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A map of Europe

Europe is a continent or subcontinent comprising the westernmost peninsula of Eurasia, bordering the Arctic Ocean to the north, the Atlantic Ocean to the west, the Mediterranean Sea to the south, and Asia to the east along with the rest of Eurasia.

Since at least the Roman era, both the Assassin Brotherhood and Templar Order have had a strong presence in Europe. The continent served as the primary housing for both organizations until the Age of Discovery,[1] when they started expanding their influence around the entire globe.[2]

History[edit | edit source]

Isu Era[edit | edit source]

The city of Atlantis

Millennia ago, Europe, like the rest of the world, was populated by the Isu, an advanced civilization divided into many factions. In modern Greece, the Sister Realms of Atlantis, Elysium, and Underworld were ruled respectively by Poseidon, Persephone, and Hades.[3] In Norway, the Æsir of Asgard were led by Odin.[4] To stop the war between the Æsir and the Vanir led by Freyr, Odin married Freyja, Freyr's twin sister, uniting the two people. Numerous Isu Temples were built across Europe, especially in the British Isles, Greece, and Italy.[5]

The Isu scientist Phanes engineered humans as slaves for the Isu, who used Apples of Eden to control them. Phanes fell in love with a female human, and they fled to Atlantis. She gave birth to Eve, the first hybrid who was unaffected by the Apples.[6] As the number of hybrids increased, Eve, with Adam, led the Human-Isu War by stealing an Apple of Eden around 75,010 BCE.[7]

During the war, Isu learned that an upcoming coronal mass ejection would ravage Earth.[8] The Isu scientists subsequently searched for different ways to save the planet. The Capitoline Triad, composed of the Father of Understanding Jupiter, the Mother of Wisdom Juno, and the Sacred Voice Minerva, work on seven solutions.[9] One of them was the Rings of Eden Initiative led by Rah Cel'eze, adapting the technology of the Rings to deflect the solar flare. Inside a station in modern England, the Isu tried to create a giant shield to circle the Earth, but without the time and resources, they limited their goal to protecting one city. Eventually, the initiative was shut down, and the station was cut from the global grid.[10]

The Æsir witnessing the Great Disaster

Knowing that the Isu would become extinct after the catastrophe while humanity would prevail, the Æsir, with Juno's help, stole "the mead", a catalyst for the seventh solution, permitting them to store their essence in the human gene pool across eons.[11] After this treason, Juno was outcast.[12] In 75,000 BCE, just before the Toba Disaster, Odin, Tyr, Freyja, Freyr, Thor, Sif, Idun and Heimdall used the computer Yggdrasil with the Mead to store their essence before dying. The Isu Loki also secretly used Yggdrasil to take his revenge on Odin millennia after the Catastrophe.[13]

After the Earth burned for weeks, less than 10,000 humans and far fewer Isu survived. Jupiter, Minerva, and other Isu taught what they could to the humans to help reignite the spark of civilization.[9] After a few centuries, the Isu became extinct, but they were remembered by humans as gods, composing the pantheons of different civilizations.[8] While the Isu Temples were buried through time, the hybrids' descendants used Pieces of Eden to become rulers, heroes, and conquerors. Their feats were remembered as legends and the artifacts were perceived as magical objects.[14]

Antiquity[edit | edit source]

Mediterranean Civilizations[edit | edit source]

Ruins of Knossos Palace

During the Bronze Age, many civilizations appeared across Europe, like the Celts in Western Europe, the Etruscans and the Romans in Italy, the Minoans in Krete and the Mycenaean in Greece, which was later seen as the cradle of Western civilization, influencing philosophy, art, politics, and science.[15] The Trojan War was perpetuated through Homer's poems of the Iliad and the Odyssey, while Aesop's Fables also had a great impact on European culture.[16]

During the Archaic era, the Greek culture was expanded by settlers across the Mediterranean Sea, in Sicily but also in Ionia and Cyrenaica. In 658 BCE, in Thrace, the Doric Greek Byzas founded the colony of Byzantium, which would have a reputation as a raucous port that would outshine its credentials as a locus of culture.[17]

During the 6th century BCE, the scholar Pythagoras met the Isu Hermes Trismegistus, who gave him his Staff of Eden, granting him immortality.[18] Pythagoras founded the Cult of Hermes, a group that sought to keep balance between order and chaos. However, many Hermeticists favored chaos, and they eventually split off to form the Cult of Kosmos, which was led by a person under the moniker the Ghost of Kosmos to secretly control Greece. They found an Isu Pyramid under the Sanctuary of Delphi, permitting them to see possible futures and influence Greek politics.[19] Pythagoras went to the ruins of Atlantis to protect its secrets from the Cult.[20]

Athens' Acropolis

During the Classical Era, Greece was divided into many poleis, such as Sparta, Korinth, and Athens, which was one of the first democracies.[21] Between 490 and 449 BCE, Greece was invaded by the Achaemenid Empire which was supported by the Order of the Ancients, a secret society emulating the Isu civilization by controlling humanity through Pieces of Eden.[22] The Persians and the Order allied with the Cult of Kosmos, facing the Greek city-states alliance, Athens and Sparta among them.[23] Even if King Leonidas of Sparta died with his army at the Battle of Thermopylae, the Greeks defeated the Persians at the battles of Salamis and Plataia.[24]

Without a common enemy, Athens and Sparta fought for Greece's hegemony, creating the Delian League for the former and the Peloponnesian League for the latter. This led to the Peloponnesian War between 431 and 404 BCE, with the Cult of Kosmos infiltrating the two sides to gain control of Greece.[25] Their plans were thwarted by the misthios Kassandra, granddaughter of King Leonidas, who assassinated each member of the Cult and destroyed the Pyramid with the Leonidas' Spear of Eden.[19] The Order of the Ancients infiltrated the Greek institutions during the war but they were also stopped by Kassandra, who was helped by the Persian proto-Assassin Darius.[26] Later, Kassandra helped her father Pythagoras to seal the ruins of Atlantis and inherited the Staff of Hermes, becoming its Keeper, tasked with finding and destroying dangerous Pieces of Eden like Korfu's Apple of Eden.[27]

During the 5th century BCE, even through war, Greece stayed a beacon of culture with Athens as its first city. Sokrates and Plato developed Western philosophy with the Academy while Herodotos and Thucydides were dubbed the "Fathers of History".[28] The poet Empedocles wrote in his On Nature his thoughts on human evolution while Hippokrates greatly contributed to medicine. In theatrical art, tragedies were represented through the plays of Aischylos, Sophokles, and Euripides while Aristophanes became the Father of Comedy, followed by Menander a century later.[29] In the 4th century BCE, the philosopher Aristotle was at the Makedonian court of King Philip II to tutor his son Alexander. He later established in Athens his school, the Lykeion, with an important library.[30]

Mosaic depicting Alexander the Great

In the late 4th century BCE, Greece was part of the Kingdom of Makedonia ruled by Alexander the Great. The Order of the Ancients granted him a Staff combined with the Trident of Eden, permitting him to conquer Egypt and the Middle East. His vast empire did not last as Alexander was poisoned by the Babylonian proto-Assassin Iltani, leading to the Trident being divided between his generals in Makedonian Greece, the Ptolemaic Kingdom, and the Seleucid Empire, each ruler taking a prong.[31]

In Egypt, Alexandria and its library became a center of Greek culture in Africa. Among its scholars was the poet Kallimachos, who rejected the epic format of Homeric poems, and instead fervently supported a shorter, more judiciously formulated style of poetry.[32] The mathematician Euclid was seen as the Father of Geometry and wrote The Elements, laying out the foundational work of what would become modern algebra and number theory.[33] During the 3rd century BCE, Eratosthenes calculated the circumference of the Earth.[34]

In the Near East, the city of Seleucia-on-the-Tigris was also a center of Greek culture, known for its Stoic philosophers and its Olympic athletes.[35] In the late 2nd century BCE, the collapse of the Seleucid Empire created a power vacuum that turned the region of western Cilicia into a pirate stronghold. The inhabitants were already known for their outlaw activities and military prowess, and the Cilicians established themselves as the most successful group of pirates in the ancient Mediterranean region.[36]

Roman era[edit | edit source]

According to legend, Rome was founded by King Romulus in 753 BCE and became the center of a Republic in 510 BCE.[37] By the 3rd century BCE, the Romans expanded across the Mediterranean Sea, fighting Celts, Greeks, Carthaginians, and Persians. This led to the Romanization of most parts of Europe, with the construction of aqueducts, forts, and cities but also the enslavement of the defeated populations. The Romans used enemy technologies to add to their own formidable arsenal like the Catarginean ships or the Greek siege engines.[38] De Architectura's author Vitruvius exemplified these two sides of the Roman conquest, as a military engineer and architect who developed Cyrenaica.[39]

Caesar's assassination by the Hidden Ones

In 49 BCE, as a civil war erupted between the consuls Pompey and Gaius Julius Caesar, the Order of the Ancients killed the former and inducted the latter into their ranks.[40] While Caesar rose to become the Order's leader, Marcus Junius Brutus, Gaius Cassius Longinus, and other senators allied with Amunet, a descendant of Darius and Kassandra. They founded the Roman branch of the Hidden Ones, a group dedicated to fighting the Order and protecting humanity's freedom.[41] In 44 BCE, the Hidden Ones assassinated Caesar.[42]

After the dictator's death, General Marcus Antonius allied with Caesar's nephew and adopted son Octavian. In 42 BCE, they defeated Brutus and Longinus at the battle of Philippi, the two Hidden Ones committing suicide afterward. Octavian took the leadership of the Ancients, and after defeating Antonius in 30 BCE, established the Roman Empire.[43] His successors expanded the empire using the Prongs of Faith and Devotion.[31] The expansion wasn't without resistance, like the Iceni revolt led by Queen Boudicca in 60 CE.[44]

Hadrian's Wall

As the empire spread across Europe, North Africa, and the Near East, the Hidden Ones established bureaus to operate in Europe.[45] The emperors were often targets of the Brotherhood. In 41 CE, Caligula was killed by the Hidden One Leonius for allying with the Order of the Ancients.[46] By 122 CE, Emperor Hadrian built a Great Wall in England and planned to lead a war against the northern native people. The Hidden One Caius tried to assassinate the emperor, but he was discovered and killed. In 164 CE, the Brotherhood made a deal with Emperor Marcus Aurelius to retreat the Roman troops from the Antonine Wall to Hadrian's Wall. In 211 CE, when Emperor Septimius Severus broke the deal, the Hidden One Khloe killed him in his villa in Eboracum.[47]

