Templar pin
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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. |
- Arno: "It's... the weapon that killed your father."
- Élise: "That's a Templar badge of office."
- —Élise de la Serre and Arno Dorian.[src]

The Templar pin was a bladed adornment worn by some French members of the Templar Order around the time of the French Revolution, that could be used as a weapon and replaced the function of Templar rings, signifying the membership in the Order. Typically, the pins featured the Cross of the Templars in its center with intricate designs surrounding the symbol, varying according to the blacksmith or the Templar owner.
History
During the French Revolution, the bladed pins were made by the silversmith and Templar François-Thomas Germain before his excommunication, after which they were only made for the members of his extremist faction. When Charles Gabriel Sivert recruited the Roi des Thunes into his faction, he gave him a pin and called him brother. Later, the Roi des Thunes used his pin to kill the Grand Master François de la Serre, by plunging the bladed side into the man's neck, who bled to death.[1]
By 1927, the Templar agent acting as Black Cross at the time used a Templar pin as his weapon of choice.[2]
Gallery
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The Black Cross throwing his pin
