Welcome to Assassin's Creed Wiki! Log in and join the community.

10 August: Difference between revisions

From the Assassin's Creed Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
Line 15: Line 15:
*[[National Guard (France)|National Guard]]
*[[National Guard (France)|National Guard]]
*Fédérés
*Fédérés
|side2 = [[File:Kingdom of France Flag.svg|20px|border]] [[Royalists]]
|side2 = [[File:Freedom Cry - Kingdom of France Flag.png|20px|border]] [[Royalists]]
*[[Swiss Guards]]
*[[Swiss Guards]]
*Gentlemen-at-arms
*Gentlemen-at-arms

Revision as of 00:59, 8 May 2026

Patience, brothers. Soon we will reveal the secrets of this painting.

This article has been identified as being out of date. Please update the article to reflect recent releases and then remove this template once done.

The 10 August insurrection, also known as "the storming of the Tuileries Palace", was the French revolutionary insurrection upon King Louis XVI's reign in Paris on 10 August 1792.

The insurrection was led by Frédéric Rouille and Antoine Joseph Santerre, with thousands of armed revolutionary extremists fighting against two-to-three thousand men, mainly Swiss Guards. The fighting was fast and brutal and the Swiss Guards were massacred. During the confusion of the battle, the King escaped from the palace and took refuge with the National Assembly. This resulted in the abolition of monarchy and the creation of a new National Convention in France.[2]

The Assassin Council, discovering that their late Mentor Mirabeau had sent letters to the King with important information on the French Brotherhood, tasked Arno Dorian to infiltrate the Tuileries Palace and destroy the letters before the Templars could recover them. In the King's office, Arno met a young soldier, Napoleon Bonaparte,[3] who found a key to open the Isu Temple under the Basilica of Saint-Denis.[4] The two allied and took what they searched for before fleeing when Rouille and his men arrived. The Templars subsequently recovered the evidence they needed for the King's trial that would lead to his execution.[3]

Gallery

Appearances

References