During the transition from the Republic to the Empire, the poet Virgil wrote the Aeneid, the epic journey of the Trojan prince Aeneas, which strengthened the Roman identity. Roman civilization was greatly influenced by Greek culture. Ovid's Metamorphoses compiled Greek fables while the historian Plutarch made comparative biographies of Greek and Roman men in Parallel Lives.[16] The Greco-Egyptians also continued to influence Rome, like the historian Arrian writing about Alexander the Great's campaigns.[48] The scholar Ptolemy, through his Geography and Almagest, solidified geocentrism as the major astronomical model for centuries. The Berberian Roman Apuleius wrote The Golden Ass, a precursor of "picaresque style".[16]

Saint Peter with a Staff of Eden

During the 1st century CE, Simon Peter, an Apostle of Jesus of Nazareth, arrived in Rome leading the Christian Church with a Staff of Eden.[49] His successor inherited the Staff and later the Roman Emperors' Prongs, spreading Christianity in Europe.[31]

In 293 CE, the Roman Emperor Diocletian, having come to feel that his Empire had grown too large and complex to be ruled by one man, appointed three others to rule as his equals. This period was known as the Tetrarchy.[50] In some cases, Christians were persecuted by the Roman authority. In 306 CE, when the Belgae warriors killed Christians, the Hidden One Beatha delivered a letter to Emperor Constantine I pleading for the protection of the Christians.[47] Later, Constantine I eliminated the other emperors and proclaimed himself the sole Caesar of the Roman Empire. Between 324 and 330 CE, Constantine I rebuilt the Greek city of Byzantium as a New Rome and a Christian city, which later became Constantinople.[50]

At the end of the 4th century, Theodosius I declared Christianity the official religion of the empire and ordered the closing of polytheist temples.[51] This particularly decreased the Order of the Ancients' influence throughout the empire.[52] In England, pagan Britons were executed by Christians. The Hidden Ones Teague and his magister eliminated three priests to send a message to the emperor.[47] In Alexandria, the Neoplatonist school was led by Hypatia until she died in 415 CE, ending the age of great ancient scientific discoveries.[53] 

Attila the Hun

By the 5th century, as the empire was too vast to control, the legions retired from the peripheral provinces like England. The Hidden Ones also fled these provinces and established their strongest foothold across the Mediterranean Sea.[45] The empire was invaded by Germanic tribes, the Saxons and the Franks among them. In 410 CE, Rome was sacked by the Visigoths and their king Alaric I.[54] In Eastern Europe, Attila the Hun obtained a Sword of Eden and used it to expand his empire in central and western Europe.[49]

In 476 CE, Rome and the Western Roman Empire fell.[37] Only the Eastern Roman Empire in Constantinople remained, controlling Greece, Egypt, and the Near East.[50] Even after the empire's fall, many ruins lasted for centuries and the Roman civilization held a lasting influence on the European countries.[55]

Middle Ages[edit | edit source]

Dark Ages[edit | edit source]

Arthur pulling Excalibur

After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, the Germanic tribes filled the political vacuum, establishing new kingdoms. In the late 5th century, when the Anglo-Saxons invaded England, Arthur Pendragon received the Sword of Eden Excalibur from the Women of the Mist, a group of witch-warriors. Using its power, Arthur became the King of the Britons and a leader of the Order of the Ancients. The Women of the Mist's agent Mordred tried to steal the Sword for himself, founding the Descendants of the Round Table, but Arthur hid it in an Isu vault. The Women of the Mist protected the vault, becoming an enemy of the Descendants.[56]

In 536 CE, as Italy was under the control of the Ostrogoths, the Eastern Roman emperor Justinian I sent the generals Belisarius and Narses to conquer Rome. During the Gothic War, the Romans took Rome, but the city was besieged numerous times by the Ostrogoths of Totila.[57] Eventually, Italy became a part of the Byzantine Empire, but in the 7th century, after Lombard's invasion, Byzantine settlers took refuge in Venice, establishing their own Republic.[58]

In parallel with the king and lords, the bishops served as representatives of the Roman Church across Europe's dioceses. Even if they were chosen among the local elites, bishops sometimes entered into conflicts with civil powers.[59] Monastic orders also flourished like the Benedictines. The monasteries served many roles in European society, greeting pilgrims and dispensing education and care. Monasteries also became the place for political meetings.[60]

Between the 6th and the 7th century, the Anglo-Saxons established the Heptarchy with the kingdoms of Wessex, Essex, Sussex, Kent, East Anglia, Mercia and Northumbria.[61] With the influence of Irish monks, the Anglo-Saxons adopted Christianity, as well as the Picts of Scotland.[62] The Britons in Wales regularly fought with the Anglo-Saxons. During the late 8th century, Mercia was ruled by the Ancient Offa, who expanded his kingdom and built a linear military fortification known as the Offa's Dyke.[63] After his rule, the Order established one of their last strongholds in England, even reaching Scandinavia.[52]

Tapestry depicting Charlemagne

In 756 CE, the bishop of Rome established the Papal States, becoming the pope.[37] As Rome and Constantinople were rivals for Christendom leadership, Pope Leo III allied with Charlemagne, King of the Franks and secretly a leader of the Ancients. In 800, Leo crowned Charlemagne Emperor of the Romans. The Carolingian Empire spread across France, Germany, and Northern Italy and was seen as a spiritual successor of the Western Roman Empire.[64] Later, the empire was divided into three, but the Ancients kept their influence as Emperor Louis II of Italy also joined their ranks.[65]

Islamic Caliphates[edit | edit source]

While Islam spread across the Middle East and North Africa during the 7th century, the Arab caliphates entered into wars with the Byzantine Empire.[66] In the early 8th century, the Umayyad Caliphate nearly conquered all of Spain. The last Christian states struck back, leading to the Reconquista, opposing the Christian and the Muslim states in Spain for over seven centuries.[67] After the Abbasid Revolution in 750 CE overthrew the Umayyad dynasty in Damascus, the last member of the family established the Emirate of Córdoba in Spain.[68]

Even if the Greeks and the Arabs were often at war, economic and cultural exchanges existed between the two populations.[69] Many Greek merchants and architects went to the Abbasid Caliphate and the manuscripts of Aristotle, Hippokrates, and Ptolemy influenced Middle Eastern philosophy, medicine and astronomy, contributing to the Islamic Golden Age.[70]

During the 10th century, the Fatimid Caliphate took control of Sicily. In 929, the emir of Cordoba Abd al-Rahman III founded a caliphate over Spain and Maghrib, challenging the Abbasids of Baghdad.[68] In the 11th century, Europeans gained access to papermaking thanks to the Arabs.[71]

In 917 CE, the Byzantine admiral John Rhadenos negotiated peace with the Abbasids and paid the ransom for captured soldiers, bringing gifts of silk, ivory, or precious manuscripts to the caliph.[72]

Viking Age[edit | edit source]

Main article: Viking expansion

In the late 8th century, the lack of arable land in Scandinavia led many Norse people to leave their countries. As a seafaring people, they became settlers and traders, but also Vikings, raiding the coast to loot goods and made slaves.[73] The monastery of Lindisfarne was one of the first raided in 793 CE, beginning the Viking expansion.[74]

Ragnar Lothbrok during the Siege of Paris in 845

One of the most famous Vikings was Ragnar Lothbrok, who besieged Paris in 845 and invaded the kingdom of Northumbria ruled by King Ælla, a member of the Order of the Ancients. After Ælla executed Lothbrok, the Sons of Ragnar invaded England with the Great Heathen Army to conquer it. When they killed Ælla in 867, Northumbria became a vassal of the Ragnarssons. East Anglia knew the same fate after the murder of the King Edmund the Martyr. As the Great Summer Army led by Guthrum expanded their control over the Kingdom of Mercia, Wessex, ruled by the Grand Maegester of the Ancients Æthelwulf and later his sons Æthelred and Alfred the Great, fought the Viking expansion.[75]

The Norse also explored other regions. In the 850s, the Norwegian Ímar established the kingdom of Dublin in Ireland, which became an important trading hub under the rule of his son Bárid mac Ímair.[76] In 852, the Varangian Rurik built the city of Novgorod in modern-day Russia. Sailing through the Danube, Varangians besieged Constantinople in 860. To stop them, the imperial family recruited them as personal guards, the Eagle Clan among them.[77] During their expansion, the Norse entered into war with the Picts and the Britons.[78]

By the late 9th century, Europe was the last stronghold of the Order of the Ancients. In 867, the Ancients helped the Chambellan Basil to assassinate the Byzantine Emperor Michael III. As Basil became the new emperor, the Order influenced him to kill his son Leo but their plan was foiled by two Hidden Ones from Alamut, Basim ibn Ishaq and his apprentice Hytham. They protected Leo from the Ancients' repeated attacks and eventually killed the Order's leader Isaac, leading Basil to cut ties with the Order.[77]

The Hidden Ones meeting the Raven Clan

In 872, Basim and Hytham traveled to Norway and allied with the Raven Clan to fight the Ancients. After helping Harald Fairhair unify Norway, the Raven Clan and the Hidden Ones migrated to England, establishing the settlement of Ravensthorpe in Mercia and a bureau for the British Hidden Ones.[79][80] Hytham enlisted the help of the shieldmaiden Eivor Varinsdottir to track the Ancients, and also received clues from an anonymous informant known as the "Poor Fellow-Soldier of Christ". This was none other than King Alfred of Wessex, who sought to reform the Order, deeming its Isu worship as heretical. By 878, with all the members dead, Alfred reformed the Ancients as the Templar Order.[81]

During this period, the Æsir's human incarnations appeared, such as Thor's incarnation Halfdan Ragnarsson and Freyr's as Harald Fairhair.[79] Tyr's and Odin's incarnations were Sigurd Styrbjornsson and Eivor Varinsdottir from the Raven Clan. Basim ibn Ishaq was Loki's incarnation and tried to take his revenge on Odin, but it failed when he was trapped in Yggdrasil's simulations for centuries.[82]

The Battle of Chippenham

While tracking the Ancients, Eivor tried to conquer all of England and entered into conflict with King Alfred. In 878, during the Battle of Chippenham, Eivor and her allies fought Alfred's army. After his defeat, Alfred hid at Athelnay where he met Eivor to reveal their secret alliance.[81] Later, Alfred's army defeated the Great Heathen Army at the Battle of Edington. The king established peace with Guthrum, who converted to Christianity and became King of East Anglia.[83] During the following decades, the Norse adopted Christianity and the two societies were unified as the Kingdom of England.[84]

