User:Soranin/Sandbox: Difference between revisions
imported>Soranin |
imported>Soranin |
||
| Line 449: | Line 449: | ||
===Text pile=== | ===Text pile=== | ||
(To be formatted and corrected | (To be formatted and corrected once done.) | ||
Story: Pitcaim was a British soldier stationed in | Story: Pitcaim was a British soldier stationed in | ||
| Line 463: | Line 463: | ||
conflict, and was part of the conspiracy to | conflict, and was part of the conspiracy to | ||
assassinate George Washington. | assassinate George Washington. | ||
Story: Sakakibara Yasumasa served as one of | |||
Tokugawa leyasu's greatest generals, often called | |||
the "Four Guardians.” Yasumasa and Honda | |||
Tadakatsu were the same age, and both were | |||
appointed into leyasu's personal service when | |||
they became old enough. | |||
E Ani | |||
More: Yasumasa earned the gratitude and trust | |||
of leyasu by staying to fight against Toyotomi | |||
Hideyoshi, despite having familal tes to | |||
Hideyoshi. Yasumasa was the most suspicious of | |||
the Assassins, though he was also the most | |||
impressed by their skills. | |||
Story: The Chalice was supposedly an object of | |||
great power, which was rumored to be able to | |||
unite even the most bitter of rivals. Both the | |||
Assassins and Templars sought it, but at first only | |||
the Templars were aware that the Chalice was | |||
actually a woman, Adha. | |||
More: Altair sought Adha to keep the Chalice's | |||
ability to sway the minds of people out of the | |||
hands of the Templars. He fought for her safety, | |||
but could only watch as a Templar ship took her | |||
away. He would never see her alive again. | |||
Story: Sakai Tadatsugu served as one of | |||
Tokugawa leyasu's greatest generals, often called | |||
the "Four Guardians." He was the eldest of the | |||
four, having first served leyasu's father, | |||
Matsudaira Hirotada. | |||
, E À GR | |||
[fo CSN Eos To DD SO =p O 0 | |||
penchant for fooling his enemies with ruses. In | |||
the battle of Mikatagahara, which saw leyasu's | |||
army devastated by Takeda Shingen, some | |||
trickery from Tadagatsugu kept the enemy from | |||
pursuing leyasu's men as they retreated, | |||
Story: Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights, | |||
Sibrand was a fierce and skiled warrior capable | |||
of besting his enemies just as skillfulhy with words | |||
SALSA ESA UA, (ee | PO 01 | |||
More: As Sibrand witnessed more and more of | |||
his Templar brethren meeting their end at Altair's | |||
hands, he grew increasingly paranoid. He | |||
doubled his personal guard and took refuge on | |||
his ship. Ultimately, he faced same fate that befell | |||
the rest of the Templars on Altair's list. | |||
Story: Like most pirates, Charles Vane began his | |||
career as a privateer When privateering | |||
opportunities dried up, Vane took to piracy at the | |||
helm of his ship, the Ranger. He quickly became | |||
one of the most notorious pirates in the | |||
Caribbean. | |||
More: Vane and Edward Kenway sailed together | |||
on several occasions. It was during one of these | |||
collaborations that Jack Rackham convinced | |||
Vane's crew to mutiny, leaving Vane and Kenway | |||
stranded on a deserted island. | |||
Story: Honda Tadakatsu served as one cf | |||
Tokugawa leyasu's greatest generals, often called | |||
the "Four Guardians.” His distinction in batile was | |||
known across all of Japan, and legends say that | |||
despite fighting in over 100 batiles, he never | |||
suffered a single wound. | |||
More: When the Assassins came to leyasu with | |||
a plan for retrieving the Sword of Eden, Tadakatsu | |||
was initially opposed; being an honorable warrior, | |||
he preferred meeting his enemy face to face in | |||
combat over striking at them from secrecy. | |||
Story: Wilikin of the Weald, also known as | |||
William of Cassingham, was a squire during the | |||
LS STO ni VETA A INTE o SIT RO aco | |||
oppose Prince Louis VIII of France, who had tried | |||
to depose King John during the First Barons' War. | |||
RE DR | |||
o Ca ER ARS PIS pe (a(o SS To ES | |||
Assassin of the English Brotherhood. While not an | |||
admirer of the despotic King John, Willkin still | |||
favored the monarchy over baronial rule and was | |||
a supporter of John's son, Henry. | |||
Story: Mochizuki Chiyome was a noblewoman | |||
who served Takeda Shingen. Upon hearing that | |||
she had been trained in the ninja arts by the | |||
Kôga clan, Shingen gave Chiyome the task of | |||
recruiting women and training them as spies and | |||
assassins. | |||
More: Chiyome's network of kunoichi numbered | |||
in the hundreds, and Shingen was kept well | |||
informed. While strong, this network still had | |||
holes; it was not enough to spot Honda | |||
Tadakatsu and Hattori Hanzô as they snuck into | |||
la e cigf er: ng 79 N | |||
Story: Niccolô and Maffeo Polo ran a successful | |||
trading post in Constantinople, and it was through | |||
this that they met and befriended Darim Ibn- | |||
La'Ahad. Darim then invited the two of them to | |||
Masyaf, and there the brothers began their | |||
training as Assassins. | |||
More: Altair knew Masyaf would fall under the | |||
approaching Mongols and the Sword of Eden. | |||
Therefore he imparted as much knowledge as he | |||
could to Niccolô Polo, and told him and his | |||
brother Maffeo to start a new Brotherhood in | |||
Constantinople. | |||
Story: Benjamin Hornigold was a tremendously | |||
successful pirate with a fleet of five warships. | |||
Among Hornigold's trainees were Edward Thatch | |||
and Charles Vane. However, Hornigold would | |||
eventually betray them all after an offer to join the | |||
Templars. | |||
More: Hornigold accepted a pardon offered by | |||
[ra SM ES 9) FL (0 [0 SS o [o [TE TO Ca Tn [= | |||
Hornigold became a pirate hunter, chasing down | |||
and apprehending his former comrades. He | |||
excelled at this task until the day he went after his | |||
former associate Edward Kenwav. | |||
Story: In order to get a foothold in the | |||
predominately male pirate society, Mary Read | |||
disguised herself as a man and took the name | |||
James Kidd. She eventually sailed on Jack | |||
Rackham's ship, and was one of the few sober | |||
enough to fight back when they were boarded. | |||
More: Aside from her life of piracy, Mary Read | |||
was a member of the Assassins. She tried several | |||
times to convince Edward Kenway to abandon his | |||
pursuit of riches and join the Brotherhood. It was | |||
only after her death in prison that Edward took | |||
her advice. | |||
Story: Bom on the Yucatán Peninsula and of | |||
Mayan descent, Ah Tabai became Mentor of the | |||
Caribbean Assassins in 1713. He trained both | |||
Mary Read and Duncan Walpole as Assassins, | |||
and took on Adéwalé as an apprentice after the | |||
[juta ip o (ço À Ia EAD | |||
ss t “o RUM O. | |||
More: Ah Tabai and Edward Kenway had a | |||
fractious relationship, as Edward had no interest in | |||
the Assassins and had simply posed as one to | |||
make some money. Edward would later come to | |||
understand what the Assassins stood for, and Ah | |||
Tabai then allowed him to join. | |||
ES (o) AME O gr UR SE RO Ce pe Sair O RS | |||
Continental Army that fought with recklessness. | |||
His most notable battle was that of Bunker Hill; | |||
while technically a loss, Putnam's army inflicted so | |||
many casualtes on the British that their victory | |||
oe ao [0 | |||
pod | |||
More: Putnam might have faced further | |||
humiliation at Bunker Hill if it werent for | |||
Ratonhnhaké:ton's aid. The Assassin disabled a | |||
British frigate in the harbor, and then snuck into | |||
the British camp to assassinate their general, | |||
John Pitcairn. | |||
Story: Bartolomeo d'Alviano was a loyal | |||
member of the Italian Brotherhood of Assassins. | |||
