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

Smugglers' Hideout: Difference between revisions

From the Assassin's Creed Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Darman36
No edit summary
m Text replacement - "<gallery captionalign="center" position="center" spacing="small" widths="180">" to "<gallery captionalign="center" position="center" widths="180">"
 
Line 16: Line 16:


==Gallery==
==Gallery==
<gallery captionalign="center" position="center" spacing="small" widths="180">
<gallery captionalign="center" position="center" widths="180">
Location - Smuggler's Hideout.jpg|Concept art of the mansion
Location - Smuggler's Hideout.jpg|Concept art of the mansion
ASSASSIN'S CREED 3 - LIBERATION . Smugglers area. Cemetery by nachoyague.jpg|Concept art of the cemetery
ASSASSIN'S CREED 3 - LIBERATION . Smugglers area. Cemetery by nachoyague.jpg|Concept art of the cemetery

Latest revision as of 02:08, 25 May 2026

"I've built—"we've" invested years of work in this camp."
―Élise Lafleur, on the smugglers' hideout, 1766.[src]-[m]

The smugglers' hideout was a burned-out, overgrown plantation located in the Louisiana Bayou, which served as the residence and headquarters of the smugglers Élise Lafleur and Roussillon during the 18th century.

The amount of land it encompassed was large, signified by the partially destroyed brick walls that bordered the grounds. The hideout primarily consisted of the main mansion and surrounding cabins, with one serving as a dressing chamber, but also included a sizeable though neglected garden and a small graveyard.

In 1766, Baptiste's cult members attacked it, though they were swiftly repelled by the Assassin Aveline de Grandpré. Later, she found two of her mother Jeanne's diary pages on the hideout's premises, one outside the overgrown garden and another in one of the cemetery's graves.

Gallery[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]