While the Ancients were collapsing, other secret organizations were active in the British Isles. After Eivor recovered Excalibur, both the Descendants of the Round Table and the Women of the Mist tried to steal the Sword of Eden, but the Hidden Ones allied with the witch warrior Niamh of Argyll to hide the Piece of Eden.[56] In Scotland, a Christian sect led by Saint Columba the Reborn used the Codex of Eden to convert the population. Both the Hidden Ones and Templars took interest in the group. Their headquarters in the Loch Ness Temple was flooded by the Hidden Ones while the Templars recovered fragments of the Codex.[85]

By 879, the Children of Danu, a secret society dedicated to defending the Gaelic culture through violent ways, spread fear among the Christians and Norse in Ireland.[86] The Children planned to assassinate the High King Flann Sinna to destabilize Ireland but they failed and were eliminated by Eivor.[87] Their actions led to further persecutions against the druids by the Christians.[88]

Vikings raiding Paris' streets

In the 880s, the Carolingian Empire was once again unified under Charles the Fat, who was manipulated by the Bellatores Dei, a zealous Christian sect believing that Francia had fallen into apostasy.[89] In 886, after the Bellatores killed jarl Sinric of the Elgring Clan, his brother Sigfred led the Siege of Paris with the help of Eivor. Despite Count Odo and some Bellatores members leading the city's defenses, the Vikings stormed Paris.[90] Eivor and Odo made a truce to spare the citizens while Charles paid the Elgring Clan to leave, weakening his leadership.[91] Later, Eivor eliminated the Bellatores, saving Queen Richardis and defeating Charles in a duel.[92] In 887, Charles was deposed and Odo became King of Western Francia, leading to the collapse of the Carolingian Empire and the rise of feudalism.[93]

During the following years, Eivor explored other Isu sites on the British Isles. On the Isle of Skye, she helped Kassandra to recover an Apple of Eden, ending the nightmares the artifact had induced in the population.[94] Eivor also met the mystic Hildiran and uncovered Freyja's Cave and Odin's Vault. Hildiran was revealed to be a descendant of the Valkyrie Hildr, who had been imprisoned by Odin and sought vengeance. Eivor defeated her and Hilderan pledged her loyalty to the jarlskona.[95] Near Ravensthorpe, Eivor prevented the Eden Ring Station from exploding by removing the Blazing Sword, shutting down the generators.[10] In 889, as Odin's memories became more vivid, Eivor left England and settled in Vinland.[96]

During the 9th century, the Patriarch Photios I of Constantinople compiled in his Bibliotheca the review of 300 books.[97] During the 10th century, the bishop Liutprand of Cremona went to Constantinople as an emissary and wrote a book relating his experience.[98]

In 962, the King of East Francia and Italy Otto established the Holy Roman Empire, controlling most of central Europe. Owning the Prong of Devotion, he granted the artifact to the bishop Poppa to convert Denmark to Christianity. Poppa baptized Denmark's king Harald Bluetooth, who kept the prong and joined the Templars. In 975 in Sweden, the Hidden Ones assassinated King Olof Björnsson and promoted his brother Eric as his successor. Olof's son, Styrbjörn the Strong, allied with Harald to invade Sweden, using the Prong. In 985, at the Battle of Fýrisvellir, Styrbjörn's army was defeated and the Prong was taken by the Hidden One Thorvald Hjaltason. He entrusted the artifact to the warrior Östen Jorundsson, who hid it on his farm.[99]

The handover of the city keys to William the Conqueror, Bayeux Tapestry, scene 27

The Vikings also explored the Atlantic Ocean, settling in Iceland by the 9th century.[79] Around 1000, according to the sagas, Leif Ericson participated in a Viking expedition to North America, establishing a colony in Vinland.[100]

In the middle of the 11th century, the Duke of Normandy, William the Conqueror, led his army against the County of Britain. He eventually became King of England, and the Bayeux Tapestry was created to serve as an illustrated document of his life.[101] Later, the Normans conquered Naples, ruling it for three centuries.[102]

High Middle Age[edit | edit source]

By the 11th century, European Christendom was divided between the Roman Catholic Church in the West and the Orthodox Churches in the East. In 1095, at the Council of Clermont, Pope Urban II initiated the First Crusade to recover the Holy Land from Muslim rule.[103] Peasants, and later lords and knights, participated to the siege of Jerusalem in 1099, establishing the Crusader states for two centuries.[104]

Hughes de Payens, Grand Master of the Templar Order

In this context, many military orders were created to protect the pilgrims, the Knights Hospitalier among them. During the council of Troyes in 1129, with the support of Bernard de Clairvaux, the Templars were officially recognized as the Knights Templars, with Hugues de Payens serving as their first Grand Master. They established strongholds in the Middle East but also in Europe, becoming an important economic infrastructure in Christendom. During this time, they fought the Assassins, a reformed incarnation of the Hidden Ones that had established a state in the Middle East.[105]

In the 12th century, reality and fiction were sometimes blurred in writing. Geoffrey of Monmouth wrote The History of the Kings of Britain, a pseudo-historical work claiming to use earlier sources.[106] The pre-Christian Germanic poem Nibelungenlied was written in Germany.[107] The Digenes Akritas told the epic story of Basil during the Arab-Byzantine wars.[66] During the 13th century, the Aberdeen Bestiary was written, representing mythical creatures, while the Icelandic scholar Snorri Sturluson wrote the Heimskringla, a collection of Old Norse sagas.[108]

In 1202, during the Fourth Crusade, Venice's fleet transported the Crusaders, leading to the sack of Constantinople in 1204. This shattered the Byzantine Empire while the Crusaders established the Latin Empire in Greece and Venice and occupied many islands of the Aegean Sea. Consequently, Venetian and Genoan merchants would settle in Constantinople.[17] During this time, the Levantine Mentor Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad failed to establish a guild in the city due to the sack, but in 1257, he sent the Venetian explorer brothers Niccolò and Maffeo Polo, who succeeded.[109] In 1261, the Latin Emperor was expelled from Constantinople and Michael VIII Palaiologos re-established the Byzantine Empire, albeit reduced to a fraction of its former land.[17] In 1269, the Polo brothers established an Assassin guild in Venice.[110]

At the dawn of the 13th century, two Mendicant orders were created: the Franciscans and the Dominicans, making a vow of poverty while preaching in the cities. In 1231, Pope Gregory IX initiated the Medieval Inquisition, to bring order to the process of dealing with heresy and prevent mob justice. Both Franciscan and Dominican members were appointed as papal inquisitors.[111]

A page of Epistola de Magnete

Between the 12th and 13th centuries, thanks to Arabic translations, Europe had access to Greek and Indian philosophical and mathematical knowledge.[70] Scientific fields evolved, like magnetism with the Epistola de Magnete, while the philosopher Roger Bacon compiled in his Opus Majus and Opus Minus treatises on natural science, mathematics, grammar, physics, optics, and philosophy for Pope Clement IV.[16]

By the mid-13th century, the Mongol Empire expanded into Eastern Europe. In 1241, the Mongol army defeated Poland in the Battle of Legnica. During the battle, the Mongol prince Möngke Khan captured a Templar who introduced him to the Order's ideology, inspiring Möngke to create the Mongolian Rite of the Templar Order.[112]

During this time, the Grand Prince of Vladimir, Alexander Nevsky, paid tribute to the Golden Horn to protect his country. In 1263, the Mongolian Assassin Nergüi killed Nevsky, believing that his alliance with the Mongols hid something else.[113] Accompanying his father and uncle to Kublai Khan's court, the Assassin Marco Polo recovered Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad's Codex and brought it to Venice. He wrote an exaggerated account of his twenty years in the Far East.[16] Polo was also acquainted with the Italian Assassin Dante Alighieri, who wrote the Divine Comedy.[114]

Jacques de Molay burning at the stake before King Philip IV and Pope Clement V

In 1291, Acre was captured by the Mamluks, ending the Crusader states. The Templars retreated to Europe, where Jacques de Molay, a Sage of the Isu Aita, became Grand Master in 1292.[115] In 1307, the Mentor of the French Assassins, Guillaume de Nogaret, manipulated King Philip IV and Pope Clement V to arrest the Templars. On 13 October 1307, the Temple of Paris was stormed by Assassins disguised as Flemish mercenaries, and the Grand Master was captured.[116] While the Assassins tracked the last Templars across Europe, de Molay told nine of his lieutenants the secrets of the Order and tasked them to reform the Templars as a secret organization. In 1314, de Molay was burnt at the stake, officially ending the Templar Order and allowing the surviving members to operate in the shadows.[117]

In the 1320s, the Templars killed Dante Alighieri and Marco Polo, revealing their continued existence to the Assassins. Dante's pupil, Domenico, destroyed Altaïr's Codex and scattered its pages to prevent the Templars from obtaining them. Later, he relocated to the Sienan city of Monteriggioni, which became the headquarters of the Italian Brotherhood of Assassins, and founded the noble House of Auditore.[114]

Late Middle Ages[edit | edit source]

Black Death and Hundred Years' War[edit | edit source]
Main article: Hundred Years' War
The Brothers of the Cross during the plague

The Late Middle Ages were a turbulent time for Europe, struck first by the Great Famine (1315–1322), and then by the Black Death between 1346 and 1353, killing hundreds of millions.[118] In 1350, the Templars posed as the Brothers of the Cross, traveling across the Holy Roman Empire and promising protection from the disease while searching for the Ankh, a Piece of Eden rumored to be located in Essen. The group mysteriously vanished alongside the Assassin Lukas Zurburg.[119]

During the 14th century, Geoffrey Chaucer wrote in Middle English The Canterbury Tales, a collection of stories detailing the lives and concerns of a group of Christian pilgrims making their way to Canterbury Cathedral. The work would come to be regarded as one of the most significant pieces of English literature.[16]

Jeanne d'Arc with the Sword of Eden

Between 1337 and 1453, the French House of Valois and the English House of Plantagenet fought in the Hundred Years' War for the throne of France. The Templars influenced the latter stages of the conflict, mainly through their members John of Bedford, who served as regent in France for Henry VI of England, Duke Philip III of Burgundy, and the chamberlain Georges de la Trémoille. The three Templars plotted to control the weak-willed Charles VII of France, but his mother-in-law Yolande of Aragon, who served as the Mentor of the French Assassins, thwarted their plan.[120]