He was renowned for his prowess in battle, | |||
though much of that was due to brute strength | |||
and sheer determination. He wielded a huge two- | |||
handed sword that he named “Bianca.” | |||
More: Bartolomeo and Ezio met in Venice, and | |||
soon became friends. The two of them would aid | |||
one another several times over the years, with | |||
Bartolomeo's leadership over the Venetian | |||
mercenaries proving invaluable to the Assassins. | |||
Story: A wealthy doctor, Benjamin Church was | |||
kidnapped and held for ransom until he was | |||
rescued by Haytham Kenway. He was then | |||
recruited into the Templar Order, and furthered | |||
their goals through his position as Surgeon | |||
General of the Revolutionary Army. | |||
More: Church ended up betraying both the | |||
Templars and the Patriots, and had planned to | |||
defect to the British with military secrets and a | |||
cache of weapons in tow. Ratonhnhakéton and | |||
Haytham formed a temporary partnership to put | |||
an end to the traitor. | |||
Story: Gilberto was a thief known as La Volpe | |||
(the Fox). He closely guarded the details of his | |||
life, and little other than his name is known. His | |||
network of thieves in Florence aided Ezio a | |||
number of times, and he was eventually invited to | |||
[oa R UPAs | |||
More: After moving to Rome, La Volpe began to | |||
suspect the Mentor Niccolô Machiavell of | |||
betraying the Assassin cause, and was prepared | |||
to assassinate him. Ezio discovered the identity of | |||
the true traitor, and was able to convince La | |||
Volpe to stay his blade. | |||
Story: Thomas Hickey was an Irish soldier in the | |||
French and Indian War, and he eventualky joined | |||
the Templars along with his commander, William | |||
Johnson. He was vulgar and unscrupulous, but | |||
loyal to the Templar cause (so long as they | |||
continued to pay him). | |||
More: Thomas Hickey ran a counterfeiting ring | |||
in New York, and was to be the trigger-man in the | |||
plot to assassinate George Washington. Hickey | |||
was to make this attempt during | |||
Ratonhnhakéton's hanging, but the Assassin | |||
managed to escape the noose and stop Hickey. | |||
Story: While the Sultan Saladin had left | |||
Jerusalem to fight the armies of King Richard, | |||
Majd Addin took the opportunity to seize control | |||
of the city. He did this mainly through fear, | |||
conducting public executions of anyone who | |||
E iojo SE: [or DIM ATAE | |||
More: Majd Addin was one of the nine Templars | |||
on Altair's list. Altair learned that Addin was about | |||
to execute several people of Jerusalem, one of | |||
whom was a fellow Assassin. Altair intervened, | |||
and while the Assassin was saved, the rest were | |||
not “ | |||
Story: Jack Rackham, often called Calico Jack, | |||
was a capable shipman who sailed with Charles | |||
Vane. He convinced the crew to mutiny against | |||
Vane and steal Edward Kenway's ship, but his | |||
captaincy was a failure and Edward got his ship | |||
[pic jo =D (= Dano RAE (SIA | |||
More: Calico Jack retumed to piracy after | |||
enlisting the aid of Mary Read and Anne Bonny. | |||
They successes drew the attention of bounty | |||
hunters, who attacked Rackham's ship. They were | |||
captured fairly easily, as most of the crew was too | |||
drunk to fight back. | |||
Story: Lorenzo de' Medici was an Italian | |||
statesman and the ruler of the Florentine | |||
Republic. He was also a close friend of the | |||
Auditore family, and one of the few people to | |||
know about Giovanni's role as an Assassin. | |||
More: Lorenzo de' Medici became reunited with | |||
the Assassins when there was an attempt on | |||
Medici's life; Ezio came to his aid and prevented | |||
the deed from being completed. From that point | |||
on, Medici sought Ezio's aid in dealing with the | |||
DS ER Ss a [o pr | |||
Story: Emilio Barbarigo used his connections in | |||
the government and the police force to ensure | |||
that the merchant district remained under his | |||
control. He demanded outrageous taxes from | |||
merchants, and sent his quards to destroy the | |||
Este] o Raros tSR ja o Ro DS a SA | |||
More: Emilio was secrety a Templar, and a | |||
close ally of Rodrigo Borgia. His actions attracted | |||
the attention of the Venetian Thieves Guild, who | |||
enlisted the aid of Ezio in freeing the merchants | |||
of the city from Emilio's cruel governance. | |||
Story: The daughter of Rodrigo and the sister | |||
of Cesare, Lucrezia collaborated with her family in | |||
their machinations. Rodrigo married her off | |||
several times to men with power, whom Cesare | |||
would then have assassinated. | |||
More: Befitting the Borgia name, Lucrezia was | |||
every bit as cruel and manipulative as her father | |||
and brother. However, she later became aware | |||
that their manipulation extended to her as well, as | |||
they were merely using her to further their own | |||
ambitions. | |||
Story: As one of the most successful and | |||
destructive pirates of all time, Roberts drew the | |||
re of everyone in the Caribbean; Assassins, | |||
Templars, the British Navy, the Spanish Naw, | |||
the Portuguese Nawy, and even other pirates. | |||
More: Roberts knew the location of an | |||
ancient First Civilization building called the | |||
Observatory, and both Templars and Assassins | |||
fought over him for this knowledge. In the end, | |||
it was Edward Kenway who claimed the pirate s | |||
fe and the knowledge of the Observatory's | |||
location. | |||
Story: Julien du Casse was a French arms | |||
dealer operating In the West Indies. His work | |||
eventually saw him inducted into the Templar | |||
Order along with Woodes Rogers and Duncan | |||
Walpole, the latter being impersonated by | |||
Edward Kenway. | |||
More: Du Casse and the other Templars | |||
quickly discovered that who they thought was | |||
Walpole was actually an impostor, and had | |||
Kenway Imprisoned, Shortly after escaping, | |||
Kenway crossed paths with du Casse and | |||
ended his life. | |||
Story: An aristocrat and a soldier of King | |||
John during the wars in Normandy, Robert | |||
Fitzwalter cast away that allance after seeing | |||
King John abusing his authonty. Fitzwalter then | |||
became the leader of the baronial uprising | |||
Jota [SE dao) | |||
More: After meeting with his fellow Assassins | |||
to figure out how to depose King John, | |||
Htzwalter began a campaign to unite all of the | |||
English barons and force John off the throne. | |||
This attempt soon led to civil war, and the | |||
barons had to ask France for aid. | |||
Story:Tamir ran a black market in Damascus, specializing in | |||
weapons and armor. He supplied both sides of the | |||
conflict, Saracens and Crusaders, and would often gloat | |||
about the amount of death caused by his wares. | |||
More:Tamir was one of the nine Templars on Altair's list. He | |||
DE is RT de RU SA | |||
comected somehow, as in his dying words he wamed | |||
PTE A CORO EO Sua PRC | |||
[GU | |||
PAR soar ale Td RAE CP A UE RD pacto) | |||
was one of the few to see the indigenous tribes of the | |||
[CIR STS OE TE UU | |||
Kanien'kehá:ka people, leaming their language and | |||
ado Deu SD dO | |||
More:Johnson attermpted to buy land from the Irogiuos for | |||
the Templars, but the tribal leaders refused, Johnson | |||
Doado e DT AUS Re E UA | |||
Before this threat could turn to violence, | |||
Ratonhnhaké:ton silenced Johnson permanentiy. | |||
[Cie ise DOE E ie E ad DS US | |||
Assassin Brotherhood. He was born in Venice and | |||
bege EP TAGS Sa CORE TO RT To | |||
the latter would eventually betray the Order after falling | |||
do TG CDA | |||
More: After the death of Perotto, Francesco traveled to | |||
Rome to become the apprentice of Ezio Auditore. He | |||
