Board Thread:Wiki discussion/@comment-1153722-20171031194910/@comment-2112031-20171101215332
All fair points that I can compromise with. Then it's settled, we'll make this template and use that henceforth for events detailing the events of the French comics.
To that extent, I will note that "Liberalis Circulum" will stay removed from the introductions of the Assassins and Hidden Ones articles. Not only would it necessitate usage of the template in our introductions which we will want to avoid, I have been against using it in the introductions from the start because it was never clear to me what exactly it referred to. Considering it was founded by a Roman named Lugos I always assumed it to be more of an inner circle rather than being the name for the entire Brotherhood. Considering it's ambiguous, I think we'll strike two birds with one stone here.
Agreed, I personally interpret that "Liberalis Circulum" was the name of the entire Roman Brotherhood at the time. They had members in Gaul, Germania and Iberia, and no distinction was made to suggest that they were some kind of inner circle. Aquilus' father Lucius referred to them as a faction and stated that his family had been a part of it for generations.
It should also be noted that Lugos was consistently referred to as "one of the founders", obviously indicating that there were others that he founded the group with. Factoring in what we learned in Origins, it's not much of a stretch to suggest that he had been one of Aya's earliest recruits in Rome.
We're never explicitly told when Lugos died, but we're told that it happened "more than 200 years ago" as of 259. This doesn't necessarily contradict him being a one of the founders of the Roman Brotherhood, since he appeared to be rather old around the time that he died.