Lugos: Difference between revisions
imported>Jasca Ducato m →References: Cat fix |
imported>Master Sima Yi He is not referred to as a Hidden One. Liberalis Circulum is a canon term for the Assassins at the time and that is what we must handle to not dabble in speculation. |
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| death = 1st century<br>[[Mediterranean Sea]] | | death = 1st century<br>[[Mediterranean Sea]] | ||
| species = [[Human]] | | species = [[Human]] | ||
| affiliates = [[ | | affiliates = [[Liberalis Circulum]]}} | ||
'''Lugos''' was one of the founders [[Liberalis Circulum]], a subgroup of the early [[Assassins|Assassin Brotherhood]] which was active throughout the [[Roman Empire]] and operated from the city of [[Lugdunum]]. | |||
'''Lugos''' was | |||
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{{AmbCanon Start}} | |||
==Biography== | ==Biography== | ||
===Mission to Egypt and death=== | ===Mission to Egypt and death=== | ||
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==Legacy== | ==Legacy== | ||
Lugos was still remembered as one of the founders of the Roman Brotherhood in the mid-3rd century. By 259, the Ankh had somehow ended up in [[Germany|Germania]], where it was found by | Lugos was still remembered as one of the founders of the Roman Brotherhood in the mid-3rd century. By 259, the Ankh had somehow ended up in [[Germany|Germania]], where it was found by an [[Alemanni]] member of the Liberalis Circulum, [[Accipiter]], who passed it on to his cousin and fellow member [[Aquilus]]. Eventually, following Aquilus' death, the Ankh was hidden within an altar erected to his memory by his wife [[Valeria]].<ref name="AC3A"/> | ||
In the early 13th century, the Scepter of Aset was recovered from the wreck of Lugos' ship by [[Italy|Italian]] fishermen, who subsequently sold the artifact for a very low price to an Egyptian merchant, who in turn sold it to the [[Egyptian Brotherhood of Assassins]]. However, in 1341, the artifact was lost when it was thrown in a well near [[Edfu]] by [[Ali Al-Ghraib]], the Assassin apprentice of [[Numa Al'Khamsin]], better known as "El Cakr". Ali intended to contact the Brotherhood and come back later, but died a few weeks later of food poisoning, from eating tainted meat. Although [[Leila]], a member of the [[Egyptian Rite of the Templar Order|Egyptian Rite]] of the [[Templars|Templar Order]], attempted to retrieve the artifact, she suffered a head injury, becoming amnesiac, and died nine months later from internal bleeding while giving birth to her and Numa's child.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed 6: Leila]]''</ref> | In the early 13th century, the Scepter of Aset was recovered from the wreck of Lugos' ship by [[Italy|Italian]] fishermen, who subsequently sold the artifact for a very low price to an Egyptian merchant, who in turn sold it to the [[Egyptian Brotherhood of Assassins]]. However, in 1341, the artifact was lost when it was thrown in a well near [[Edfu]] by [[Ali Al-Ghraib]], the Assassin apprentice of [[Numa Al'Khamsin]], better known as "El Cakr". Ali intended to contact the Brotherhood and come back later, but died a few weeks later of food poisoning, from eating tainted meat. Although [[Leila]], a member of the [[Egyptian Rite of the Templar Order|Egyptian Rite]] of the [[Templars|Templar Order]], attempted to retrieve the artifact, she suffered a head injury, becoming amnesiac, and died nine months later from internal bleeding while giving birth to her and Numa's child.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed 6: Leila]]''</ref> | ||
{{AmbCanon End}} | |||
==Trivia== | ==Trivia== | ||
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[[Category:Individuals]] | [[Category:Individuals]] | ||
[[Category:Romans]] | [[Category:Romans]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Liberalis Circulum]] | ||
[[Category:Assassin Brotherhood members]] | [[Category:Assassin Brotherhood members]] | ||
[[Category:Roman Assassins]] | [[Category:Roman Assassins]] | ||
[[Category:Individuals who held Pieces of Eden]] | [[Category:Individuals who held Pieces of Eden]] | ||
Revision as of 14:17, 29 May 2020
Lugos was one of the founders Liberalis Circulum, a subgroup of the early Assassin Brotherhood which was active throughout the Roman Empire and operated from the city of Lugdunum.
| The enclosed content is of ambiguous canonicity. |
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BiographyMission to Egypt and deathIn the mid-1st century, Lugos traveled to Egypt to recover two Pieces of Eden, the Ankh and the Scepter of Aset, which had been found in a pyramid by Roman plunderers. However, while carrying the two artefacts aboard his ship back to Rome across the Mediterranean Sea, a terrible storm opened an enormous waterway within the ship, causing it to sink. Before his demise, Lugos recorded a message with the Ankh, detailing the ongoing events and lamenting the failure of his mission.[1] LegacyLugos was still remembered as one of the founders of the Roman Brotherhood in the mid-3rd century. By 259, the Ankh had somehow ended up in Germania, where it was found by an Alemanni member of the Liberalis Circulum, Accipiter, who passed it on to his cousin and fellow member Aquilus. Eventually, following Aquilus' death, the Ankh was hidden within an altar erected to his memory by his wife Valeria.[1] In the early 13th century, the Scepter of Aset was recovered from the wreck of Lugos' ship by Italian fishermen, who subsequently sold the artifact for a very low price to an Egyptian merchant, who in turn sold it to the Egyptian Brotherhood of Assassins. However, in 1341, the artifact was lost when it was thrown in a well near Edfu by Ali Al-Ghraib, the Assassin apprentice of Numa Al'Khamsin, better known as "El Cakr". Ali intended to contact the Brotherhood and come back later, but died a few weeks later of food poisoning, from eating tainted meat. Although Leila, a member of the Egyptian Rite of the Templar Order, attempted to retrieve the artifact, she suffered a head injury, becoming amnesiac, and died nine months later from internal bleeding while giving birth to her and Numa's child.[2] |
Trivia
- With Ali Al-Ghraib and an unidentified Egyptian Assassin who gave the Scepter of Aset to the Mamluks in 1250, Lugos is the third known ancestor of Stella Crow, a non-canon modern assassin.
- Lugos is also the name of a major Celtic deity whose name possibly comes from a somewhat attested Gaulish word for "crow" via a Proto-Indo-European word meaning "blackness".
Appearances
- Assassin's Creed 3: Accipiter (projection only)
References
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