became close friends with two other apprentices, | |||
Cipriano Enu and Tessa Varzi, onhy to see both of them | |||
E DE Ei de Te TEL | |||
Story: Rocco Tiepolo was a Templar who led | |||
a sizable group of mercenaries. While he often | |||
provided mercenaries to Cesare, he was not | |||
directly under the Borgia's control. | |||
More: Rocco was one of the names that Fiora | |||
gave to the Assassins when she defected from | |||
the Templar Order. Fiora pointed out the | |||
strategic weaknesses in Rocco s headquarters, | |||
and the Assassins launched an attack. | |||
Story: Spanish for “The Shark” El Tiburón | |||
was the mute bodyguard of the Templar Grand | |||
Master, Laureano de Torres y Ayala. El Tiburón | |||
was a brute of a man draped in thick armor, | |||
elle qi fis a O no E | |||
More: Edward Kenway first encountered El | |||
Tiburón when he tried to break the Sage out of | |||
prison in Havana. El Tiburón got the better of | |||
Kenway then, but later he would prevail over | |||
The Shark as Kenway attempted to assassinate | |||
Torres. | |||
Story: Chaya Shirojiro Kiyonobu was part of a | |||
long line of merchants in Kyoto. The Chaya | |||
family held a monopoly on the raw silk trade | |||
thanks to a permit that allowed them to travel to | |||
Vietnam to trade goods. | |||
More: In addition to managing trade, | |||
Kyonobu was also tasked by leyasu to track the | |||
foreigners entering the port city. Specifically, he | |||
was to keep an eye on the Christian | |||
missionaries, and report any suspicion of | |||
Templar affiliation. | |||
Story: “Big Dave” Walston was a blacksmith | |||
who was draited into the Bntish army. Walston | |||
had little desire to fight, so he deserted and ran | |||
off to the Frontier. He was later found by Bnitish | |||
Regulars, was about to be executed when | |||
Ratonhnhaké:ton came to his aid. | |||
More: After saving him, Ratonhnhaké:ton | |||
offered Big Dave a job and a place to live on | |||
the Davenport Homestead. His smithing skills | |||
quickly made a valuable ally of the Colonial | |||
Assassins. | |||
Story: The newly appointed governor of the | |||
Bahamas, Woodes Rodgers, appointed | |||
Commodore Peter Chamberlane to combat | |||
piracy. Chamberlaine harbored a fierce grudge | |||
against pirates, however, and was wiling to | |||
overstep his bounds to see them eliminated, | |||
More: While the governor had offered | |||
pardons to the pirates Hornigold, Vane, and | |||
Thatch, Chamberlaine plotted to sink their ships | |||
regardless of whether or not they accepted. | |||
Upon discovering this, Kenway snuck onto | |||
Gar policia Fe] ae OR ate Rc IST SS are Si ROTA] | |||
Story: This wealthy Damascus merchant had | |||
little regard for what he sold or who he sold it to. | |||
He was fond of throwing both parties and insults, | |||
and was convinced that he was the subject of | |||
cruel words and misgivings from the people of | |||
the city. | |||
More: Abul Nugoud was one of the nine | |||
Templars on Altair's list Altair attended one of | |||
Abul's lavish partes (paid for with funds | |||
embezzled from the city treasury), only to | |||
discover that Abu! had poisoned the wine the | |||
partygoers had been drinking. | |||
Story: Laurens Prins was a Dutch pirate who | |||
once sailed with the legendary Captain Henry | |||
Morgan. After Morgan's death, Prins became a | |||
slave trader, and as a consequence he worked | |||
closely with the Caribbean Templars. | |||
More: In 1717, Bartholomew Roberts was | |||
working on one of Prins' slave ships. Having | |||
identified Roberts as the Sage, Torres tried to buy | |||
Roberts from Prins for a sizable sum. | |||
Story: As a poltican and philosopher, | |||
Machiavell was highly critical of idealism and self- | |||
serving politicians. Eventualy, the tem | |||
“Machiavellian" became adopted as an adjective | |||
for those who served themselves before their | |||
people. | |||
More: Niccolô was also an Assassin, and he | |||
worked with Ezio to track the Templars through | |||
Venice, Florence, and later Rome. When the | |||
previous leader of the Assassins, Mario Auditore, | |||
was murdered by Cesare, Niccolô became the | |||
leader of the Brotherhood. | |||
Story: Hattori Hanzô skill with the yari was | |||
legendary, and his prowess in batile made him | |||
respected and feared as one of the greatest | |||
samurai in Japan. He also excelled in the ninja | |||
arts, and had a fierce rivalry with Fúma Kotarô. | |||
More: Hanzô's ability made him a valued ally of | |||
Tokugawa leyasu, and Hanzô saved his master's | |||
life on several occasions. He was also | |||
instrumental in the struggle against the Japanese | |||
Templars, assassinating Uesugi Kenshin and | |||
retrieving the Sword of Eden. | |||
Story: |i Naomasa served as one of Tokugawa | |||
leyasu's greatest generals, often called the “Four | |||
Guardians” He was a veteran of numerous | |||
battles, and was famous for continuing to fight | |||
even after sustaining severe injuries. | |||
More: While the rest of the Four Guardians | |||
were not easily convinced that the Assassins | |||
could aid them, Naomasa saw differentiy. He | |||
recognized that the Assassins could prove to be | |||
valuable alles, and often suggested calling on | |||
them to his colleagues. | |||
Story: Alessandro Valignano was a Jesuit | |||
missionary that was sent to help introduce | |||
Catholicism to Japan. While he was sent to aid | |||
Francisco Cabral, who was already doing | |||
missionary work in Japan, the two men despised | |||
on another almost instantly. | |||
More: Valignano used his Jesuit connections to | |||
Ee PLAN): a(o a iunio E: (Sto A a cia: pe ij) | |||
Cabral confronted Valignano about this, he used | |||
his influence to force Cabral to resign from his | |||
post as Superior of the Jesuit Mission. | |||
Story: When Altair let his arrogance get the | |||
better of him it was Malik who suffered, losing his | |||
brother and his left arm in the battle that followed. | |||
However, after Altair regained his honor the two | |||
men reconciled, and Malik would become second | |||
in command of the Brotherhood. | |||
More: After his injury, Malik served as the Rafiq | |||
of Jerusalem, offering a point of contact and | |||
advice to the Assassins who had business to | |||
perform in the city. | |||
Story: Edward Thatch sailed in the British Nawy, | |||
but eventually quit to become a privateer. Once | |||
the War of the Spanish Succession ended Thatch | |||
turned to piracy. His fearsome ability as well as | |||
his significant facial hair led to the nickname | |||
Blackbeard. | |||
More: Thatch and Kenway crossed paths when | |||
they freed Nassau from the British. The two soon | |||
became alles, and debated how to run the Pirate | |||
Republic. Thatch later decided to quit piracy, but | |||
was killed by the British Navy on the night of his | |||
ASS INE ARA o. | |||
Story: A Scottish sailor and privateer for the | |||
English Parliament, William Kidd was later accused | |||
of piracy and hung. While he certainly took his | |||
share of plunder while privateering, the evidence | |||
that actually tied him to piracy was slim at best. | |||
More: Kidd's legacy far outlived the man | |||
himself. The Assassin Mary Read took the name | |||
James Kidd, and pretended to be an illegitimate | |||
child. The Assassin Ratonhnhakéton followed | |||
several maps to discover one of Kidd's buried | |||
treasures, a Shard of Eden. | |||
Story: Adéwalé was born into slavery on | |||
Trinidad. His opportunity for escape came when | |||
pirates began raiding the plantation Adéwalé was | |||
on. He decided to aid the pirates, and they took | |||
him on board. He was eventually caught by the | |||
Spanish and imprisoned. | |||
More: Adéwalé met Edward Kenway while | |||
