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Bathhouse of Alexandria

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This article title is conjecture. Although the article subject is canon, no official name for it has been given.

The Bathhouse of Alexandria was a bathhouse in the Egyptian capital of Alexandria. Eudoros, a royal scribe and member of the Order of the Ancients, frequented the baths to treat his skin condition. The Cyrenean magistrate Simonides occasionally visited the baths as well.[1]

In 48 BCE, the Medjay Bayek of Siwa travelled to the bathhouse to assassinate Eudoros, having learned his location from a papyrus at the Ptolemaic Royal Palace. Bayek sneaked atop the ceiling to pass by the guards and assassinated Eudoros with his newly-acquired Hidden Blade.[2]

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Behind the scenes[edit | edit source]

The Bathhouse of Alexandria is depicted in a Roman style; however, this is anachronistic as this style became popular in Egypt in the 1st century AD.[3]

Appearances[edit | edit source]

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