Avicenne: Difference between revisions
imported>Blue-castle m +fr |
imported>Francesco75 No edit summary |
||
| Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
==Biography== | ==Biography== | ||
Circa | Circa 1593, Avicenne tasked [[Florine]] and [[Isaac du Queyran|Nicodemus]] with stealing a [[Shrouds of Eden|Shroud of Eden]] from the [[Templars]]. Due to Templar interference, however, Nicodemus had to leave the Shroud in the care of a Brotherhood ally, [[Catherine (healer)|Catherine]]. It was only in 1609, after Catherine and one of her adopted daughters, [[Ermeline]], were captured by [[Master Templar]] [[Pierre de Lancre]]'s [[Labourd witch-hunt of 1609|witch-hunt]] that Nicodemus managed to deliver the Shroud to Avicenne, also bringing along Catherine's other daughter, [[Margaux]].<ref name = "Chapter 11">''Assassin's Creed: Fragments – The Witches of the Moors'' – Chapter 11 - Margaux</ref> | ||
Margaux, wanting to free her sister from her captors, pleaded with Avicenne to interfere. Though Avicenne originally chose to not have the Brotherhood go against Pierre de Lancre, instead only ordering Nicodemus to train Margaux, having recognized her as the daughter of Florine, when Margaux confronted him with her sister's ability to also use the Shroud, he relented, telling her they would meet again in a week, after some information-gathering.<ref name = "Chapter 11"/> During that week, Avicenne and the Assassins under him managed to get the map of the castle Ermeline was being kept in and the times of the changing of the guard, as well as identify three other Templars in Pierre de Lancre's entourage and plan a rescue.<ref name = "Chapter 15">''Assassin's Creed: Fragments – The Witches of the Moors'' – Chapter 15 - Margaux</ref> | Margaux, wanting to free her sister from her captors, pleaded with Avicenne to interfere. Though Avicenne originally chose to not have the Brotherhood go against Pierre de Lancre, instead only ordering Nicodemus to train Margaux, having recognized her as the daughter of Florine, when Margaux confronted him with her sister's ability to also use the Shroud, he relented, telling her they would meet again in a week, after some information-gathering.<ref name = "Chapter 11"/> During that week, Avicenne and the Assassins under him managed to get the map of the castle Ermeline was being kept in and the times of the changing of the guard, as well as identify three other Templars in Pierre de Lancre's entourage and plan a rescue.<ref name = "Chapter 15">''Assassin's Creed: Fragments – The Witches of the Moors'' – Chapter 15 - Margaux</ref> | ||
| Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
==Behind the scenes== | ==Behind the scenes== | ||
Avicenne is the French form of ''{{Wiki|Avicenna}}'', the latinisation of Ibn Sina, a [[Iran|Persian]] polymath of the 10th and 11th centuries during the Islamic Golden Age. | Avicenne is the French form of ''{{Wiki|Avicenna}}'', the latinisation of Ibn Sina, a [[Iran|Persian]] polymath of the 10th and 11th centuries during the [[Islamic Golden Age]]. | ||
==Appearances== | ==Appearances== | ||
Latest revision as of 13:39, 21 August 2023
Avicenne (died 1609) was a Master Assassin, responsible for overseeing the Assassins in southwest France in the early 17th century. [1]
Biography[edit | edit source]
Circa 1593, Avicenne tasked Florine and Nicodemus with stealing a Shroud of Eden from the Templars. Due to Templar interference, however, Nicodemus had to leave the Shroud in the care of a Brotherhood ally, Catherine. It was only in 1609, after Catherine and one of her adopted daughters, Ermeline, were captured by Master Templar Pierre de Lancre's witch-hunt that Nicodemus managed to deliver the Shroud to Avicenne, also bringing along Catherine's other daughter, Margaux.[2]
Margaux, wanting to free her sister from her captors, pleaded with Avicenne to interfere. Though Avicenne originally chose to not have the Brotherhood go against Pierre de Lancre, instead only ordering Nicodemus to train Margaux, having recognized her as the daughter of Florine, when Margaux confronted him with her sister's ability to also use the Shroud, he relented, telling her they would meet again in a week, after some information-gathering.[2] During that week, Avicenne and the Assassins under him managed to get the map of the castle Ermeline was being kept in and the times of the changing of the guard, as well as identify three other Templars in Pierre de Lancre's entourage and plan a rescue.[3]
However, unknown to the Assassins, Pierre de Lancre managed to discover the time and place for their meeting, launching an attack as Avicenne explained the plan to Nicodemus and Margaux. Avicenne was impaled in the chest by glass pane and died instantly.[3]
Personality and traits[edit | edit source]
Avicenne had a Moorish accent: his /r/ was raspy and his /h/ sounded pressed.[2]
Behind the scenes[edit | edit source]
Avicenne is the French form of Avicenna, the latinisation of Ibn Sina, a Persian polymath of the 10th and 11th centuries during the Islamic Golden Age.
Appearances[edit | edit source]
References[edit | edit source]
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||