imprisoned, and the two broke free and | |||
commandeered a ship. Adéwalé became | |||
Edward's quartermaster, and the two sailed | |||
together for many years. Eventually Adéwalé left | |||
Edward's employ to join the Assassins. | |||
Story: As daimyo of what was a relatively | |||
small clan, Mori Motonari used a cunning blend | |||
of tactics and force to expand his empire. | |||
Within a few years, he had eliminated several | |||
rival clans and ruled over the entire Chugoku | |||
region of Japan. | |||
More: Motonari was a vocal opponent of | |||
Nobunagas attempt to unify all of Japan, | |||
though he never had the strength to challenge | |||
Nobunaga directly. The Mori clan was further | |||
weakened when Nobunaga arranged the | |||
assassination of Motonari's heir, Mori Takamoto. | |||
Story: As the last Grand Master of the Templar | |||
order before the organization was dissolved, at | |||
least publicly, Jacques de Molay became | |||
renowned as a martyr after being accused of | |||
heresy and subsequently burned at the stake. | |||
More: By accepting the dubious charges | |||
brought before him, de Molay allowed the world | |||
to believe that the Templars were gone for good. | |||
In actuality, his widely publicized death drew | |||
attention away from the Templars, allowing them | |||
to rebuild the organization in secret. | |||
Story: Uesugi Kenshin was one of the most | |||
powerful daimyos of his time, ruling over the | |||
large Echigo province of Japan. In addition to his | |||
skill in battle, Kenshin was also a gifted | |||
administrator who greatly expanded industry and | |||
trade in his province. | |||
More: When Takeda Shingen's army neared | |||
Echigo, Kenshin moved to hatt their advance. | |||
They fought to a stalemate, which was the start | |||
of a fierce rivalry between the two daimyos. This | |||
rivalry ended when Shingen was assassinated | |||
over the Sword of Eden. | |||
Story: Qulan Gal was an Assassin of the | |||
Mongolian Brotherhood as well as an unmatched | |||
archer. His skill with the bow led to his role in the | |||
assassination of Genghis Khan, elevating Qulan | |||
Gal to a legendary status among the Mongolian | |||
Assassins. | |||
More: Little is known about Qulan Gal beyond | |||
his involvement in the assassination of Genghis | |||
Khan. Such was his legacy, though, that the Italian | |||
Brotherhood had him entombed below the Rocca | |||
di Ravaldino in Forli Italy. | |||
Story: While still an Apprentice, the Mongolian | |||
Assassin Nergul was captured. He was tortured | |||
while imprisoned, leaving his face permanently | |||
scarred. He was eventually rescued by Qulan Gal | |||
and Darim Ibn-La'Ahad when the two of them | |||
assassinated Genghis Khan. | |||
More: Nergúi would go on to be an effective | |||
and influential member of the Mongolian | |||
Assassins. His greatest achievement was the | |||
assassination of Húlegu Khan, in retribution for | |||
Húlegu's sacking of Masyaf and the destruction | |||
of the Levantine Assassins. | |||
Story: The Mongolian chapter of the Assassin | |||
Brotherhood was one of the few groups who | |||
resisted the expansion of the Mongol Horde. | |||
Though few in number, the Mongolian Assassins | |||
managed to curtail the Horde's campaigns on | |||
several occasions. | |||
More: N/A | |||
Story: At only fourteen years of age, Yamauchi | |||
Kazutoyo's father died, leaving the young man to | |||
wander as a ronin for several years. He eventually | |||
came into the service of Oda Nobunaga, and | |||
worked his way up to becoming a trusted general. | |||
More: After Nobunaga's death, Kazutoyo served | |||
Toyotomi Hideyoshi, who had taken up | |||
Nobunaga's goal of unifying all of Japan. When | |||
Hideyoshi died in 1598, Kazutoyo chose to serve | |||
Tokugawa leyasu, and played a small but critical | |||
role in the latter's rise to power in 1600. | |||
Story: Despite being the eldest of Genghis | |||
Khan's sons, and despite numerous successes | |||
on the battlefield, Jochi was not named as the | |||
Great Khan's successor, While controversial at | |||
the time, this issue became moot when Jochi | |||
Disse nc) Do sifo fc TS Fe A TeÍ TO | |||
More: Jochi Khan did not know that he was | |||
being tracked by Darm lbn-LaAhad as he | |||
moved through Central Asia. Under cover of | |||
night, Darim snuck into Jochi's tent and placed | |||
a few drops of poison into his waterskin. | |||
Story: A massive strongman with a missing | |||
eye, Date Masamune was feared throughout | |||
much of northern Japan for his cunning and | |||
ruthlessness. As daimyo, Masamune began | |||
attacking nearby clans to expand his own, | |||
eventually ruling over most of the Tohoku | |||
region. | |||
More: The shogun at the time, Toyotomi | |||
Hideyoshi, saw the wisdom in having | |||
Masamune as an aly, as did Hideyoshi's | |||
successor Tokugawa leyasu. Eventualy | |||
Masamune became lord of the profitable | |||
Sendal Domain, making him one of the most | |||
powerful men in Japan. | |||
Story: A poet, traveler, and Sufi mystic, Attar of | |||
Nishapur studied under many great Sufi Shaykhs | |||
and returned to his native Persia to spread this | |||
knowledge. | |||
More: Attar fell victim to the seemingly | |||
unstoppable spread of the Mongol Empire. In | |||
April of 1221, the Mongols entered the Persian | |||
city of Nishapur and slaughtered everyone they | |||
fer pn Ars [e 0) | |||
Story: Alexander Nevsky was a def military | |||
tactician and an emphatic leader who successfully | |||
defended Russia's borders on several occasions. | |||
He became Grand Prince of Vladimir in 1252, and | |||
his alliance with the Golden Horde kept Russia | |||
from being a Mongolian target. | |||
More: While Nevsky was never identified as a | |||
Spy o EJA US 0 0 [0 9/0 DES 5) [SRF pre | |||
the Khans implies such an association. It was on | |||
his way back from visiting the Golden Horde that | |||
Nevsky fell mysteriously ill and passed away. | |||
Story: Maria Thorpe, a former Templar, switched | |||
aliances to the Assassins when after several | |||
meetings with Altair. The two eventually started a | |||
family, and it was that family that traveled to | |||
Mongolia to see to the end of Genghis Khan. | |||
More: Maria did not take an active role in the | |||
assassination of Genghis Khan. However, she was | |||
on hand to tend to Altair's wounds when his first | |||
attempt on the Khan's life was unsuccessful. | |||
Story: Mogami Yoshiaki was a powerful daimyo | |||
of northermn Japan. In order to solidify his political | |||
position, Yoshiaki sent his daughter, Komahime, to | |||
be wed to Toyotomi Hidetsugu, nephew and heir | |||
to the Regent of Japan, Toyotomi Hideyoshi. | |||
More: Soon after Hideyoshi had a son of his | |||
own, and in order to secure his succession, | |||
Hideyoshi ordered the death of Hidetsugu and | |||
his family, including Komahime. This enraged | |||
Yoshiaki, who immediately turned his allegiance to | |||
fo fer RS eU | |||
Story: The British Regular was the foot soldier of the | |||
Loyalist Army, and they were easily identified by their | |||
red jackets. Their training and equipment were superior | |||
to the Continental Army, forcing the Colonists to devise | |||
new tactics to counter them. | |||
More: | |||
ES a RA ERR SG ge TE DG ge a SS CA ES | |||
the Mongol Empire expanded across Central Asia | |||
and into the Levant It was ruled over by Húlegu | |||
Khan, and at its height it spread all the way into | |||
Turkey. | |||
More: | |||
Story: The Kheshig were the personal guard of | |||
the Khan and his family. They did not go to war | |||
with the rest of the Mongolian army, as they were | |||
tasked with seeing to the Khan's personal safety | |||
at ali times. | |||
More: | |||
Revision as of 04:01, 20 December 2020
My primary sandbox.