Yolande later recruited Jeanne d'Arc, a peasant girl with a high concentration of Isu DNA and possessing a Sword of Eden. With the artifact, she led the French army to victory, strengthening Charles's legitimacy. In 1430, the Templars captured Jeanne, recovered the Sword, and condemned her to be burned at the stake. The Assassins secretly saved her.[120]

Fall of the Byzantine Empire[edit | edit source]

In 1301, the Byzantine Empire was defeated at the Battle of Bapheus by Muslim Turks led by Osman I. Expanding on the Byzantine territories in Anatolia and Thrace, Osman I founded the Ottoman Empire.[121] In 1397, Sultan Bayezid I tried to conquer Constantinople but failed. To counter the Ottoman threat, the Byzantine emperors tried to ally with the Catholic West but this was limited. During the conflict, the Byzantines hired Spanish mercenaries, such as the Almogavars, to fight the Turks. Among them was Ramon Muntaner, who wrote his Cronica about the defense of Constantinople.[16] Through the dervshirme system, the Ottomans enrolled slave Christian boys from the Balkans to serve as Janissaries, their elite soldiers.[122]

In 1453, Sultan Mehmet II, wielding an Apple of Eden, conquered Constantinople, ending the Byzantine Empire.[50] Even if many churches of the city were transformed into mosques, the Ottomans authorized the Orthodox Church to stay in the city, and Constantinople became the cosmopolitan capital of the empire.[121] The Ottomans made a priority to restore the city to its former glory. During the following century, the population increased tenfold—from 40,000 to 400,000.[17]

The Valencian Joanot Martorell wrote Tirant lo Blanch, a romance novel set in the Byzantine Empire, full of sensuous vitality, chivalrous daring, and good humor.[16]

During their expansion, the Ottomans came into conflict with Wallachia and the Republic of Venice. At some point, the Assassin Mentor and Grand Vizier Ishak Pasha forged a peace with the empire, permitting the Brotherhood to flourish in Constantinople. In 1476, during an anti-Ottoman uprising in Hungary, Pasha defeated Vlad Tepes, the Voivode of Wallachia and a Templar.[123] Vlad died shortly after, and his head was brought to Constantinople as a gift to the sultan.[124]

Italian Renaissance[edit | edit source]
Main article: Renaissance
Florence, the heart of the Italian Renaissance

By the 14th century, the Italian city-states became the cradle of the Renaissance. This intellectual and artistic cultural movement emulated the revival of classical Greco-Roman studies and the new philosophy of humanism.[125] The creation of the printing press by Johannes Gutenberg in 1439 in Strasbourg permitted the mass production of books and the spreading of Renaissance ideas across Europe.[126] The Republic of Venice became one of the wealthiest cities in the world thanks to its fleet, even defeating the Republic of Genoa on the sea.[58] In the Republic of Florence, its leading statesman Lorenzo de' Medici sponsored many artists such as Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo, and the city became the center of the Renaissance.[127] In 1460, the Hermeticist teaching was rediscovered through the work of Marsilio Ficino.[128]

During this period, the Italian Templars led by Grand Master Rodrigo Borgia planned to unify Italy under their banner. As they supported the House of Pazzi's plot to control Florence and the House of Barbarigo's scheme to claim Venice, the Italian Assassins led by the House of Auditore thwarted their plans. The two factions also searched for Altaïr's Codex pages to find an Isu vault in Italy. In 1488, the Templars brought Mehmet II's Apple of Eden from Cyprus to Venice but the Assassins seized it.[129] While escorting it to Forlì, the Templars led an attack on the city. The two groups lost the artifact as the monk Girolamo Savonarola took the Apple.[130]

Spanish Inquisition and Fall of Granada[edit | edit source]
Main article: Spanish Inquisition

In the late 15th century, the Christian kingdoms of Spain began to unite. Around 1458, Pope Callixtus III gave to King Alfonso V of Aragon the Prong of Faith that his successors later inherited.[31] In 1478, after King Ferdinand II of Aragon and Queen Isabella I of Castile married, the Spanish Inquisition was established to maintain Catholic orthodoxy in their kingdoms, prosecuting anyone suspected of being a heretic for nearly four centuries.[131] The Master Templar Tomás de Torquemada became the Grand Inquisitor and branded the Spanish Assassins as heretics to hunt them.[67]

In 1481, the first auto-da-fé happened in Seville, with six persons burnt at the stake. In 1483, the Jews were expelled from Andalusia and a new court was formed with a 30-day grace period for Jews to renounce their religion. Torture was used to extract confessions and relapsed Jews were burned.[132] In 1492, the Alhambra Decree formally expelled all Jews from Spain. Tens of thousands were baptized in the three months before the deadline for expulsion. Around 40,000 left the country.[133]

The Siege of Granada

In the late 1480s, Spain entered into war with the Emirate of Granada, the last Muslim state in Iberia. By 1491, the Assassins allied with Emir Muhammad XII of Granada and entrusted him with an Apple of Eden. The Templars abducted the emir's son Ahmed to ransom him for the Apple,[67] while also advising Muhammad to continue resisting the Spanish siege of Granada.[134] The Italian Assassin Ezio Auditore da Firenze convinced the emir to surrender,[134] while the Spanish Assassin Aguilar de Nerha recovered the Apple from the Templars and entrusted it to the navigator Christoffa Corombo. With the Treaty of Granada, Spain was unified by the Catholic kingdoms, ending the Reconquista.[67]

By 1498, Tomás de Torquemada gathered the parts of the Shattered Staff of Eden and went to the Isu Forge under the Real Monasterio de Santo Tomás in Avila to repair the artifact. With the Staff, the Templar created an army of tangible holograms but was killed by the Spanish Assassins, who destroyed the Staff, leading to the collapse of the Forge.[135] In 1504, the Brotherhood assassinated Queen Isabella of Castile as she was influenced by the Templars.[136] In 1511, the Grand Inquisitor Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros accused the Assassins of having killed a cardinal, but the Brotherhood brought him the true culprits.[137]

Early Modern Era[edit | edit source]

Italian Wars[edit | edit source]

Main article: Italian Wars

In 1492, the Grand Master of the Italian Rite, Rodrigo Borgia, became Pope Alexander VI, increasing the Templar influence across Europe, with Rome at its center.[138] In 1494, France invaded the Italian peninsula, beginning the Italian Wars, opposing the French, the Spanish, and the Italians for over six decades.[139] During the conflict, Girolamo Savonarola took control of Florence with the Apple of Eden in his possession and established a theocracy. During the Bonfire of the Vanities, both the Assassins and Templars tried to recover the Piece of Eden.[140] In 1498, the Master Assassin Ezio Auditore took the Apple, ending Savonarola's rule while Florence became a republic once again.[141]

The Assassin Brotherhood in Rome

While Rodrigo tried to unify Italy through conspiracies, his son Cesare Borgia allied with the French to conquer the peninsula.[142] In January 1500, after his father was defeated by Ezio in the Vatican, Cesare led an attack on the Assassin headquarters of Monteriggioni, killing their leader Mario Auditore and taking back the Apple of Eden.[143] Ezio relocated the Assassins to Rome, recruiting its harassed citizens into the Brotherhood to fight the Templars both in Italy and across Europe.[144] In 1503, the Assassins took back the Apple and freed Rome from the Borgia's rule.[145]

After Rodrigo's death, the new Pope Julius II had Cesare arrested and imprisoned in Spain.[145] In 1507, following his escape, Cesare led the Navarrese army to take back Viana Castle from the Castellans and restore the influence of the Templars.[146] During the siege, Cesare was killed by Ezio, thwarting the Templars' attempted return to European politics.[147] Over the following years, the Italian Assassins continued to strengthen their influence, establishing a Brotherhood in Venice which retrieved the Venetian Staff of Eden.[148]

During the Italian Wars, French culture was influenced by Italian arts. King Francis I of France hired the artist Leonardo da Vinci and granted him a home in Amboise where he finished his Mona Lisa. In 1519, just before he died, Leonardo met his friend Ezio one last time.[149] On his deathbed, he wrote his last desires for the then-retired Mentor, asking him to find Havens across Europe to train the Assassins.[150]

Ottoman expansion[edit | edit source]

Between 1499 and 1502, the Venice Republic and the Ottoman Empire were at war. During the battle of Zonchio, the Ottomans destroyed the Venetian navy and conquered Lepanto, Modone, and Corone.[151] The Assassins from both sides permitted the peace between the two states.[152]

In Lisbon, when Spain influenced King Manuel I of Portugal to establish the Inquisition and force conversions, the Assassins protected some citizens and trained them to fight oppression.[153] As many Iberians went to Constantinople to flee the persecution, Manuel infiltrated spies among the migrants, but the Assassins replaced them.[154] In the meantimes, the Spanish took control of the coastal cities of North Africa, Algiers and Tripoli among them.[155]

Ezio Auditore and Yusuf Tazim watching over Constantinople

In 1509, Constantinople was struck by an earthquake and a civil war began between Sultan Bayezid II and his son Selim, who was supported by the Janissaries.[156] In a plan to end the difference and the wars between the West and the East, Selim's brother Ahmet became the leader of the Byzantine Templars and searched for the Masyaf Keys to open the Library of Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad and locate the Grand Temple.[157] As the Byzantine soldiers took the streets of Constantinople, the Ottoman Assassins led by Yusuf Tazim and reorganized by the Mentor Ezio Auditore fought the Templars in the city.[158] In 1512, the Assassins recovered the Masyaf Keys and eliminated the Byzantine Templars while Selim became the new sultan and killed Ahmet.[159]

Across the Mediterranean Sea, the Ottoman Assassins fought the Templars.[155] In Athens, the Templars bribed the Ottoman soldiers to loot the homes of wealthy citizens. The Assassins defended the citizens and killed the Templars in the city.[160] In Rhodes, after the Knights Hospitalier captured many Assassins and killed the Master Assassin Castor, the Brotherhood attacked the Hospitalier compound Ataviros in retaliation.[161] The Assassins also defended the island against corsair attacks.[162] As the Templars in Tripoli were commanded from Rhodes, the Assassins cut their communications.[163] In Algiers, the Assassins fought the Spanish influence, allying with the pirate Hayreddin Barbarossa and protecting the Moors of Penon island.[164]

During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Mediterranean Sea became a battlefield between the Ottoman Empire and the Catholic states. In 1565, Sultan Suleiman I, an ally of the Assassins, ordered the siege of Malta, which was held by the Knights Hospitalier, but the Ottomans failed to take the island.[165] From 1648 to 1669, the Ottomans besieged the Venetian city of Candia in Krete and took over the island.[166] In 1687, during the Morean War, the Republic of Venice besieged Athens and inadvertently blew up the Parthenon by destroying the Ottoman's gunpowder stock with a cannonball.[167]

