ref name="Assassin's Creed II">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]''</ref>
*Those Who Came Before (? - ?)<ref name="AC2" />
*[[Jason]] (? - ?)<ref name="Assassin's Creed II" />
*Jason (? - ?)<ref name="AC2" />
*[[Joseph]] (? - ?)<ref name="Assassin's Creed II" />
*Joseph (? - ?)<ref name="AC2" />
*[[David]] (? - ?)<ref name="Assassin's Creed II" />
*David (? - ?)<ref name="AC2" />
*Fellow conspirators of [[Marcus Junius Brutus|Brutus]] (? - ?)
*Fellow conspirators of Marcus Junius Brutus (? - ?)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*[[Jesus Christ|Jesus of Nazareth]] (? - 33 AD)<ref name="Assassin's Creed II" /><ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy">''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]''</ref>
*Jesus of Nazareth (? - 33 AD)<ref name="AC2" /><ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*[[Jacques de Molay]] (? - ?)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*[[Jacques de Molay]] (? - ?)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*[[Geoffroi de Charney]] (? - ?)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*[[Geoffroi de Charney]] (? - ?)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*[[Mario Auditore]] (1454)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*Mario Auditore (1454)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*[[Giovanni Auditore]] (1454)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*Giovanni Auditore (1454)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*[[Rinaldo Vitturi]] (? - 1498)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*Rinaldo Vitturi (? - 1498)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*[[Perotto Calderon]] (1498)
*Perotto Calderon (1498)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*[[Rinaldo Vitturi]] (? - 1498)
*[[Cesare Borgia]] (? - ?)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*[[Cesare Borgia]] (? - ?)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*[[Niccolò di Pitigliano]] (1509 - 1510)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*Niccolò di Pitigliano (1509 - 1510)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*[[Francesco Vecellio]] (1510 - ?)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*Francesco Vecellio (1510 - ?)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />
*The Baguttiani (? - 1944)
*The Baguttiani (? - 1944)<ref name="Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy" />


==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*Interestingly, in the French version of ''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'', the Shroud was referred to as Piece of Eden #36, not #66. Whether this was a mistake in the translation or not remains to be seen.
*The Shroud is based on a real object known as the Shroud of Turin. It is kept in the royal chapel of the [[Wikipedia:Turin Cathedral|Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist]] in [[Wikipedia:Turin|Turin]], northern [[Italy]].
*In ''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]'', one of Mnemonic sets from the Holiday pack is "Shroud of Turin" with the description "Greatest mystery, or clever hoax?". It's components are: Jesus of Nazareth, Jacques de Molay, Geoffroi de Charny and Cesare Borgia.
*Coordinates given to [[Ezio Auditore da Firenze|Ezio Auditore]] and [[Leonardo da Vinci]] in the [[Pythagorean Vault]] in "[[The Da Vinci Disappearance]]" [[DLC]] point to the city of [[Wikipedia:Turin (town), New York|Turin, New York]].
*Coordinates given to [[Ezio Auditore da Firenze|Ezio Auditore]] and [[Leonardo da Vinci]] in the [[Pythagorean Vault]] in the downloadable memory sequence "[[The Da Vinci Disappearance]]" point to the city of [[Wikipedia:Turin (town), New York|Turin, New York]], which so happens to have a supposed crater near it. The cities of [[Wikipedia:Rome, New York|Rome]] and [[Wikipedia:Florence, New York|Florence]] are also nearby.
*Interestingly, in the French version of ''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'', the Shroud was referred to as Piece of Eden #36, not #66. Whether or not this was a mistake in the translation is unknown.
 
*In ''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]'', [[Erudito]] gives the user three memories of the Shroud as a "Christmas present."
==Gallery==
*In ''Project Legacy'', one of [[Mnemonic sets]] from the Holiday pack is "Shroud of Turin" with the description "Greatest mystery, or clever hoax?" Its components are: Jesus of Nazareth, Jacques de Molay, Geoffroi de Charny and Cesare Borgia.
 
<center><gallery captionalign="left">
Image:Glyph 7-2.jpg|Jesus Christ's crucifixion.
Image:Revelation.jpg|The Shroud, covering [[Giovanni Borgia]].
Image:Philippi, Macedonia.png|The Shroud, covering [[Marcus Junius Brutus|Brutus]].
</gallery></center>


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{reflist}}





Revision as of 15:35, 31 March 2011

The Shroud of Turin.
"A myth become miracle, the "holy winding sheet" has arrived..."
―An Assassin describing the Shroud.[src]

The Shroud of Eden is a linen cloth bearing the image of a man suffering from some physical trauma. Numbered PE66, it is one of the many Pieces of Eden of Those Who Came Before.[1]

It is described generally as a white cloth stained with blood, and is usually kept in a simple wooden box. The shape of a seemingly tortured man is also burned onto its surface, positioned with arms to his sides and palms forward. However, Church records note that the man's visage has changed multiple times throughout history.[2]

History

Greece

The Shroud's earliest appearance seems to have been in Greek myth, where it was known as the Golden Fleece. A legendary object of strange power, it was recovered by Jason from a tree guarded by a serpent.[1]

Rome

The Shroud covering Brutus.
"Whatever power lies within this artifact, it has not returned our Brother to us."
―An Assassin commenting on the failed resurrection of Brutus.[src]

The Shroud later came into the possession of the Assassins of ancient Rome for some time. After the assassination of Julius Caesar in 44 BC, and the subsequent suicide of Brutus in 42 BC, his fellow Assassins tried to reanimate Brutus using the Shroud.[2]

Since they had never used it before, they feared its effects, but nevertheless wrapped Brutus in the cloth. Though the corpse opened its eyes and moved its arms, it neither breathed nor reacted to any touch, and eventually fell still in a seeming "second death." As some of the Assassins wept, Brutus was wrapped instead in a burial mantle, and the Shroud was returned to its wooden storage box.[2]

Israel

File:Glyph 7-2.jpg
Christ's crucifixion, when the Shroud was taken.

In relation to the Hebrew Bible, the Shroud was known as the famous multicolored coat given to Joseph by his father Isaac, and was thought to be what aided David, second king of Israel, in his fight against Goliath.[1]

At this time, the Shroud's most famous ownership was by Jesus Christ. It is unknown when he obtained the Shroud, but it was likely the source of his many healing myths. Upon discovering his ownership of the Shroud, the Templars, under the guise of the Roman Empire, had Jesus crucified. However, Jesus' disciples were somehow able to recover it, and used it to resurrect him. After this, traces of the Shroud disappeared.[1]

Monteriggioni

The Assassins of Monteriggioni examining the Shroud in its box.
"What better place than our walled city to hide such abominations from mankind? We will bury it deep and set up measures to ensure it remains hidden."
―An Assassin regarding the concealment of the Shroud.[src]

The Shroud eventually came into the possession of Geoffroi de Charney, a French Templar of the mid-14th century. It was stolen from him by the Assassins of Monteriggioni, who replaced it with a careful forgery. Upon confirming the Shroud's validity, an Auditore Assassin (likely a close descendant of Domenico Auditore) decided that the Shroud needed to be hidden. After concealing the artifact with claims of fraud and falsified Church records, the city well was drained and excavated further in order to store the Shroud.[2][3]

The Templars eventually discovered the location of the Shroud, thus, in 1454, the condottiero Federico da Montefeltro was sent to besiege the city. Mario Auditore successfully repelled the attack, and through a confession from an enemy spy, Luziano Pezatti, he learned that the siege had merely been an attempt to gain access to something hidden under Monteriggioni.[3]

With a team of historians and architects, Mario searched for any record of the artifact, but only found vague references to the city well. He and a team of soldiers eventually found a hidden entrance on the back wall of the well, and were led into a narrow corridor filled with traps. As they passed through it, many men lost their lives to the razor wires, pitfalls and tripwire arrows, with Mario himself losing his left eye to a swinging pendulum.[3]

The hidden Shroud in its box.

Eventually, the few remaining men reached the final room, which only contained a simple wooden box. All present heard a voice that promised to heal their injuries, but as Mario warned his men not to open the box, they attacked him. The condottiero was forced to kill them, and only just managed to return to the city, ignoring the screams and temptations projected into his mind by the artifact.[3]

Fearing its powers, Mario hid the Shroud temporarily within his Villa, then sent for his brother, Giovanni Auditore, who took the Piece of Eden far away from Monteriggioni. The Shroud was no longer mentioned afterwards, and Mario dismissed it as "the Brotherhood's problem now."[3]

Agnadello

The Shroud covering Perotto's son, Giovanni Borgia.
"So... beautiful! It is a plain thing, carefully folded inside a simple wooden box, but it is also so much more!"
―Perotto Calderon first encountering the Shroud.[src]

After fleeing his previous Borgia masters, the Assassin Perotto Calderon traveled to Agnadello to seek out the Shroud. His son, born to him illegitimately by Lucrezia Borgia, had been birthed deformed, and had been diagnosed to die within a few days. Determined to save him, he sought out Rinaldo Vitturi, who he knew was guarding the Shroud for the Brotherhood. Though he was forced to kill many of his own Brothers, Perotto successfully used the Shroud to heal his son, but was later executed by his fellow Assassins for breaking the Creed.[4]

Lonigo

Niccolò di Pitigliano wrapped in the Shroud.
"I have no choice. Whatever power this thing holds, I must try to unleash it!"
―Niccolò di Pitigliano, just before attempting to use the Shroud.[src]

The Shroud then fell into the hands of Niccolò di Pitigliano, likely during or around the Battle of Agnadello, of which he was a participant. In 1510, the Assassin Francesco Vecellio was sent to kill Niccolò, and to retrieve the Piece of Eden.[5]

Though Francesco succeeded in striking a deadly blow, Niccolò survived. Wounded and dying, he retrieved the Shroud from its hiding place and wrapped himself in it in an attempt to save his life. However, the artifact turned against him and destroyed his body, finishing the Assassin's job. Francesco, who had anticipated this, reappeared and took the Shroud from his dying grip.[5]

Milan

The sale of the Shroud in Milan.
"Goose chase in the middle of a warzone while our own boys are dropping the bombs on me. For what? Chance that it may be the real thing? Right... been at this nearly twenty years and I don't even believe it exists."
―The Templar agent sent to search for the Shroud.[src]

On Christmas day of 1944, in the middle of World War II, a Templar agent was directed to a restaurant in Milan, in order to purchase an artifact claimed to be the Shroud. Though dubious, he brought a large sum of money through the war zone and met with one of the Baguttiani family, who showed him a folded cloth in a wooden box. To his surprise, the agent was able to confirm the truth of the Piece of Eden's identity using a metal company logo keychain, which vibrated upon being brought near the Shroud.[2]

Use and Side effects

The Shroud destroying Niccolò di Pitigliano.
"The voice does not seem hostile, despite its urgency. Perhaps it does only wish to heal, but I will not take a chance!"
―Mario Auditore, regarding the use of the Shroud.[src]

The Shroud has been used to heal wounds of varying severity, mending injuries ranging from stab wounds to birth defects. It speaks in an almost kind voice that constantly offers healing, and urges its users to not believe in their own frailty. However, it is also known to cause severe hallucinations, and (in extreme cases, such as that of Niccolò di Pitigliano) can also seem to tear a person from the inside out.[6]

Giovanni Borgia in particular suffered lasting effects from the Shroud. Though the artifact gave him renewed life as a baby, he was left mentally unstable; and throughout his childhood, he would have vivid dreams of the memories of his ancestors, such as his father and Marcus Junius Brutus. Additionally, he frequently spoke with a being no one else could see, one he called Consus. In his later life, he would be known as one who "spoke" with Pieces of Eden, and was particularly receptive to their presence, leading to him being sent on a mission to identify and retrieve one such artifact in Tenochtitlan.[7]

Status

Under Templar possession in 1944.

Owners

Trivia

References