AC Memories Cards
Working off of the screenshots Lacrosse managed to procure for us. This table is not meant to be used as is, it's just a way to archive this. Still have to do 'story' and 'more', but missing cells for 'location' and 'timeline' are not in the screenshots I have. The question marks exist in the cards.
| Name | Quote | Timeline | Location | Story | More |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anne Bonny | England's the wrong way 'round the globe for an Irishwoman. | 1702-1743 | Caribbean | Anne Bonny was working as a bartender in Nassau when she caught the eye of Jack Rackham. The two eloped, and Anne became a member of Rackham's crew. Proving to be capable with both a sword and a gun, Anne took to a life of piracy quite readily. | While sailing around the Caribbean, Anne crossed paths with Edward Kenway several times. The two came to trust one another, and after Rackham was executed and Adéwalé left to join the Assassins, Anne became quartermaster on Edward's ship. |
| Oda Nobunaga | Yes, you have your ideals. But I will have a nation. | 1534-1586 | Japan | Oda Nobunaga first achieved notoriety at the bate of Okehazama, where his army overwhelmed an army ten times its size. His tactics and leadership saw his empire continue to grow and he proclaimed that he would eventually control all of Japan. | When the Assassins first made contact with Nobunaga, he was sympathetic to their cause, and promised an alliance once he had unified Japan. However, this promise was made before Nobunaga held the Sword of Eden. |
| John Pitcairn | I assume you've good reason for causing all this madness? | 1722-1775 | Colonial | ||
| Sakakibara Yasumasa | Allocation of fiefs is the opposite of war: giving land, not taking it. | 1548-1606 | Japan | ||
| Adha the Chalice | A chalice is merely a vessel for libation, for good or ill. | ?-1190 | Kingdom | ||
| Sakai Tadatsugu | Every advance reveals a weakness. Wait, and strike. | 1527-1596 | Japan | ||
| Sibrand | I followed my orders, believeing in my cause. Same as you. | 1157-1191 | Kingdom | ||
| Charles Vane | I'll murder the man who stole my ship! | 1680-1721 | Caribbean | ||
| Honda Tadakatsu | I served in battle my master has fought, yet where are my wounds? | 1548-1610 | Japan | ||
| Willikin of the Weald | Your barons better than the King if they take aid from the French. | ?-1257 | Kingdom | ||
| Mochizuki Chiyome | Your old life is over. Trains with me, and you will have a new one. | ? | Japan | ||
| Niccolò Polo | To us, Altaïr is entrusting the spirit of the Brotherhood. He is passing the torch to us. | 1230-1294 | Kingdom | ||
| Benjamin Hornigold | The Templars know order. Discipline. Structure. But you could never fathom these subleties. | ?-1719 | Caribbean | ||
| James Kidd | We follow a Creed, aye. But it does not command us to act or submit. | ?-1720 | Caribbean | ||
| Ah Tabai | Nothing in life is guaranteed, except surprise. | 1660-? | Caribbean | ||
| Israel Putnam | What would you know about victory? | 1718-1790 | Colonial | ||
| Bartolomeo d'Alviano | I'll take you all on! With one arm -- no-- BOTH arms tied behind my back! | 1455-1515 | Italy | ||
| Benjamin Church | There's no single path through life that's right and fair and does no harm. | 1734-1778 | Colonial | ||
| La Volpe | It is my business to know everything in this city. | ? | Italy | ||
| Thomas Hickey | They paid me so I said yes. Didn't bother to ask who or how or why. | ?-1776 | Colonial | ||
| Majd Addin | Do you know what it feels like, to determine another man's fate. | ?-1191 | Kingdom | ||
| Calico Jack | You'd like to know my secrets, would you? | 1682-1720 | Caribbean | ||
| Lorenzo d'Medici [sic] | Whoever wants to be happy, let him be so. | 1449-1492 | Italy | ||
| Emilio Barbarigo | Progress demands sacrifice. | 1421-1485 | Italy | ||
| Lucrezia Borgia | Tell Cesare, we shall see how it feels when the shoe is on the other foot. | 1480-1519 | Italy | ||
| Bartholomew Roberts | A merry life and a short one, as promised. How well I know myself. | Caribbean | |||
| Julien du Casse | As bold as a musket ball, and still half as sharp. | Caribbean | |||
| Robert Fitzwalter | Our so-called King meets with his Templar advisers in London. Shall we pay them a visit? | ||||
| Tamir | I serve a far nobler cause than mere profit. | 1147-1191 | Kingdom | ||
| William Johnson | I offered you an olive branch, and you knocked it from my hand. | Colonial | |||
| Francisco Vecellio | Someday I will take the time to paint. For now, I am a soldier on the front lines. | Italy | |||
| Charles de la Motte | My skill with the blade? Don't ask me: ask the eviscerated dead. | ? | Italy | ||
| Rocco Tiepolo | Am I for sale? Cesare will need to send more coin for that. | ?-1503 | Italy | ||
| Jabal | End the life of Montferrat, that we may call this city free. | ? | Kingdom | ||
| El Tiburón | ... | Caribbean | |||
| Chaya Shirojiro Kiyonobu | Powerful men still need what we provide. | Japan | |||
| David "Big Dave" Walston | Don't much agree with the fight and I love this country, so there you have it. | Colonial | |||
| Peter Chamberlaine | Why scratch and claw to protect such squalor? | ||||
| Abu'l Nuqoud | These noble robes did little more than muffle their shouts of hate. | ?-1191 | Kingdom | ||
| Laurens Prins | You live in the world but you cannot make it move. | 1630-1717 | Caribbean | ||
| Niccolò Machiavelli | We don't need the apple to tell us what our old friend Cesare is planning. | 1469-1527 | Italy | ||
| Hattori Hanzo | Those who cling to life, die; those who defy death, live. | 1542-1596 | Japan | ||
| Ii Naomasa | If you are not wounded, you have not truly fought. | 1561-1602 | Japan | ||
| Alesandro Valignano | These converts are our foothold in this country. | 1539-1606 | Japan | ||
| Malik Al-Sayf | As we share the glory of our victories, so too should we share the pain of our defeat. | 1165-1228 | Kingdom | ||
| Blackbeard | Legends ain't born from mildness. | 1680-1718 | Caribbean | ||
| Captain William Kidd | I find myself at a crossroads; to return to my wife and child, or join my kinsmen. | 1645-1701 | Caribbean | ||
| Adéwalé | I'll be your quartermaster. Nothing less. | 1692-1758 | Caribbean | ||
| Mori Motonari | You have just shown me why we should not be under one rule. | ||||
| Jacques de Molay | If my death means my brothers can continue on, then so be it. | 1244-1314 | Kingdom | ||
| Uesugi Kenshin | Wars are to be won with swords and spears, not with rice and salt. | 1530-1578 | Japan | ||
| Qulan Gal | But there is another way to bring down the Khan. | ? | Mongolia | ||
| Nergüi | I made a promise to an old friend. | 1212-1279 | Mongolia | ||
| Mongolian Assassin | We cannot hope to fight them, but we can still sabotage their efforts. | N/A | Mongolia | ||
| Hattori Masanari | I will serve the Tokugawa as my father did, but in my on own. | 1565-1615 | Japan | ||
| Yamauchi Kazutoyo | I wonder if my station is too much for one of such humble origins. | 1546-1605 | Japan | ||
| Jochi Khan | Am I not the eldest Khan? I will have more than a quartered empire. | Mongolia | |||
| Date Masamune | Benevolence indulged beyond measure sinks into weakness. | ||||
| Attar of Nishapur | Be the Eternal Mirror that you saw. | 1145-1221 | Mongolia | ||
| Aleksander Nevsky | It's better to die for your country than to leave it. | 1120-1263 | Mongolia | ||
| Maria Thorpe | You see? Years of being boisterous finally paid off. | 1161-1228 | Mongolia | ||
| Mogami Yoshiaki | The bald rat will soon learn he can not simply take any life he pleases. | 1546-1614 | Japan |
Text pile
(To be formatted and corrected once done.)
Story: Pitcaim was a British soldier stationed in Boston before the Revolutionary War broke out It was then that he was contacted by Haytham Kenway and the rest of the Colonial Templars, and offered a position in their Order “o Di , a anta E - More: Despite being closely tied with Templars on the side of the Revolutionaries, Pitcairn continued to lead British troops in the war. He claimed to seek peaceful resolutions to the conflict, and was part of the conspiracy to assassinate George Washington.
Story: Sakakibara Yasumasa served as one of
Tokugawa leyasu's greatest generals, often called
the "Four Guardians.” Yasumasa and Honda
Tadakatsu were the same age, and both were
appointed into leyasu's personal service when
they became old enough.
E Ani
More: Yasumasa earned the gratitude and trust
of leyasu by staying to fight against Toyotomi
Hideyoshi, despite having familal tes to
Hideyoshi. Yasumasa was the most suspicious of
the Assassins, though he was also the most
impressed by their skills.