In the 17th century, pirates from the Barbary Coasts were still actively attacking European ships.[168] In the mid-18th century, the Assassins were influencing the French Kingdom and the Ottoman Empire to fight the Knights of Malta, provoking revolts among the Muslim slaves on the island.[165]

Occultism and Scientific Revolution[edit | edit source]

Copernicus and Ezio Auditore observing the lunar eclipse

The Renaissance and humanism paved the way for new ideas. In May 1500, when the Templar astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus wanted to share his research on Heliocentrism, the Master of the Sacred Palace Giuliano attempted to have him killed.[169] He was protected by the Master Assassin Ezio Auditore, who killed Giuliano during a lunar eclipse.[170] The Brotherhood continued to protect Copernicus from the Templars in the following years.[171] His research was only published after he died in 1543.[172] Astronomy developped further with the work of Petrus Apianus in his Introductio Geographica.[173]

In 1506, the Cult of Hermes was active in Rome, led by Ercole Massimo. After a failed attempt to take the Apple of Eden from Ezio, the Hermeticists associated with Leonardo da Vinci to find the Temple of Pythagoras. When Leonardo refused to help them, they abducted him and forced him to reveal the location.[174] Ezio saved his friend, killing Massimo and his followers before discovering with Leonardo what the Temple contained.[175] By 1509, the Cult's remnants were led by Seraphina, who sought revenge against Ezio for killing her father and brother. She allied with the Templar Francesco Rizzo to attack Monteriggioni while the Cult searched for the Staff of Hermes Trismegistus in Venice.[176] Ezio eliminated both Seraphina and Rizzo and discovered that the Staff was a replica.[177]

Giovanni and Maria running in the streets of Troyes

The Hermeticist teachings continued to spread among scholars. The Book of Abraham written by the alchemist Nicolas Flamel took the interest of both the Assassins and the Templars. By 1520, the physician Bombastus possessed one-half of the book. In 1527, he sent his Hermeticist apprentice Maria Amiel and the Assassin Giovanni Borgia to recover the second half in Paris, but they found only a copy.[178] Returning to Basel, they discovered that Bombastus had been driven mad by the book's influence, and they stole the first part.[179]

While the Grand Duchy of Moscow expanded, the Italian Assassin infiltrated the Kremlin in the late 1490s. As Ivan III of Russia was about to uncover the existence of the Brotherhood, the Assassins spread rumors about the revival of the Strigolniki Sect.[180] In 1581, the Assassins killed the Tsarevitch Ivan Ivanovich, who was being influenced by the Templars.[181]

Prague, city of sciences and occultism

In the late 16th century, the court of the Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II in Prague became an intellectual center, counting numerous scholars including the scientist Johannes Kepler, the alchemist Michael Maier, the painter Giuseppe Arcimboldo, and the writer Elizabeth Jane Weston.[182] By 1587, the English occultists Edward Kelley and John Dee possessed the two volumes of the Book of Abraham and used them to create gold for the emperor.[183] As Kelley became more obsessed with the book, Dee stole it and left the city.[184] During this period, the Isu book later known as the Voynich manuscript was possessed by the emperor.

As Cosmology evolved, it was sometimes restrained by the Church. In 1600, the Roman Inquisition executed the scholar Giordano Bruno for his unorthodox beliefs,[185] and in 1633 Galileo Galilei was arrested for promoting Heliocentrism.[186] However, the Scientific Revolution happened, sponsored by the Templars to influence the rulers and the population in preparation for the establishment of their New World Order. To promote science and rationalism, the Templars influenced and used the research of Francis Bacon, Baruch Spinoza, John Locke, and Isaac Newton.[187] Other scientists flourished during this period, like Athanasius Kircher, René Descartes, and Thomas Burnet.[188]

The Montgolfière

In the 18th century, new sources of energy were discovered, like electricity that could be created through an Electrostatic Generator.[189] In 1745, the scientist Pieter van Musschenbroek created the Leyden jar to stock electricity.[190] Electricity was used in the Flying Magnetic Boy Experiments conducted by Stephen Gray and Abbé Nollet.[191] Steam developped as a energy used for Newcomen engine and later James Watt's steam engine, permitting to waste less coal.[192] New scientific fields developped, like chemistry with Humphry Davy and Antoine Lavoisier who isolated elemental potassium.[193] In Leeds, the minister and philosopher Joseph Priestley made the first drinkable soda by performing scientific experiments above the vats in a brewery.[194] In 1783, the brothers Joseph-Michel and Jacques-Étienne Montgolfier invented the first recorded hot air balloon and the first successful human-carrying flight technology.[195]

Reformation and persecutions[edit | edit source]

At this time, Christendom experienced a massive change through reform. In 1502, the elector Friedrich der Weise of Saxe opened the University of Wittenberg, dedicated to religious reform. The Assassins founded the construction using money stolen from the Templars.[196] Fifteen years later, in the same city, the German monk Martin Luther nailed the Ninety-five Theses to a church door, disputing the claim that absolution from sin can be paid for. Excommunicated by Pope Leo X and condemned as an outlaw, Luther became the figurehead of the Protestant Reformation, splitting Europe between Catholic and Protestant states.[197]

The Church reacted with the Counter-Reformation, with Pope Paul III establishing the Roman Inquisition, while in Spain over a hundred Lutherans were put on trial and burnt in 1558, ending Protestantism in Iberia.[198] In 1559, Pope Paul IV established the Pauline Index, a list of publications deemed heretical, anti-clerical, or lascivious that were banned from the Church.[199] In 1563, the last session of the Council of Trent was held, issuing more condemnations of what it defined to be heresies punishable by death, and published the Tridentine Index, a list of forbidden books.[200]

Depiction of Elizabeth I of England with an Apple of Eden

The Protestant Reformation had a major impact on some kingdoms. In England, King Henry VIII severed ties with the Catholic Church while his daughter Queen Mary I established back Catholicism, allying herself with the Templars. In 1558, Mary I was killed by the Assassins, who allied with her half-sister Elizabeth. In 1559, Elizabeth became Queen of England and restored Protestantism with the help of an Apple of Eden.[201] In Belgium, both Catholic Spain and Protestant Dutch fought, leading to the Sack of Antwerp.[202] In France, the division between Catholics and Protestants led to the French Wars of Religion and events like the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre. Henry IV, who was protestant before he became king, converted to Catholicism in 1593, bringing stability and peace to France.[203]

During this era, persecution against unorthodox beliefs increased. In Spain, the Inquisition tried bigamists, blasphemers, and witches. In 1609, King Philip III ordered the expulsion of the Moriscos, descendants of converted Muslims. An estimated 300 000, roughly 4% of the Spanish population, were forced to leave the country.[204] In France, the Templar Pierre de Lancre instigated a witch-hunt in Labourd to recover the original Shroud of Eden from the Brotherhood. Even though some Assassins like Isaac du Queyran were burnt at the stake, the Templars ultimately failed to secure the artifact, which was taken by the Assassin Margaux to the New World.[205]

During the 17th century, the Freemasons society was created, assembling men of different religions. They were persecuted in some countries like Spain.[204] Spreading to the New World, they brought an Apple of Eden to the Americas.[206]

The religious division challenged the divine right of the monarchs. In 1605, Guy Fawkes and other Catholic conspirators planned to blow up the Palace of Westminster to kill the king and members of Parliament but they were arrested by Sir Thomas Knyvet.[207] In 1610, the religious fanatic François Ravaillac assassinated King Henry IV of France.[203]

Discovery and Imperial Ages[edit | edit source]

Main article: Age of Discovery
Reaching Asia[edit | edit source]

By the 15th century, the European powers tried to reach Asian markets by sea, with Portugal spearheading the movement. The patronage of Henry the Navigator permitted the funding of many journeys.[208] While explorers such as Bartolomeu Dias and Vasco da Gama contoured Africa, Portugal established colonies on its coasts, such as in Angola, Príncipe, and Mozambique.[209] Reaching India by the end of the 15th century and China in 1513, the Portuguese established an access point in Macau.[210]

Ferdinand Magellan's expedition arriving in Cebu

In 1521, the Spanish sponsored the Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan's voyage, which had the goal of circumnavigating the world. Magellan's journey led him to the Philippines, where he converted the population of Cebu to Catholicism and discovered a Piece of Eden. While searching for another artifact on the neighboring Mactan Island, Magellan was killed in battle by the chieftain Lapu-Lapu.[211] Despite Magellan's death, his voyage would be completed by his surviving crew, and Spain eventually colonized the Philippines in 1565.[212]

In 1540, the Society of Jesus was created with the goal of spreading Catholicism to Asia and other regions. The Templars Francis Xavier and Alessandro Valignano were both Jesuit missionaries who used their ties to expand the Order's influence in India, China, and Japan, the latter beginning trade with Europe.[213] The Portuguese priest Luís Fróis was another notable missionary who helped spread Catholicism to Japan and provided some of the first European accounts of the country's culture and history.[214] However, once Toyotomi Hideyoshi rose as the de facto ruler of Japan at the end of the Sengoku period, he began persecuting Christians in the country, a tradition which continued under the Tokugawa shogunate, until Christianity was almost completely eradicated from Japan by the 1640s.[215]

The Jesuits Luís Fróis and Alessandro Valignano meeting Akechi Mitsuhide in Japan

After their numerous defeats at the hands of the Assassins in Europe, the Templars turned their attention to Japan, seeking to establish a foothold on the island. They formed alliances with local warlords and nobles, many of whom joined the Order's ranks, but their activities caught the attention of the Assassins, who responded by establishing their own guild in Japan.[213] Initially known as the Kakushiba ikki and founded by the exiled Spanish Assassin Alvaro Catarribera,[216] the Japanese Brotherhood would fight against the Templars' efforts to seize control of the country for centuries to come.[217]

Through chartered companies, the different European powers established more colonies in East and Southeast Asia. The Dutch East India Company occupied the Indonesian archipelago, establishing a trade monopoly on the islands,[209] while the English East India Company ruled a large part of India, having its own army.[218] By the early 18th century, both companies also had a presence in Macau, from where they searched for artifacts of interest throughout Asia, and often found themselves at odds with each other.[219]

New World conquests[edit | edit source]

In 1492, the Genoan navigator and Assassin ally Christoffa Corombo crossed the Atlantic Ocean, intending to arrive in Asia, but instead discovered the Bahamas, Hispaniola, and Cuba. Claiming the islands of the Caribbean Sea for Spain, Colombo enslaved the native Taínos, leading to their near extinction in the following decades.[220]

