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'''David's Citadel''' was an ancient citadel located in the middle district of [[Jerusalem]]. The citadel was used by [[Roman Empire|Romans]] as barracks in 70 AD. After the Arab conquest of Jerusalem, the new Muslim rulers refurbished the ancient building. It even withstood the assault of the [[Crusaders]] in 1099, but was later used as the seat of the Crusader kings of Jerusalem.<ref>{{WP|Tower of David}}</ref>
'''David's Citadel''' was an ancient citadel located in the middle district of [[Jerusalem]]. The citadel was used by [[Roman Empire|Romans]] as barracks in 70 CE. After the Arab conquest of Jerusalem, the new Muslim rulers refurbished the ancient building. It even withstood the assault of the [[Crusaders]] in 1099 but was later used as the seat of the Crusader kings of Jerusalem.<ref>{{WP|Tower of David}}</ref>


In 1191, the [[Templars|Templar]] [[Majd Addin]] was buried on a small graveyard in front of the citadel. The funeral was infiltrated by the [[Assassins|Assassin]] [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad]] with the intention of killing [[Robert de Sablé]], the [[Grand Master of the Templar Order|Grand Master]] of the Templar Order; Altaïr ended up being discovered, however, and fled the funeral following his confrontation with [[Maria Thorpe]], who had impersonated Robert as a decoy.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed]]'' – [[Assassination (Robert de Sablé)]]</ref>
In 1191, the [[Templars|Templar]] [[Majd Addin]] was buried on a small graveyard in front of the citadel. The funeral was infiltrated by the [[Assassins|Assassin]] [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad]] with the intention of killing [[Robert de Sablé]], the [[Grand Master of the Templar Order|Grand Master]] of the Templar Order. Altaïr ended up being discovered, however, and fled the funeral following his confrontation with [[Maria Thorpe]], who had impersonated Robert as a decoy.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed]]'' – [[Assassination (Robert de Sablé)]]</ref>


==Behind the scenes==
==Behind the scenes==
The citadel is anachronistic as it is based mostly on the 16th century Ottoman reconstructions. It also features anachronistic bartizan turrets (these were developed in the 14th century) that are not present on the real walls.
David's Citadel is the setting for one of the last [[genetic memory|memories]] in ''[[Assassin's Creed]]''. Its appearance is anachronistic because it s based mostly on the 16th century Ottoman reconstructions. Notwithstanding this, it features bartizan turrets—which were only developed in the 14th century—that are not present on the real walls.


==Trivia==
Despite being one of the largest and tallest buildings in the game, it is not climbable and only minor portions of it can be entered.
*Despite being one of the biggest and highest buildings in [[Assassin's Creed]], it is not climbable and only minor parts of it can be entered.
*The citadel was rebuilt by [[Suleiman I|Suleiman the Magnificent]] during the 16th century.
*The citadel was most likely named after King [[David]] of Jerusalem.
*In the [[Assassin bureau]], [[Malik Al-Sayf|Malik al-Sayf]] kept a map of Jerusalem, on which only minor parts of David's Citadel were marked.


==Gallery==
==Gallery==

Revision as of 19:59, 21 September 2021


David's Citadel was an ancient citadel located in the middle district of Jerusalem. The citadel was used by Romans as barracks in 70 CE. After the Arab conquest of Jerusalem, the new Muslim rulers refurbished the ancient building. It even withstood the assault of the Crusaders in 1099 but was later used as the seat of the Crusader kings of Jerusalem.[1]

In 1191, the Templar Majd Addin was buried on a small graveyard in front of the citadel. The funeral was infiltrated by the Assassin Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad with the intention of killing Robert de Sablé, the Grand Master of the Templar Order. Altaïr ended up being discovered, however, and fled the funeral following his confrontation with Maria Thorpe, who had impersonated Robert as a decoy.[2]

Behind the scenes

David's Citadel is the setting for one of the last memories in Assassin's Creed. Its appearance is anachronistic because it s based mostly on the 16th century Ottoman reconstructions. Notwithstanding this, it features bartizan turrets—which were only developed in the 14th century—that are not present on the real walls.

Despite being one of the largest and tallest buildings in the game, it is not climbable and only minor portions of it can be entered.

Gallery

References