Story: The Chalice was supposedly an object of great power, which was rumored to be able to unite even the most bitter of rivals. Both the Assassins and Templars sought it, but at first only the Templars were aware that the Chalice was actually a woman, Adha. More: Altair sought Adha to keep the Chalice's ability to sway the minds of people out of the hands of the Templars. He fought for her safety, but could only watch as a Templar ship took her away. He would never see her alive again.
Story: Sakai Tadatsugu served as one of Tokugawa leyasu's greatest generals, often called the "Four Guardians." He was the eldest of the four, having first served leyasu's father, Matsudaira Hirotada. , E À GR [fo CSN Eos To DD SO =p O 0 penchant for fooling his enemies with ruses. In the battle of Mikatagahara, which saw leyasu's army devastated by Takeda Shingen, some trickery from Tadagatsugu kept the enemy from pursuing leyasu's men as they retreated,
Story: Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights, Sibrand was a fierce and skiled warrior capable of besting his enemies just as skillfulhy with words SALSA ESA UA, (ee | PO 01 More: As Sibrand witnessed more and more of his Templar brethren meeting their end at Altair's hands, he grew increasingly paranoid. He doubled his personal guard and took refuge on his ship. Ultimately, he faced same fate that befell the rest of the Templars on Altair's list.
Story: Like most pirates, Charles Vane began his career as a privateer When privateering opportunities dried up, Vane took to piracy at the helm of his ship, the Ranger. He quickly became one of the most notorious pirates in the Caribbean. More: Vane and Edward Kenway sailed together on several occasions. It was during one of these collaborations that Jack Rackham convinced Vane's crew to mutiny, leaving Vane and Kenway stranded on a deserted island.
Story: Honda Tadakatsu served as one cf Tokugawa leyasu's greatest generals, often called the "Four Guardians.” His distinction in batile was known across all of Japan, and legends say that despite fighting in over 100 batiles, he never suffered a single wound. More: When the Assassins came to leyasu with a plan for retrieving the Sword of Eden, Tadakatsu was initially opposed; being an honorable warrior, he preferred meeting his enemy face to face in combat over striking at them from secrecy.
Story: Wilikin of the Weald, also known as William of Cassingham, was a squire during the LS STO ni VETA A INTE o SIT RO aco oppose Prince Louis VIII of France, who had tried to depose King John during the First Barons' War. RE DR o Ca ER ARS PIS pe (a(o SS To ES Assassin of the English Brotherhood. While not an admirer of the despotic King John, Willkin still favored the monarchy over baronial rule and was a supporter of John's son, Henry.
Story: Mochizuki Chiyome was a noblewoman who served Takeda Shingen. Upon hearing that she had been trained in the ninja arts by the Kôga clan, Shingen gave Chiyome the task of recruiting women and training them as spies and assassins. More: Chiyome's network of kunoichi numbered in the hundreds, and Shingen was kept well informed. While strong, this network still had holes; it was not enough to spot Honda Tadakatsu and Hattori Hanzô as they snuck into la e cigf er: ng 79 N
Story: Niccolô and Maffeo Polo ran a successful trading post in Constantinople, and it was through this that they met and befriended Darim Ibn- La'Ahad. Darim then invited the two of them to Masyaf, and there the brothers began their training as Assassins. More: Altair knew Masyaf would fall under the approaching Mongols and the Sword of Eden. Therefore he imparted as much knowledge as he could to Niccolô Polo, and told him and his brother Maffeo to start a new Brotherhood in Constantinople.
Story: Benjamin Hornigold was a tremendously successful pirate with a fleet of five warships. Among Hornigold's trainees were Edward Thatch and Charles Vane. However, Hornigold would eventually betray them all after an offer to join the Templars. More: Hornigold accepted a pardon offered by [ra SM ES 9) FL (0 [0 SS o [o [TE TO Ca Tn [= Hornigold became a pirate hunter, chasing down and apprehending his former comrades. He excelled at this task until the day he went after his former associate Edward Kenwav.
Story: In order to get a foothold in the predominately male pirate society, Mary Read disguised herself as a man and took the name James Kidd. She eventually sailed on Jack Rackham's ship, and was one of the few sober enough to fight back when they were boarded. More: Aside from her life of piracy, Mary Read was a member of the Assassins. She tried several times to convince Edward Kenway to abandon his pursuit of riches and join the Brotherhood. It was only after her death in prison that Edward took her advice.
Story: Bom on the Yucatán Peninsula and of Mayan descent, Ah Tabai became Mentor of the Caribbean Assassins in 1713. He trained both Mary Read and Duncan Walpole as Assassins, and took on Adéwalé as an apprentice after the [juta ip o (ço À Ia EAD ss t “o RUM O. More: Ah Tabai and Edward Kenway had a fractious relationship, as Edward had no interest in the Assassins and had simply posed as one to make some money. Edward would later come to understand what the Assassins stood for, and Ah Tabai then allowed him to join.
ES (o) AME O gr UR SE RO Ce pe Sair O RS Continental Army that fought with recklessness. His most notable battle was that of Bunker Hill; while technically a loss, Putnam's army inflicted so many casualtes on the British that their victory oe ao [0 pod More: Putnam might have faced further humiliation at Bunker Hill if it werent for Ratonhnhaké:ton's aid. The Assassin disabled a British frigate in the harbor, and then snuck into the British camp to assassinate their general, John Pitcairn.
Story: Bartolomeo d'Alviano was a loyal member of the Italian Brotherhood of Assassins. He was renowned for his prowess in battle, though much of that was due to brute strength and sheer determination. He wielded a huge two- handed sword that he named “Bianca.” More: Bartolomeo and Ezio met in Venice, and soon became friends. The two of them would aid one another several times over the years, with Bartolomeo's leadership over the Venetian mercenaries proving invaluable to the Assassins.
Story: A wealthy doctor, Benjamin Church was kidnapped and held for ransom until he was rescued by Haytham Kenway. He was then recruited into the Templar Order, and furthered their goals through his position as Surgeon General of the Revolutionary Army. More: Church ended up betraying both the Templars and the Patriots, and had planned to defect to the British with military secrets and a cache of weapons in tow. Ratonhnhakéton and Haytham formed a temporary partnership to put an end to the traitor.
Story: Gilberto was a thief known as La Volpe (the Fox). He closely guarded the details of his life, and little other than his name is known. His network of thieves in Florence aided Ezio a number of times, and he was eventually invited to [oa R UPAs More: After moving to Rome, La Volpe began to suspect the Mentor Niccolô Machiavell of betraying the Assassin cause, and was prepared to assassinate him. Ezio discovered the identity of the true traitor, and was able to convince La Volpe to stay his blade.
Story: Thomas Hickey was an Irish soldier in the French and Indian War, and he eventualky joined the Templars along with his commander, William Johnson. He was vulgar and unscrupulous, but loyal to the Templar cause (so long as they continued to pay him). More: Thomas Hickey ran a counterfeiting ring in New York, and was to be the trigger-man in the plot to assassinate George Washington. Hickey was to make this attempt during Ratonhnhakéton's hanging, but the Assassin managed to escape the noose and stop Hickey.
Story: While the Sultan Saladin had left Jerusalem to fight the armies of King Richard, Majd Addin took the opportunity to seize control of the city. He did this mainly through fear, conducting public executions of anyone who E iojo SE: [or DIM ATAE More: Majd Addin was one of the nine Templars on Altair's list. Altair learned that Addin was about to execute several people of Jerusalem, one of whom was a fellow Assassin. Altair intervened, and while the Assassin was saved, the rest were not “
Story: Jack Rackham, often called Calico Jack, was a capable shipman who sailed with Charles Vane. He convinced the crew to mutiny against Vane and steal Edward Kenway's ship, but his captaincy was a failure and Edward got his ship [pic jo =D (= Dano RAE (SIA More: Calico Jack retumed to piracy after enlisting the aid of Mary Read and Anne Bonny. They successes drew the attention of bounty hunters, who attacked Rackham's ship. They were captured fairly easily, as most of the crew was too drunk to fight back.
