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{{Era|Culture}}
{{Era|Culture}}[[File:Assassin's Coin.png|thumb|250px|An Assassins' coin]]
[[File:Assassin's Coin.png|thumb|250px|An Assassins' coin]]
The '''Assassins' coins''' were ten [[coin]]s brought into [[Louisiana]] by foreign smugglers in the 18th century.
The '''Assassins' coins''' were [[coin]]s smuggled into [[New Orleans]] and the [[Louisiana Bayou]] by foreign smugglers in the 18th century.
 
==Description==
Despite their name, the coins did not appear to be [[Assassins|Assassin]] in origin. Inscribed upon their rims were the words ''Hispaniarum Rex''—Latin for 'King of the Spanish'—hinting at a [[Spain|Spanish]] source, but they were marked by uncanny anachronisms. First, the year was given as 1788, almost two decades after they first arrived in New Orleans around 1769, but even stranger was the symbol on their faces—the telltale triangular insignia was the logo of [[Abstergo Industries]], the [[Templars|Templar corporation]] which would not be founded until 1937.<ref name="AC3L">''[[Assassin's Creed III: Liberation]]''</ref><ref name="Ins_Purpose">''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]'' – [[Abstergo Files]]: File.0.01\Ins_Purpose</ref> If not for these mysterious traits, they would have appeared to be relatively ordinary silver coins.<ref name="AC3L" />


==History==
==History==
The coins reached New Orleans and Lousiana Bayou in the pockets of smugglers. The [[Assassins|Assassin]] [[Aveline de Grandpré]] beat up these smugglers throughout [[Louisiana]] to acquire the coins, amassing a vast collection.<ref name="ACLib">''[[Assassin's Creed III: Liberation]]''</ref>
The mysterious coins had reached [[New Orleans]] and the [[Louisiana Bayou]] in the pockets of smugglers by 1769. The [[Assassins|Assassin]] [[Aveline de Grandpré]] subsequently seized all ten of them from the smugglers by force, seven of whom she encountered in New Orleans and the other three in the Bayou. While useless as money, she was able to exchange them at a [[tailor]]'s shop for the [[Tailor#Assassin outfits|Bayou Hunter outfit]].<ref name="AC3L" />
 
After gathering a certain amount of the coins, Aveline exchanged them at a [[tailor]]'s shop for the [[Tailor#Assassin outfits|Bayou Hunter outfit]].<ref name="ACLib" />


==Behind the scenes==
==Behind the scenes==
Collecting the coins came available in the sequence 4 and can be found only if Aveline is in Assassin Persona. To collect the coins, the player must identify the smuggler using [[eagle vision]] and kill him in order to loot the coins.
The Assassin's coins are one of three persona-specific collectibles in ''[[Assassin's Creed III: Liberation]]''. As their name suggests, they can only be collected when the player character, Aveline de Grandpré, is dressed in her Assassin persona because only then will the ten smugglers who carry them appear. To retrieve the coins from them, they must be either killed or knocked out and looted.
 
The coins feature the text "Hispaniarum Rex" – Latin for "King of the Spanish", pointing to a [[Spain|Spanish]] origin – as well as the year 1788.


Strangely, the coins feature the logo of the [[Abstergo Industries]], while the last coins were collected in 1777, 160 years prior to the company's founding. Despite the coins' [[Templars|Templar]] connotation, the reason behind their title is due to them being collected by Aveline while wearing her Assassin [[Assassin's Creed III: Liberation outfits|outfit]].
Ironic given their name, the coins feature the logo of Abstergo Industries which would not be founded for centuries after the era the game takes place. ''Assassin's Creed III: Liberation'' within the [[Assassin's Creed (series)|series' universe]] is itself a video game produced by Abstergo Industries under the [[Liberation|same name]] which has been edited for censorship. One possible in-universe explanation is that the logo in the coins are a result of the company's editing and are not faithful to their design as encountered by Aveline de Grandpré.


==Appearances==
==Appearances==

Revision as of 21:00, 1 April 2020

An Assassins' coin

The Assassins' coins were ten coins brought into Louisiana by foreign smugglers in the 18th century.

Description

Despite their name, the coins did not appear to be Assassin in origin. Inscribed upon their rims were the words Hispaniarum Rex—Latin for 'King of the Spanish'—hinting at a Spanish source, but they were marked by uncanny anachronisms. First, the year was given as 1788, almost two decades after they first arrived in New Orleans around 1769, but even stranger was the symbol on their faces—the telltale triangular insignia was the logo of Abstergo Industries, the Templar corporation which would not be founded until 1937.[1][2] If not for these mysterious traits, they would have appeared to be relatively ordinary silver coins.[1]

History

The mysterious coins had reached New Orleans and the Louisiana Bayou in the pockets of smugglers by 1769. The Assassin Aveline de Grandpré subsequently seized all ten of them from the smugglers by force, seven of whom she encountered in New Orleans and the other three in the Bayou. While useless as money, she was able to exchange them at a tailor's shop for the Bayou Hunter outfit.[1]

Behind the scenes

The Assassin's coins are one of three persona-specific collectibles in Assassin's Creed III: Liberation. As their name suggests, they can only be collected when the player character, Aveline de Grandpré, is dressed in her Assassin persona because only then will the ten smugglers who carry them appear. To retrieve the coins from them, they must be either killed or knocked out and looted.

Ironic given their name, the coins feature the logo of Abstergo Industries which would not be founded for centuries after the era the game takes place. Assassin's Creed III: Liberation within the series' universe is itself a video game produced by Abstergo Industries under the same name which has been edited for censorship. One possible in-universe explanation is that the logo in the coins are a result of the company's editing and are not faithful to their design as encountered by Aveline de Grandpré.

Appearances

Assassin's Creed III: Liberation

References