In 1501, the Florentine navigator Amerigo Vespucci, working for Portugal, reached Rio de Janeiro Bay and Río de la Plata. Vespucci highlighted that the lands were not part of Asia but a new continent. In 1507, the German cartographer and clergyman Martin Waldseemüller proposed to name them the Americas in his honor.[221] Waldseemuller also established a map of these uncharted lands.[222]

La Noche Triste

During the 16th century, the Spanish Crown expanded across Central and South America, its army led by conquistadores such as Hernan Cortes and Francisco Pizarro, who respectively defeated the Aztec and Inca Empires. The Europeans also inadvertently spread diseases that greatly impacted the native populations.[223] While Spain controlled most of Central and South America, and Portugal ruled Brazil, the French, British, and Dutch settled in North America and the Caribbean. To protect their colonies and trade networks from their rivals and piracy, the European powers created navies.[224]

To exploit their newly conquered lands, the European powers brought slaves from Africa, establishing a triangle trade across the Atlantic Ocean. While Europeans sold goods in Africa, the local slaves were shipped to the Americas to work on plantations. The products of these plantations, such as sugar, coffee, and cotton, were shipped to Europe to be sold and transformed. This trade persisted until the 19th century, transporting an estimated 15 million Africans to the Americas.[225] Among the slave traders were the Royal African Company.[226] During these centuries, many slaves revolted, leading to uprisings such as the Maroon rebellion.[227]

The Assassin insigna in Tulum

In parallel with the conquest and trade, the European powers also sent scientific expeditions. Many navigators searched the Northwest Passage to connect the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans while the French Geodesic Mission accurately determined the roundness and shape of the Earth.[228] The British navigator James Cook chartered the last unknown lands in the Pacific Ocean.[229]

Both the Templars and the Assassins from Europe infiltrated these expeditions, spreading their influence to the newly discovered lands. The Order infiltrated the new colonial powers, while the Brotherhood primarily allied with the natives, the Tainos and the Mayans among them.[230] While they had strong ties with their European counterparts, they also created autonomous Brotherhoods and Rites.[231]

Ages of Absolutism and Enlightenment[edit | edit source]

Charles II's coronation at Westminster

Between 1642 and 1651, the English Civil War saw King Charles I's forces fighting against the Parliament's troops. After the king was trialed and executed, a Puritan Republic was established in the British Isles, led by the Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell and later his son Richard.[232] While the Stuarts' heir Charles was exiled to France, he was recalled as the population was dissatisfied with Cromwell's rule.[233] In 1661, Charles returned to England and became king.[234] In France, after the Fronde revolt, King Louis XIV left Paris and established his new residence in the Palace of Versailles, showing his control over the French State. The Palace became a symbol of the Absolute Monarchy and the Ancien Régime.[235]

Between the 16th and 18th centuries, the Baroque style influenced European architecture and painting, with artists such as Claude Lorrain.[236] The Dutch Golden Age painting was held by artists like Gerard van Honthorst, Willem van de Velde the Younger, and Pieter Claesz and even influenced British painting with Peter Lely.[237] New musical instruments were created and instrument makers became famous, like Hendrik Richters with his oboes, and Antonio Stradivari with his violoncelli.[238]

By 1688, King James II of England, who was an overt Roman Catholic, followed policies of religious tolerance and his proximity to France. Fearing that he would establish a Catholic dynasty, English Parliamentarians persuaded William of Orange to cross the English Channel from the Netherlands. James II was overthrown during the Glorious Revolution, and William became king of England. The aftermath of these events led to the Bill of Rights and to restrictions on the monarch's power.[239] In the following decades, the Jacobites advocated for the restoration of the Catholic House of Stuart on the throne of England, instigating several uprisings.[240]

During the 18th century, European states engaged in numerous wars that spread across their overseas colonies. The first was the War of the Spanish Succession in 1701, when Philip of Anjou, grandson of King Louis XIV of France, claimed the throne of Spain. This led to a conflict between Philip's followers and France on the one hand, and the Holy Roman Empire, the Dutch Republic, and Great Britain on the other. During the war, many sailors were recruited as privateers to plunder enemy ships. In 1713, the Treaty of Utrecht settled the conflict: while Philip was recognized as King of Spain, he had to abandon his claim to France's throne. Great Britain gained territories from both France and Spain and was granted the exclusive right to slave trading in Spanish America for thirty years.[241]

Nassau, capital of the Bahamas and the short-lived Pirate Republic

After the peace, as thousands of privateers became unemployed, many of them turned to piracy and joined the Pirate Republic in Nassau, Edward Thatch, and Benjamin Hornigold among them. This marked the start of the third and final "Golden Age of Piracy".[242] In an attempt to end piracy in the Caribbean, King George I of Great Britain appointed the Templar Woodes Rogers as Governor of the Bahamas and sent him to Nassau to offer a royal pardon as an alternative to execution.[243] The strategy proved effective, allowing the British Empire to reannex Nassau and dissolve the Pirate Republic.[244]

During the Golden Age, the pirate captain Edward Kenway used his fleet to trade goods in the different ports of Europe and their settlements, even aiding the city of Marseille during the plague of 1720.[245] Later, Edward became an Assassin and joined the British Brotherhood, becoming its co-leader alongside Miko. While the two worked together to bring stability to the Assassins in England,[246] Edward also searched for Isu sites across Europe and Asia,[219] documenting his findings in a journal.[247] In 1735, Reginald Birch, the Grand Master of the British Templars, engineered Edward's assassination, which allowed him to take his journal and groom his son Haytham to become a Templar.[248] Two decades later, the British Assassins were left leaderless after Haytham killed Miko,[249] forcing them to flee London, which enabled the Templars to solidify their control over the city for over a century.[250]

In the 1740s, the War of the Austrian Succession occurred, pitting the Austrians, the British, and the Dutch against France and its allies. This conflict reached America, where the British besieged Louisbourg in 1745.[251] In 1747, the French besieged Bergen op Zoom in the Dutch Republic. The British Army protected the city, with the Templars Haytham Kenway and Edward Braddock among its ranks. While fleeing the city, Braddock ordered the execution of civilians, appalling Haytham, who saw that Braddock was turning his back on the Order.[248]

During the 1750s, the Corsicans rebelled against the Genoese, who had ruled the island for five centuries.[248] In 1768, the French defeated the rebels and took control of Corsica.[252]

A destroyed Lisbon after the 1755 earthquake

In July 1754, the Battle of Fort Necessity between the French and the British marked the beginning of the French and Indian War, which would escalate into the worldwide Seven Years' War, fought between the two colonial empires.[253] On 1 November 1755, while exploring a Seismic Temple in Lisbon, Portugal, the Colonial Assassin Shay Cormac unwittingly triggered an earthquake, destroying most of the city and killing thousands.[254] The incident led Shay to lose faith in the Assassins, whom he held responsible for the tragedy,[255] and ultimately defect to the Templars.[256]

As the Order became involved in the Seven Years' War, Shay used his fleet to support Great Britain's war efforts across the world while furthering Templar interests in Europe and America.[257] On 20 November 1759, Shay used his ship, the Morrigan, to secure a British victory at the Battle of Quiberon Bay, foiling a planned French invasion of Scotland.[258] His efforts also led to the eradication of the Colonial Assassins.[259]

In 1762, Tsar Peter III of Russia was removed from power by a coup led by his wife Catherine and nobles. After his abdication, Catherine became the Empress of Russia, and Ivan was assassinated, possibly by the Brotherhood.[260]

In 1763, the Treaty of Paris ended the Seven Years' War. The victorious Great Britain gained most of France's holdings in North America, while the colony of Louisiana was ceded to Spain. To recoup the cost of the war, the British Parliament passed various laws to tax their American colonies.[261] However, since the colonists were not represented in the Chamber, a movement of opposition grew among the Patriots.[262] On 19 April 1775, the American Revolutionary War began, and on 4 July 1776, the United States declared its independence from Great Britain.[263]

The Marquis de Lafayette with George Washington at Monmouth

The American inventor Benjamin Franklin travelled to France as an ambassador to gain the support of King Louis XVI.[264] The Marquis de Lafayette joined the Continental Army, later receiving the support of the French Army.[265] Spain and the Dutch Republic also allied with the United States, giving the support of their navies. Other European officers, like the Polish Casimir Pulaski and Tadeusz Kościuszko, trained the Continental Army to professionalize the troops.[266] Many Hessian mercenaries were recruited by the British to fight in America, but a great number of them deserted on their arrival.[267] Ultimately, Great Britain lost the war by 1781, and the Treaty of Paris signed two years later formalized the end of the conflict and recognized the United States' independence.[268]

By the 18th century, the Age of Enlightenment spread across Europe, challenging Absolute Monarchy and the power of the Church. In Spain, the number of licenses to possess and read prohibited texts increased, and inquisitorial activity began to wind down. Leading figures of the Spanish Enlightenment pushed for the abolition of the Inquisition, and foreign Enlightenment texts proved popular among members of the nobility and government.[269] In France, philosophers and writers like Voltaire, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and Pierre Beaumarchais criticized the Ancien Régime, and Denis Diderot published the Encyclopédie, compiling knowledge on the sciences and arts.[270][271] The Scottish moral philosopher Adam Smith became one of the most influential figures within classical liberalism, introducing the concept of the "invisible hand" which greatly influenced the Templars.[272]

Late Modern Era[edit | edit source]

French Revolution[edit | edit source]

Main article: French Revolution
The opening of the Estates-General

After its involvement in the American Revolution, France was in debt and on the verge of bankruptcy in the 1780s. The financial crisis was exacerbated by a trade treaty with Great Britain, which inundated France with British industrial products, spelling ruin for French artisans. Bad crops and weather led to food shortages among the lower classes, in contrast to the lavish spending of the Versailles court. As the population's anger grew over heavy taxes, King Louis XVI of France called for the Estates-General in 1789 to resolve the crisis.[273]

At the same time, François-Thomas Germain, a Sage of Aita and member of the French Templars, tried to reshape both the Order and humanity on the beliefs of Grand Master Jacques de Molay and his Codex Pater Intellectus. Seeing the Order as too complacent in the wealth and honors of the nobility and the Church, Germain wanted the Order to reform, becoming the secret masters of society, controlling it through gold and silver, while also planning the end of the French monarchy. Deemed a heretic, Germain was expelled by the Grand Master François de la Serre. In secret, Germain recruited dissatisfied members of the French Rite to prepare his coup.[274]