Story: Lorenzo de' Medici was an Italian statesman and the ruler of the Florentine Republic. He was also a close friend of the Auditore family, and one of the few people to know about Giovanni's role as an Assassin. More: Lorenzo de' Medici became reunited with the Assassins when there was an attempt on Medici's life; Ezio came to his aid and prevented the deed from being completed. From that point on, Medici sought Ezio's aid in dealing with the DS ER Ss a [o pr
Story: Emilio Barbarigo used his connections in the government and the police force to ensure that the merchant district remained under his control. He demanded outrageous taxes from merchants, and sent his quards to destroy the Este] o Raros tSR ja o Ro DS a SA More: Emilio was secrety a Templar, and a close ally of Rodrigo Borgia. His actions attracted the attention of the Venetian Thieves Guild, who enlisted the aid of Ezio in freeing the merchants of the city from Emilio's cruel governance.
Story: The daughter of Rodrigo and the sister of Cesare, Lucrezia collaborated with her family in their machinations. Rodrigo married her off several times to men with power, whom Cesare would then have assassinated. More: Befitting the Borgia name, Lucrezia was every bit as cruel and manipulative as her father and brother. However, she later became aware that their manipulation extended to her as well, as they were merely using her to further their own ambitions.
Story: As one of the most successful and destructive pirates of all time, Roberts drew the re of everyone in the Caribbean; Assassins, Templars, the British Navy, the Spanish Naw, the Portuguese Nawy, and even other pirates. More: Roberts knew the location of an ancient First Civilization building called the Observatory, and both Templars and Assassins fought over him for this knowledge. In the end, it was Edward Kenway who claimed the pirate s fe and the knowledge of the Observatory's location.
Story: Julien du Casse was a French arms dealer operating In the West Indies. His work eventually saw him inducted into the Templar Order along with Woodes Rogers and Duncan Walpole, the latter being impersonated by Edward Kenway. More: Du Casse and the other Templars quickly discovered that who they thought was Walpole was actually an impostor, and had Kenway Imprisoned, Shortly after escaping, Kenway crossed paths with du Casse and ended his life.
Story: An aristocrat and a soldier of King John during the wars in Normandy, Robert Fitzwalter cast away that allance after seeing King John abusing his authonty. Fitzwalter then became the leader of the baronial uprising Jota [SE dao) More: After meeting with his fellow Assassins to figure out how to depose King John, Htzwalter began a campaign to unite all of the English barons and force John off the throne. This attempt soon led to civil war, and the barons had to ask France for aid.
Story:Tamir ran a black market in Damascus, specializing in weapons and armor. He supplied both sides of the conflict, Saracens and Crusaders, and would often gloat about the amount of death caused by his wares. More:Tamir was one of the nine Templars on Altair's list. He DE is RT de RU SA comected somehow, as in his dying words he wamed PTE A CORO EO Sua PRC [GU
PAR soar ale Td RAE CP A UE RD pacto) was one of the few to see the indigenous tribes of the [CIR STS OE TE UU Kanien'kehá:ka people, leaming their language and ado Deu SD dO More:Johnson attermpted to buy land from the Irogiuos for the Templars, but the tribal leaders refused, Johnson Doado e DT AUS Re E UA Before this threat could turn to violence, Ratonhnhaké:ton silenced Johnson permanentiy.
[Cie ise DOE E ie E ad DS US Assassin Brotherhood. He was born in Venice and bege EP TAGS Sa CORE TO RT To the latter would eventually betray the Order after falling do TG CDA More: After the death of Perotto, Francesco traveled to Rome to become the apprentice of Ezio Auditore. He became close friends with two other apprentices, Cipriano Enu and Tessa Varzi, onhy to see both of them E DE Ei de Te TEL
Story: Rocco Tiepolo was a Templar who led a sizable group of mercenaries. While he often provided mercenaries to Cesare, he was not directly under the Borgia's control. More: Rocco was one of the names that Fiora gave to the Assassins when she defected from the Templar Order. Fiora pointed out the strategic weaknesses in Rocco s headquarters, and the Assassins launched an attack.
Story: Spanish for “The Shark” El Tiburón was the mute bodyguard of the Templar Grand Master, Laureano de Torres y Ayala. El Tiburón was a brute of a man draped in thick armor, elle qi fis a O no E More: Edward Kenway first encountered El Tiburón when he tried to break the Sage out of prison in Havana. El Tiburón got the better of Kenway then, but later he would prevail over The Shark as Kenway attempted to assassinate Torres.
Story: Chaya Shirojiro Kiyonobu was part of a long line of merchants in Kyoto. The Chaya family held a monopoly on the raw silk trade thanks to a permit that allowed them to travel to Vietnam to trade goods. More: In addition to managing trade, Kyonobu was also tasked by leyasu to track the foreigners entering the port city. Specifically, he was to keep an eye on the Christian missionaries, and report any suspicion of Templar affiliation.
Story: “Big Dave” Walston was a blacksmith who was draited into the Bntish army. Walston had little desire to fight, so he deserted and ran off to the Frontier. He was later found by Bnitish Regulars, was about to be executed when Ratonhnhaké:ton came to his aid. More: After saving him, Ratonhnhaké:ton offered Big Dave a job and a place to live on the Davenport Homestead. His smithing skills quickly made a valuable ally of the Colonial Assassins.
Story: The newly appointed governor of the Bahamas, Woodes Rodgers, appointed Commodore Peter Chamberlane to combat piracy. Chamberlaine harbored a fierce grudge against pirates, however, and was wiling to overstep his bounds to see them eliminated, More: While the governor had offered pardons to the pirates Hornigold, Vane, and Thatch, Chamberlaine plotted to sink their ships regardless of whether or not they accepted. Upon discovering this, Kenway snuck onto Gar policia Fe] ae OR ate Rc IST SS are Si ROTA]
Story: This wealthy Damascus merchant had little regard for what he sold or who he sold it to. He was fond of throwing both parties and insults, and was convinced that he was the subject of cruel words and misgivings from the people of the city. More: Abul Nugoud was one of the nine Templars on Altair's list Altair attended one of Abul's lavish partes (paid for with funds embezzled from the city treasury), only to discover that Abu! had poisoned the wine the partygoers had been drinking.
Story: Laurens Prins was a Dutch pirate who once sailed with the legendary Captain Henry Morgan. After Morgan's death, Prins became a slave trader, and as a consequence he worked closely with the Caribbean Templars. More: In 1717, Bartholomew Roberts was working on one of Prins' slave ships. Having identified Roberts as the Sage, Torres tried to buy Roberts from Prins for a sizable sum.
Story: As a poltican and philosopher, Machiavell was highly critical of idealism and self- serving politicians. Eventualy, the tem “Machiavellian" became adopted as an adjective for those who served themselves before their people. More: Niccolô was also an Assassin, and he worked with Ezio to track the Templars through Venice, Florence, and later Rome. When the previous leader of the Assassins, Mario Auditore, was murdered by Cesare, Niccolô became the leader of the Brotherhood.
Story: Hattori Hanzô skill with the yari was legendary, and his prowess in batile made him respected and feared as one of the greatest samurai in Japan. He also excelled in the ninja arts, and had a fierce rivalry with Fúma Kotarô. More: Hanzô's ability made him a valued ally of Tokugawa leyasu, and Hanzô saved his master's life on several occasions. He was also instrumental in the struggle against the Japanese Templars, assassinating Uesugi Kenshin and retrieving the Sword of Eden.
Story: |i Naomasa served as one of Tokugawa leyasu's greatest generals, often called the “Four Guardians” He was a veteran of numerous battles, and was famous for continuing to fight even after sustaining severe injuries. More: While the rest of the Four Guardians were not easily convinced that the Assassins could aid them, Naomasa saw differentiy. He recognized that the Assassins could prove to be valuable alles, and often suggested calling on them to his colleagues.
