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User:Master Sima Yi/Sandbox/Timeline

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Revision as of 23:02, 22 July 2014 by imported>Master Sima Yi
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13th century

1250

14th century

1307

  • October 13: The Knights Templar were arrested and branded heretics on orders of King Philip IV of France, under influence of the Assassins. In the following years, hundreds of Templars were burned at the stake.[2]

1314

  • March 18: Jacques de Molay, the last publicly recognized Grand Master of the Knights Templar, was burned at the stake. Before his death, de Molay sent nine of his most trusted men across the known world to continue the Order's objectives underground.[2]

1321

  • September 14: Dante Alighieri was killed by the Templars, revealing their continued existence to the Assassins.[3]

1324

  • January: Marco Polo, and later Domenico Auditore's father, were killed by the Templars.[3]
  • Domenico Auditore bought and renovated the villa in Monteriggioni, renaming it Villa Auditore. Monteriggioni became the headquarters of the Italian Assassins.[3]

1338

1340

1341

  • June 7: The reigning Bahri Sultan of Egypt, Al-Nasir Muhammad, was killed by his servant Leila, a secret Templar agent.[5]
  • Numa Al'Khamsin and his apprentice Ali Al-Ghrabe recovered the Ankh from the Templars in Karnak.[5]

1348

1350

  • The Brothers of the Cross and Lukas Zurburg mysteriously vanished from public view.[4]

18th century

1701

1715

1716

1717

1718

1719

1720

1721

1722

1723

1735

1744

1747

1749

1753

1754

1755

1756

1758

1759

1760

1763

1765

1766

1768

1769

1770

1771

1772

1773

1774

1775

1776

1777

1778

1780

1781

1782

1783

1789

1791

  • August 14: Dutty Boukman held a religious ceremony at Boïs Caïman, prophesizing that Jean-François Papillon, Georges Biassou and Jeannot Bullet would become leaders of a revolution to free the slaves of Saint-Domingue.[6]
  • August 21: The Haitian Revolution ignited; led by members of the Assassin Brotherhood, the slaves of Saint-Domingue rose up in revolt against their French masters.[6]
  • November: Dutty Boukman was killed in battle with the French Army near Acul. Jeannot Bullet began to massacre white colonists as well as his own black subordinaries, and was ordered to death by Eseosa for breaking the Creed.[6]

1793

1794

  • July: After the abolition of slavery in France by Maximilien de Robespierre, Toussaint Louverture, formerly known as Brédá, broke his alliance with Spain and formed a new one with France.[6]

1797

  • August 24: Toussaint Louverture expelled Léger-Félicité Sonthonax from Saint-Domingue and became de facto ruler of the colony.[6]

1801

  • July: Toussaint Louverture captured the Spanish colony of Santo Domingo, with aid from Eseosa, becoming the leader of Hispaniola and freeing all slaves across the island.[6]

1802

  • May: Toussaint Louverture surrendered to General Charles Leclerc, sent by his brother-in-law Napoleon Bonaparte, who falsely claimed that France had no intention of restoring racial hierarchy in Saint-Domingue.[6]
  • November 1: Charles Leclerc died of poisoning by Eseosa, though his cause of death was believed to be yellow fever.[6]

1803

  • November 18: Jean-Jacques Dessalines, one of Toussaint Louverture's lieutenants, defeated General Rochambeau at Vertieres. Rochambeau pulled out of Vertieres at night, knowing the colony was finally lost to France.[6]

1804

  • January 1: Jean-Jacques Dessalines declared himself leader of the free republic of Saint-Domingue, and subsequently exterminated thousands of white people living in the country.[6]

19th century

1832

1839

1865

1881

1887

1888

1891

1896

20th century

1908

1910

1913

1914

1916

1917

1918

1919

1926

1928

1937

1939

1943

1944

  • July 1–22: The Bretton Woods conference was held by European powers to determine the monetary systems after the conclusion of World War II; secretly, it was a meeting between economic agents of the Templar Order to execute the "Plan".[8]

1945

1948

1952

1953

1954

1963

1969

1973

1980

1981

1985

1991

1997

1998

21st century

2000

2002

2003

2005

2007

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

References