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Southeast Asian Pieces of Eden: Difference between revisions

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I don't believe we write about unknown/speculative factors, right?
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Revision as of 13:24, 31 January 2024

He who increaseth knowledge, increaseth sorrow.

This article contains spoilers, meaning it has information and facts concerning Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple. If you do not want to know about these events, it is recommended to read on with caution, or not at all.

This template should be removed from the article 30 April 2024.

I wanted to ask you something. Which is... what's your name?
This article title is conjecture. Although the article subject is canon, no official name for it has been given.

A set of three Pieces of Eden were located in Southeast Asia. The artifacts varied in shape, size, and the abilities they granted to wielders, but were all considered part of the same set.

Owners

Usage

The three artifacts that made up the set were shaped like a crescent, a sphere resembling an Apple, and a flower-shaped disk. At least one of the artifacts, which was wielded by Lapu-Lapu, granted considerable physical strength, as it allowed the Visayan chieftain to easily defeat an army of Spanish soldiers.[1]

History

Created at some point during the Isu Era,[1] knowledge of the set, its location, and its powers was lost following the Great Catastrophe in 75,000 BCE.[2] Millennia later, in the early 16th century, two of the artifacts were found in the Philippines, with the crescent located on the island of Cebu and another artifact in the possession of Lapu-Lapu, the chieftain of Mactan Island.[1]

In 1521, the Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan arrived on Cebu to search for its artifact and converted the island's entire population to Christianity in the process. After finding the Piece of Eden, Magellan was informed by Cebu's chieftain Rajah Humabon of the other two artifacts and attempted to seize the Piece of Eden in Lapu-Lapu's possession. However, Lapu-Lapu used the artifact's power to defeat the Spanish troops under Magellan's command and personally killed the explorer.[1]

By the early 18th century, all three Pieces of Eden were rumored to be located in the former Khmer capital of Angkor. Investigating the legend, the Dutch navigator Hendrik learned about Magellan's own search for the artifacts from a monk at the Basilica del Santo Niño in Cebu, but the monk refused to disclose the fate of Magellan's treasure following the explorer's death.[1]

Hendrik eventually found Angkor and at least one of its Pieces of Eden, but could not retrieve it and was later killed in Macau in 1725.[3] That year, various parties, including the Japanese Templars and the British Assassin Edward Kenway, sought to find Angkor and its "treasure", and used information from Hendrik's sea log to aid their search for the lost city.[1]

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