Story: Alessandro Valignano was a Jesuit missionary that was sent to help introduce Catholicism to Japan. While he was sent to aid Francisco Cabral, who was already doing missionary work in Japan, the two men despised on another almost instantly. More: Valignano used his Jesuit connections to Ee PLAN): a(o a iunio E: (Sto A a cia: pe ij) Cabral confronted Valignano about this, he used his influence to force Cabral to resign from his post as Superior of the Jesuit Mission.
Story: When Altair let his arrogance get the better of him it was Malik who suffered, losing his brother and his left arm in the battle that followed. However, after Altair regained his honor the two men reconciled, and Malik would become second in command of the Brotherhood. More: After his injury, Malik served as the Rafiq of Jerusalem, offering a point of contact and advice to the Assassins who had business to perform in the city.
Story: Edward Thatch sailed in the British Nawy, but eventually quit to become a privateer. Once the War of the Spanish Succession ended Thatch turned to piracy. His fearsome ability as well as his significant facial hair led to the nickname Blackbeard. More: Thatch and Kenway crossed paths when they freed Nassau from the British. The two soon became alles, and debated how to run the Pirate Republic. Thatch later decided to quit piracy, but was killed by the British Navy on the night of his ASS INE ARA o.
Story: A Scottish sailor and privateer for the English Parliament, William Kidd was later accused of piracy and hung. While he certainly took his share of plunder while privateering, the evidence that actually tied him to piracy was slim at best. More: Kidd's legacy far outlived the man himself. The Assassin Mary Read took the name James Kidd, and pretended to be an illegitimate child. The Assassin Ratonhnhakéton followed several maps to discover one of Kidd's buried treasures, a Shard of Eden.
Story: Adéwalé was born into slavery on Trinidad. His opportunity for escape came when pirates began raiding the plantation Adéwalé was on. He decided to aid the pirates, and they took him on board. He was eventually caught by the Spanish and imprisoned. More: Adéwalé met Edward Kenway while imprisoned, and the two broke free and commandeered a ship. Adéwalé became Edward's quartermaster, and the two sailed together for many years. Eventually Adéwalé left Edward's employ to join the Assassins.
Story: As daimyo of what was a relatively small clan, Mori Motonari used a cunning blend of tactics and force to expand his empire. Within a few years, he had eliminated several rival clans and ruled over the entire Chugoku region of Japan. More: Motonari was a vocal opponent of Nobunagas attempt to unify all of Japan, though he never had the strength to challenge Nobunaga directly. The Mori clan was further weakened when Nobunaga arranged the assassination of Motonari's heir, Mori Takamoto.
Story: As the last Grand Master of the Templar order before the organization was dissolved, at least publicly, Jacques de Molay became renowned as a martyr after being accused of heresy and subsequently burned at the stake. More: By accepting the dubious charges brought before him, de Molay allowed the world to believe that the Templars were gone for good. In actuality, his widely publicized death drew attention away from the Templars, allowing them to rebuild the organization in secret.
Story: Uesugi Kenshin was one of the most powerful daimyos of his time, ruling over the large Echigo province of Japan. In addition to his skill in battle, Kenshin was also a gifted administrator who greatly expanded industry and trade in his province. More: When Takeda Shingen's army neared Echigo, Kenshin moved to hatt their advance. They fought to a stalemate, which was the start of a fierce rivalry between the two daimyos. This rivalry ended when Shingen was assassinated over the Sword of Eden.
Story: Qulan Gal was an Assassin of the Mongolian Brotherhood as well as an unmatched archer. His skill with the bow led to his role in the assassination of Genghis Khan, elevating Qulan Gal to a legendary status among the Mongolian Assassins. More: Little is known about Qulan Gal beyond his involvement in the assassination of Genghis Khan. Such was his legacy, though, that the Italian Brotherhood had him entombed below the Rocca di Ravaldino in Forli Italy.
Story: While still an Apprentice, the Mongolian Assassin Nergul was captured. He was tortured while imprisoned, leaving his face permanently scarred. He was eventually rescued by Qulan Gal and Darim Ibn-La'Ahad when the two of them assassinated Genghis Khan. More: Nergúi would go on to be an effective and influential member of the Mongolian Assassins. His greatest achievement was the assassination of Húlegu Khan, in retribution for Húlegu's sacking of Masyaf and the destruction of the Levantine Assassins.
Story: The Mongolian chapter of the Assassin Brotherhood was one of the few groups who resisted the expansion of the Mongol Horde. Though few in number, the Mongolian Assassins managed to curtail the Horde's campaigns on several occasions. More: N/A
Story: At only fourteen years of age, Yamauchi Kazutoyo's father died, leaving the young man to wander as a ronin for several years. He eventually came into the service of Oda Nobunaga, and worked his way up to becoming a trusted general. More: After Nobunaga's death, Kazutoyo served Toyotomi Hideyoshi, who had taken up Nobunaga's goal of unifying all of Japan. When Hideyoshi died in 1598, Kazutoyo chose to serve Tokugawa leyasu, and played a small but critical role in the latter's rise to power in 1600.
Story: Despite being the eldest of Genghis Khan's sons, and despite numerous successes on the battlefield, Jochi was not named as the Great Khan's successor, While controversial at the time, this issue became moot when Jochi Disse nc) Do sifo fc TS Fe A TeÍ TO More: Jochi Khan did not know that he was being tracked by Darm lbn-LaAhad as he moved through Central Asia. Under cover of night, Darim snuck into Jochi's tent and placed a few drops of poison into his waterskin.
Story: A massive strongman with a missing eye, Date Masamune was feared throughout much of northern Japan for his cunning and ruthlessness. As daimyo, Masamune began attacking nearby clans to expand his own, eventually ruling over most of the Tohoku region. More: The shogun at the time, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, saw the wisdom in having Masamune as an aly, as did Hideyoshi's successor Tokugawa leyasu. Eventualy Masamune became lord of the profitable Sendal Domain, making him one of the most powerful men in Japan.
Story: A poet, traveler, and Sufi mystic, Attar of Nishapur studied under many great Sufi Shaykhs and returned to his native Persia to spread this knowledge. More: Attar fell victim to the seemingly unstoppable spread of the Mongol Empire. In April of 1221, the Mongols entered the Persian city of Nishapur and slaughtered everyone they fer pn Ars [e 0)
Story: Alexander Nevsky was a def military tactician and an emphatic leader who successfully defended Russia's borders on several occasions. He became Grand Prince of Vladimir in 1252, and his alliance with the Golden Horde kept Russia from being a Mongolian target. More: While Nevsky was never identified as a Spy o EJA US 0 0 [0 9/0 DES 5) [SRF pre the Khans implies such an association. It was on his way back from visiting the Golden Horde that Nevsky fell mysteriously ill and passed away.
Story: Maria Thorpe, a former Templar, switched aliances to the Assassins when after several meetings with Altair. The two eventually started a family, and it was that family that traveled to Mongolia to see to the end of Genghis Khan. More: Maria did not take an active role in the assassination of Genghis Khan. However, she was on hand to tend to Altair's wounds when his first attempt on the Khan's life was unsuccessful.
Story: Mogami Yoshiaki was a powerful daimyo of northermn Japan. In order to solidify his political position, Yoshiaki sent his daughter, Komahime, to be wed to Toyotomi Hidetsugu, nephew and heir to the Regent of Japan, Toyotomi Hideyoshi. More: Soon after Hideyoshi had a son of his own, and in order to secure his succession, Hideyoshi ordered the death of Hidetsugu and his family, including Komahime. This enraged Yoshiaki, who immediately turned his allegiance to fo fer RS eU
Story: The British Regular was the foot soldier of the Loyalist Army, and they were easily identified by their red jackets. Their training and equipment were superior to the Continental Army, forcing the Colonists to devise new tactics to counter them. More:
ES a RA ERR SG ge TE DG ge a SS CA ES the Mongol Empire expanded across Central Asia and into the Levant It was ruled over by Húlegu Khan, and at its height it spread all the way into Turkey. More:
Story: The Kheshig were the personal guard of the Khan and his family. They did not go to war with the rest of the Mongolian army, as they were tasked with seeing to the Khan's personal safety at ali times. More: