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Crescent amulet

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This article contains spoilers, meaning it has information and facts concerning Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple. If you do not want to know about these events, it is recommended to read on with caution, or not at all.

This template should be removed from the article 7 August 2024.

I wanted to ask you something. Which is... what's your name?
This article title is conjecture. Although the article subject is canon, no official name for it has been given.

The crescent amulet was a Piece of Eden created by the Isu that was part of a set alongside two other artifacts. While its exact purpose is unknown, its featured powers similar to those of the Apples of Eden.

Owners

Usage

"These phantoms are no more than smoke in the air! A gust of wind can blow them away!"
―Edward Kenway explaining the Amulet's powers to Shimazu Saito, 1725.[src]-[m]

The amulet was a small, crescent-shaped artifact which could be worn like a talisman. Its powers seem to be largely the same as those of an Apple of Eden, including human mind control[1] and creating realistic, tangible illusions.[2] It also granted access to a form of calculations, not just to the wielder, but to anyone who looked into the Amulet. While in this state, a person could witness events from both the past and the future, but were temporarily rendered inert, leaving them vulnerable to an attack.[3]

One ability that was seemingly unique to the amulet was its power to resurrect the dead and make them invulnerable to pain.[4] However, this had limitations, as only those who had been killed recently and still had their body relatively intact could be brought back to life. In 1725, Edward Kenway and Shimazu Saito were able to exploit this weakness by dismembering a group of monks to prevent them from being resurrected. Additionally, the revived individuals lacked sentience and acted more like zombies, requiring the amulet's wielder to command them.[5]

History

Early history

The amulet was created at some point during the Isu Era alongside two other Pieces of Eden, forming a set.[6] After the Great Catastrophe in 75,000 BCE, which wiped out the Isu civilization,[7] knowledge of the set, its location, and its powers was lost.[6]

Acquisition by Ferdinand Magellan

Magellan finding the Amulet

By the early 16th century, both the amulet and one of its sister Pieces of Eden were located in the Philippines, with the amulet hidden on the island of Cebu and the other artifact in the possession of Lapu-Lapu, the chief of Mactan Island. In 1521, the Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan arrived on Cebu to search for its artifact after learning about it during his travels, and converted the island's population to Christianity in the process.[6]

After finding the amulet, Magellan was informed by Cebu's chieftain Rajah Humabon of the other two artifacts that made up the set and attempted to seize the Piece of Eden in Lapu-Lapu's possession. However, Lapu-Lapu used the artifact's power to defeat the Spanish troops under Magellan's command and personally killed the explorer. With Magellan's death, the amulet was lost once again for the next two centuries.[6]

18th century

By 1725, a monk in Manila found the amulet and mistook it for a religious artifact. Inspired by a riot that had occurred six years prior after Governor-General of the Philippines Fernando Manuel de Bustillo Bustamante y Rueda ordered the arrest of Archbishop of Manila Francisco de la Cuesta, the monk decided to instigate another riot to remove de la Cuesta's successor Toribio José Cosio y Campo. To this end, he used the amulet's powers of mind control to influence the public and have them create as much chaos as possible in the city.[1]

During the riot, the British Assassin Edward Kenway and the samurai Shimazu Saito cornered the monk and his followers in an alley, seeking to keep the amulet out of the wrong hands. When the monk refused to renounce the artifact, he ordered his acolytes to eliminate Edward and Saito and, after the acolytes were killed, he used the amulet to resurrect them.[4] Realizing that the acolytes were invulnerable to pain, the Assassin and samurai dismembered them to prevent them from being resurrected, then confronted the monk. However, he used the amulet on Saito, causing her to experience visions of her deceased friends.[5]

The monk using the Amulet to conjure illusions of himself

Edward also fell prey to the amulet's powers shortly after, as the monk conjured illusions of himself and a large oni to battle the Assassin and samurai. While Saito eventually succumbed to the illusions and was defeated, Edward was able to overcome the amulet's powers.[2] However, the monk was able to use one last apparition of himself to trick Edward and make his escape.[8]

As he fled, the monk used the amulet to command several civilians in his path to slow down the Assassin, as well as tamper with his Eagle Vision, momentarily preventing Edward from locating him. Despite this, Edward was eventually able to corner his target in another empty alley, though when he attempted to take away the amulet, the monk activated the artifact, causing Edward to awaken in a strange void.[8]

Gallery

Appearances

References