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Eventually arriving in Syria, he took shelter in the coastal city of [[Acre]]. While there, he was told of foreign bandits and merceneries occupying Masyaf. Before leaving, Ezio wrote a letter to his sister, [[Claudia Auditore da Firenze]]. In it, he detailed his concerns of a possible Templar threat in Masyaf, and his wishes for her and the Order should he not survive. The following day, Ezio set off for Masyaf.
Eventually arriving in Syria, he took shelter in the coastal city of [[Acre]]. While there, he was told of foreign bandits and merceneries occupying Masyaf. Before leaving, Ezio wrote a letter to his sister, [[Claudia Auditore da Firenze]]. In it, he detailed his concerns of a possible Templar threat in Masyaf, and his wishes for her and the Order should he not survive. The following day, Ezio set off for Masyaf.


Once arriving there, he found the city in ruins and its fortress overrun by [[Byzantines]], remnants of a line fiercely supportive of [[Constantinople]]'s former Sultan, Constantine XII, and a faction loyal to the Templar Order. As Ezio reached Masyaf's castle, an arrow was shot directly at his sholder, which was fortunately blocked due to his armor. He then immediately engaged in combat with the Byzantines, dispatching many in the process, but was eventually bested.
Once arriving there, he found the city in ruins and its fortress overrun by [[Byzantines]], remnants of a line fiercely supportive of [[Constantinople]]'s former Sultan, Constantine XII, and a faction loyal to the Templar Order. As Ezio reached Masyaf's castle, an arrow was shot directly at his sholder, though it was blocked due to his armor. Immediately engaging in combat with the Byzantines, he dispatched many in the process, but was eventually bested. Stripped of his weapons, Ezio was led to the castle's watch tower to be hung.


Stripped of his weapons, Ezio was led to the castle's watch tower to be hung.
Reaching the tower, the Byzantine captain, Leandros, walked Ezio out on to one of the tower's planks. After tying a noose around his neck, Ezio knocked Leandros away and made his escape by dropping to a wooden platform below. Making his way around the castle's walls, he eventually reached the castle's highest point and looked down below to the courtyard. Noticing the marble flooring, Ezio kicked a large eagle statue from the rooftop, which crashed and broke through the marble. Ezio then leapt from the rooftop, passing through the hole the statue had made and into the water below. Climbing out of the water, Ezio wandered the underground halls until he finally reached the library's door, which was surrounded by Byzantines.

Revision as of 14:41, 22 November 2011

"When I first set out from Roma ten months ago, I did so with a single purpose - to discover what our father did not. In a letter written a year before my birth, he makes mention of a library hidden beneath the stones of Masyaf's castle, a sanctum full of invaluable wisdom."
―Ezio, in a letter to his sister, Claudia.[src]

Ezio Auditore da Firenze's pilgrimage to Masyaf was an event that occured in 1511, in which the Assassin journied to Masyaf, in search of a library hidden below the city's castle.

Journey

With the Templar threat in Italy eliminated, Ezio Auditore shifted his focus to more internal matters. Further cementing the Assassins' place in Italy, he improved lines of communication from Sicily to Venice, and standardized methods of training for the Order's recruits. In the year 1509, Ezio discovered a letter written by his father, along with many other letters and documents left behind by his late uncle, Mario Auditore. In this letter, his father made mention of a locked library built by legendary AssassinAltaïr Ibn-La'Ahad, hidden beneath a castle in the Syrian city of Masyaf. Spurred by curiosity, Ezio left Italy in the winter of 1510 and began his pilgrimage.

Eventually arriving in Syria, he took shelter in the coastal city of Acre. While there, he was told of foreign bandits and merceneries occupying Masyaf. Before leaving, Ezio wrote a letter to his sister, Claudia Auditore da Firenze. In it, he detailed his concerns of a possible Templar threat in Masyaf, and his wishes for her and the Order should he not survive. The following day, Ezio set off for Masyaf.

Once arriving there, he found the city in ruins and its fortress overrun by Byzantines, remnants of a line fiercely supportive of Constantinople's former Sultan, Constantine XII, and a faction loyal to the Templar Order. As Ezio reached Masyaf's castle, an arrow was shot directly at his sholder, though it was blocked due to his armor. Immediately engaging in combat with the Byzantines, he dispatched many in the process, but was eventually bested. Stripped of his weapons, Ezio was led to the castle's watch tower to be hung.

Reaching the tower, the Byzantine captain, Leandros, walked Ezio out on to one of the tower's planks. After tying a noose around his neck, Ezio knocked Leandros away and made his escape by dropping to a wooden platform below. Making his way around the castle's walls, he eventually reached the castle's highest point and looked down below to the courtyard. Noticing the marble flooring, Ezio kicked a large eagle statue from the rooftop, which crashed and broke through the marble. Ezio then leapt from the rooftop, passing through the hole the statue had made and into the water below. Climbing out of the water, Ezio wandered the underground halls until he finally reached the library's door, which was surrounded by Byzantines.