At the opening of the Estates General on 5 May 1789, Grand Master de la Serre met the French Mentor Honoré Mirabeau and established a truce with the Brotherhood.[275] At night, while preparing to induct his daughter Élise as the new Grand Master, François was assassinated by Germain's faction.[276] While Germain became the new Grand Master, the Old Guard opposed him and recognized Élise as their leader. A civil war erupted between the radical Templars and the Old Guard, while the Assassins respected their truce.[277]

During the Estates-General, the deputies debated the voting system, the Deputies of the Church and Nobility preferring a collective Estate vote, while the Third Estate wanted individual votes. The deputies of the Third Estate began to discuss political reforms rather than the financial crisis that had been the original agenda. Breaking away from the meetings, the Third Estate re-envisioned itself as the National Assembly, an elective body representing the Nation rather than the King.[278] On 20 June, during the Tennis Court Oath, the National Assembly swore to create a Constitution for France. Among its members were the Mentor Mirabeau and the radical Templar Maximilien Robespierre. This act marked the beginning of the French Revolution.[279]

Citizens rioting outside the Bastille

After the King dismissed his finance minister Jacques Necker, it was taken as a sign of an impending coup attempt by conservative factions within the government. On 14 July, the Parisian mob, joined by French Guards, took the arms and Stormed the Bastille to recover gunpowder.[280] To calm the situation, the King was forced to call back Necker, and the National Assembly began to change French society. On 7 October, after the event of the Women's March, the Royal family was forced to leave the Palace of Versailles for the Tuileries Palace in Paris.[281]

During the following months, the National Assembly brought down the Ancien Régime to transform France into a Constitutional monarchy, abolishing privileges, reforming the Church of France, and liberating the press.[282] Some of these ideas influenced other countries, like in Liège, where the population made their own revolution and founded a Republic.[283] In Spain, the Council of Castile reactivated the Holy Office responsible for the persecution of French works to prevent the spreading of revolutionary ideas. A new Inquisition edict was passed banning seditious French papers, but it did little to stem the material crossing the border.[284] The slaves of the French colony of Saint-Domingue also initiated their own revolution influenced by the Saint-Domingue Brotherhood of Assassins.[285]

In the shadows, Germain's Templars manipulated the events of the Revolution, increasing the violence by hoarding food. On the other hand, the Assassins tried to achieve a peaceful Revolution, preventing further violence while killing hoarders, smugglers, and corrupt aristocrats.[286] Across Europe, Templar Rites chose their sides, the Spanish and Roman Rites aligning with the radicals, while the Austrian Rite followed the Old Guard.[277]

The execution of Louis XVI

King's reputation decreased after his failed attempts to flee to Varennes in the summer of 1791.[273] In 1792, the Legislative Assembly declared war on Austria to spread the revolution beyond its borders.[287] Prussia allied with Austria in the war against revolutionary France. The French royal family sought contact with foreign armies to stop the Revolution. On 10 August 1792, Paris Commune imprisoned the King.[288] In response, Austria invaded France. With the proclamation of the First French Republic, the National Convention tried Louis for treason, who was condemned to death with the involvement of the radical Templars.[289] On 21 January 1793, Louis was guillotined on the Place de la Révolution.[290] His wife Marie Antoinette was executed ten months later, and their heir Louis died in prison in 1795, ending Bourbon rule for two decades.[291][292]

To achieve their Great Work, Germain and Robespierre instigated the Reign of Terror, executing suspected counter-revolutionaries to instill fear of unbridled liberty and to justify the need for order in society.[274] In less than a year, 300,000 individuals were arrested and 40,000 executed.[293] During this period, the Brotherhood tried to stop the Reign of Terror.[294] The Templar plot was foiled by the partnership of Élise de la Serre and the former Assassin Arno Dorian. After discrediting Robespierre, leading to his arrest during the Thermidorian Reaction on 28 July 1794, the two lovers confronted Germain.[295] During the fight, both Templar leaders died, crippling the Order in France, but Germain's Great Work was achieved.[274] At the same time, the Brotherhood eliminated the last Templars in the Jacobin Club, removing their influence over French politics.[296]

General Napoleon Bonaparte during the 13 Vendémaire

During this period, the Corsican artillery officer Napoleon Bonaparte rose as a prominent figure during the Siege of Toulon.[297] Just after the Thermidorian Reaction, Bonaparte tried to recover the Apple of Eden hidden in Saint-Denis Temple, but his plan was foiled by Dorian, who sent the artifact to the Egyptian Brotherhood.[298] In 1796, under the Directory, Bonaparte became the General-in-Chief of the campaign of Italy and fought the Austrian army.[297] During the campaign, while the French Republic expanded in Italy, the Republic of Venice was dissolved, and Austria took control of the city.[58] In 1798, he led a campaign in Egypt against the British. Even if the French army was defeated, Bonaparte recovered the Apple of Eden. After this campaign, Britain, Russia, Austria, and the Ottoman Empire formed a coalition against France. In 1799, the coalition defeated the French army in many battles in Italy.[297]

In France, the Jacobins orchestrated a coup to control the Directory. On 9 October 1799, Bonaparte used the Apple of Eden in a coup d'état to seize power, becoming the first Consul of France and effectively ending the French Revolution.[297]

Napoleonic Era[edit | edit source]

During his consularship, Bonaparte initiated well-received reforms to France's education, economy, and legal system, and reinstated Roman Catholicism as the state religion. In 1802, Bonaparte was elected consul for life.[297] During this time, he also tried to reclaim the colony of Saint-Domingue, reinstating slavery. This attempt failed, and France's presence in the Americas decreased further after the United States purchased Louisiana in 1803.[285] The same year, Britain, Russia, and Austria allied once again to fight the French Republic, leading to a series of wars against Napoleon.[297]

Napoleon I, emperor of France

In 1804, Bonaparte established the Napoleonic Code, permitting freedom of religion, forbade privileges based solely on birth, and ensured that government jobs went to the most qualified. This code influenced many European countries. The same year, Bonaparte was proclaimed emperor of France, becoming Napoleon I.[297] During his reign, he allied with the Assassins in their fight against the Templars.[299]

The French Empire extended its reach to Germany during the battles of Ulm and Austerlitz. In 1808, Napoleon invaded Spain and appointed his brother, Joseph King of Spain, replacing King Ferdinand VII. Joseph was welcomed by Spanish Francophiles, who believed collaboration with France would bring modernization, liberty, and the abolition of the Spanish Inquisition.[300] Napoleon also proclaimed his brother-in-law Joachim Murat King of Naples.[301]

In 1810, Napoleon divorced his wife, Josephine de Beauharnais, to marry Marie Louise of Austria, thereby creating an alliance between the French and Austrian Empires. The couple had a son named Napoleon. In 1812, Napoleon I invaded Russia with the Grand Army, but the campaign proved disastrous, with a mere 10,000 men fit for battle among the 600,000 soldiers. During this time, a coup was made in France to dethrone the emperor, but it failed.[297]

In 1814, British, Spanish, and Portuguese forces pushed the French out of Spain, Ferdinand VII was restored to the throne, and the Inquisition was reconstituted.[302] The same year, the Allies invaded France, forcing Napoleon to abdicate on 30 March. With the end of the French Empire, Louis XVIII, Louis XVI's brother, reestablished the Kingdom of France.[297]

British caricature on Napoleon's exile, The journey of a modern hero, to the island of Elba

Even after being exiled to the island of Elba, Napoleon rallied his followers and led a coup in March 1815, becoming emperor once more. As the Allies retaliated, Joachim Murat was defeated by the Austrians on 2 May. On 16 June, Napoleon defeated the Prussians, but the next day at Waterloo, his army was defeated by the British and the Prussians. On 22 June, he abdicated once again and left the throne to his son Napoleon II, but the coalition refused to acknowledge the younger Bonaparte's legitimacy as ruler of France. To prevent any return, the Allies sent Napoleon to the remote island of St. Helena in the southern Atlantic Ocean, where he remained under house arrest.[297]

Rise of Nationalism[edit | edit source]

Even if the French Empire was defeated, the ideals of the Revolution and of the nation-state persisted. In 1820, a military uprising overthrew King Ferdinand VII of Spain, and a government took control of the country. In 1823, Ferdinand VII was reinstated by the French invasion.[303]

In 1821, Greece declared its independence from the Ottoman Empire.[15] Britain, France, and Russia helped the Greeks. In 1827, during the Battle of Navarino, their navies allied to fight the Ottoman fleet.[304]

Portrait of Queen Victoria of Britain

In 1837, the reign of Queen Victoria of Britain began, lasting until she died in 1901. This period, known as the Victorian era, was marked by the Industrial Revolution, and the British Empire's expansion to encompass all five continents.[305]

In 1848, many revolutions broke out across Europe. In Hungary, the population rebelled against the Austrian Empire. The Templar general Julius Jacob von Haynau suppressed the revolution. In France, the monarchy was once again abolished, and the Second French Republic was proclaimed. Some years later, Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte, Napoleon I's nephew, proclaimed himself emperor under the name of Napoleon III, creating the Second French Empire.[306]

In the 1850's, the Assassin and inventor Oscar Kane led a cell in Vienna while also serving as a liaison for the Assassin branches based in Northern Europe. In secret, under the name of Magus, Kane worked with the Templars, giving them information in exchange of their technological advancement. One of his acquaintances was the Austrian Templar Konstanze von Visler, giving her an Apple of Eden. Kane was also very involved in the research of Isu Eyes, artifacts that could foretell the future through the calculations of innumerable possibilities.[306]

By 1851, as Magus, Kane came into contact with the mathematician Ada Lovelace to create the Engine of History, a method for complex mathematical calculations that allows the user to predict the plans and actions of individuals they are targeting with nearly 100% accuracy. When Lovelace ended their partnership, Kane sent thugs to capture her during the Great Exhibition in London, but she was rescued by the French acrobat Pierrette Arnaud. To protect her invention from Magus, Lovelace gave her notes to Arnaud and tasked her to find her friend Simeon Price.[306]

In 1853, to test one of his devices, Kane persuaded the Hungarian tailor János Libényi to assassinate Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria. Libényi became impatient and tried to kill the emperor with his own means. Kane's Assassin apprentice, who was none other than Simeon Price, tried to stop Libényi, thereby preventing the emperor's death. Kane and Price tried to liberate Libényi, but he was executed. Later, Price met Arnaud, who gave him Lovelace's notes to decipher. Doubting about his mentor, Price didn't inform him about the notes. As Price refused to help her, Arnaud took back the notes and tried to find Magus herself. Price left Vienna and Kane's mentorship.[306]

Poster representing soldiers during the Crimean War

In the Ottoman Empire, both the French and the Russian Empires fought for control of the Christian churches in the Holy Land. In 1853, Napoleon III sent a warship to the Black Sea to force Sultan Abdülmecid I to acknowledge French Catholicism as the authority over Christian sites in the Holy Land. Because the Eastern Orthodox Church had controlled those sites, Tsar Nicholas I of Russia responded by sending two corps to the banks of the Danube River. Diplomatic relations soured, leading to the Crimean War, Britain, France, and Sardinia allying with the Ottomans against Russia. Technology such as the exploding artillery shell, the railroad, and the telegraph shaped the conflict, and the advent of photography meant it was one of the first wars to be documented in the press. It was a war marked by incompetence on all sides, especially during the Battle of Balaclava. The war ended in 1856 when the allies took the key Russian city of Sevastopol. Recognizing the inevitability of defeat, Nicholas I sued for peace, and as part of the terms, the Black Sea was declared neutral, and Moldavia and Wallachia were made independent. It cost the lives of half a million people and led to extensive calls for military reform and to nationalist movements across Eastern Europe.[307]

In Italy, some revolutionaries, including Felice Orsini, wanted the unification of the country as a nation. In 1858, Orsini worked with Magus, who gave him bomb cases to assassinate Napoleon III in Paris. Even if one of the bombs killed some bystanders, both Arnaud and Price foiled the plot, and Orsini was arrested. Because some of Orsini's accomplices were from Britain, the French public and government held England partly responsible for the attack on their ruler. Thus, the British government enforced harsher laws on its people as a result. While the Assassins were focused on the plot, Kane recovered an Isu Eye in the city.[306]

As both Price and Arnaud joined the French Brotherhood, they worked together to stop Magus. Discovering that he was Kane, the two Assassins went to England to stop him. In 1861, Price tried to prevent Kane from recovering an Isu Eye in the British Museum, but Price was arrested and tried for his desertion from the army. Once freed, Price and Arnaud confronted Kane in 1862 in an Isu Temple in Bath, leading to his death. Later, the Assassins hid Lovelace's notes inside the grave of their friend Elizabeth Siddal to protect it from the Templars for a few years.[306]

In 1870, both French and German Templar Rites orchestrated the Franco-Prussian War to unify Germany. Even after the surrender of Napoleon III and the proclamation of the Third French Republic, France resumed the war with Prussia, the French Brotherhood helping the Government of National Defense during the siege of Paris. During the conflict, Assassins and Templars fought for the Ankh of Eden, but the artifact was lost. Finally, both factions agreed to make a truce. By the end of January 1871, the Government of National Defense signed an armistice and conceded the war to Prussia, which resulted in some lands being given to the new German Empire.[308]

Industrial Revolutions[edit | edit source]

London, symbol of the Industrial Revolution

With the First Industrial Revolution beginning in the United Kingdom in the 18th century, it spread across Europe in the 19th century. This movement led to the industrialization of production and the establishment of factories in cities. The main industries were textile and metallurgy. The conditions were harsh for the working classes, and even children were used as the labor force. The writer Charles Dickens showcased the lives and personalities of London's working-class people through his works, including Oliver TwistA Christmas Carol, and Great Expectations.[309]

During this era, the train emerged as a new and innovative mode of transportation, enabling individuals to travel vast distances with greater speed and efficiency. It also supported the surge in mass production by moving large amounts of resources and products much faster. Many railway companies flourished, building lines between cities and connecting countries across the continent.[310]

Karl Marx in London during the Victorian Era

The Industrial Revolution saw the development of Capitalism, which was backed by the Templars to control society. This system created inequity between employers, who possessed the capital, and employees, who were seen as mere labor. The German philosopher and economist Karl Marx, through his theory of the materialist conception of history and his work Das Kapital, greatly influenced the analysis and criticism of Capitalism.[311] After the formation of the International Workingmen's Association, which tried to unite a variety of left-wing political groups and trade union organizations across Europe and the World, Marx became one of its major figures.[312]

In the 1860s, London's infrastructure was under the control of the British Templars, led by the Grand Master Crawford Starrick, a ruthless businessman. While controlling the economic structures and high society through his company Starrick Industries, London's Underworld was controlled by the Templar-affiliated gang of the Blighters.[313] Starrick's ultimate goal was to eliminate Queen Victoria and the heads of church and state, thereby becoming the ruler of the city. He also searched for a Shroud of Eden hidden in London to become immortal and establish a New World Order.[314]

The twins Frye confronting Starrick

The British Assassins were based in the town of Crawley, attacking only the Templars outside London. In 1860, they established a bureau in London with the Indian Assassin Jayadeep Mir as its sole member. Mir failed to prevent the Templars from recovering the Apple of Eden in 1862, but later created an intelligence network in the city using street urchins and the help of the police officer Frederick Abberline.[315] In 1868, while the High Council refused to send other members, the twin Assassins Jacob and Evie Frye went to London. Working with Mir, they liberated the city, founding their own gang, the Rooks, to fight the Blighters.[316] While Jacob killed Starrick's associates, Evie searched the Shroud of Eden. Finally, both Assassins killed Starrick and kept the Shroud hidden in the Buckingham Palace Vault. With the crumbling of the British Rite, the Assassins could once again flourish in London.[314]

The use of electricity also significantly altered production and life activities in Europe. The use of the telegraph enabled messages to be sent across cities in a few minutes.[317] The Scottish inventor Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone, allowing individuals to speak at great distances.[318] The Serbian inventor Nikola Tesla found an Apple of Eden in his country and used it to create new devices.[319] In the 1890's, he promoted alternating current, leading to the Current War against the Templar Thomas Edison. As Tesla planned to create a worldwide network capable of transmitting information and electricity anywhere on the planet, the Templar launched a smear campaign against him and stole his Apple of Eden.[320]

Rise of Propaganda of the deed[edit | edit source]

A Communist Club-Room Near Leicester-Square

In 1848, Karl Marx published the Communist Manifesto, paving the way to the political ideology of Communism across Europe, especially France and England.[311] In March 1871, two months after the end of the Franco-Prussian War, the Paris Commune revolted against the Third Republic, establishing its independence with the help of Assassins. This government established progressive laws to better the citizens' lives with merciful punishments, economical benefits, and greater educational for the children. In May, the Commune was crushed by Republican troops, who executed the rebels.[308]

Other political ideas appeared, such as anarchism. The Russian revolutionary and anarchist Mikhail Bakunin participated in many uprisings across Europe. In 1867, while in Switzerland, he was helped by the Zurich Brotherhood of Assassins. During the 1889 World's Fair in Paris, the Templar Konstanze Von Visler used the Engine of History to trick the Assassins into bombing the Eiffel Tower and branded them as terrorists. Her plan was foiled by the Assassin Simeon Price, who mortally wounded her.[308] At the end of the century, anarchists resorted to acts of terrorism against the bourgeoisie.[321]

Tsar Alexander III sparing the Assassin Nikolai Orelov

In Imperial Russia, the House of Romanov, affiliated with the Russian Rite of the Templar Order, used a Staff of Eden to rule over the Empire.[322] The Russian Brotherhood and its socialist revolutionary wing Narodnaya Volya targeted the Tsars many times to free the country. Between 1866 and 1881, the Assassins attempted to kill the Tsar Alexander II of Russia five times; the Assassin Ignacy Hryniewiecki succeeded with a bomb.[308] In 1887, the Assassin Aleksandr Ulyanov was executed for plotting to kill Alexander III of Russia. A year later, the Assassin Nikolai Orelov attempted to kill the Tsar in a train but was defeated during the Borki train disaster. Nonetheless, the injuries inflicted by Orelov on the Tsar led to his death from kidney failure in 1894.[323]

Appearances[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. Assassin's Creed II
  2. Assassin's Creed III
  3. Assassin's Creed: OdysseyThe Fate of Atlantis
  4. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaView Above All
  5. Assassin's Creed IIX Marks the Spot
  6. Assassin's Creed: OdysseyThe Fate of Atlantis: Judgment of AtlantisIsu codex: "Encrypted message from "Phanes", I of IV"
  7. Assassin's Creed IIThe Truth
  8. 8.0 8.1 Assassin's Creed IIIn Bocca al Lupo
  9. 9.0 9.1 Assassin's Creed: RevelationsModern day
  10. 10.0 10.1 Assassin's Creed: ValhallaFloating conversations: Tombs of the Fallen
  11. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaA Feast to Remember
  12. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaDawn of Ragnarök
  13. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaAnimus Anomalies: AA_Complete
  14. Assassin's Creed IIGlyphs
  15. 15.0 15.1 Assassin's Creed: OdysseyLayla Hassan's personal files: "Packing for Greece: Greece"
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 16.4 16.5 16.6 16.7 Assassin's Creed: Revelations
  17. 17.0 17.1 17.2 17.3 Assassin's Creed: RevelationsDatabase: Constantinople
  18. Assassin's Creed: Project LegacyDivine Science: Chapter 2 – Kyros of Zarax
  19. 19.0 19.1 Assassin's Creed: OdysseyA Fresh Start
  20. Assassin's Creed: OdysseyThe Gates of Atlantis
  21. Discovery Tour: Ancient GreeceTours: Democracy in Athens
  22. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsAbstergo Files: "File.0.02\Hst_Beginning"
  23. Assassin's Creed: OdysseyBully the Bullies
  24. Assassin's Creed: OdysseyHistorical Locations – Boeotia: Battleground of Plataia
  25. Assassin's Creed: OdysseyThe Serpent's Lair
  26. Assassin's Creed: OdysseyLegacy of the First Blade
  27. Assassin's Creed: OdysseyAncient Revelations
  28. Assassin's Creed: OdysseyLayla Hassan's personal files: "Herodotos and His Work"
  29. Discovery Tour: Ancient GreeceTours: School of Greece - Theater: "The Greek Theater"
  30. Discovery Tour: Ancient GreeceTours: School of Greece - Philosophy: "Classical Philosophers"
  31. 31.0 31.1 31.2 31.3 Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants
  32. Discovery Tour: Ancient EgyptTours: The Great Library of Alexandria: "Kallimachos (c.310-240 BCE)"
  33. Discovery Tour: Ancient EgyptTours: The Great Library of Alexandria: "Euclid (c. 4th-3rd century BCE)"
  34. Discovery Tour: Ancient EgyptTours: The Great Library of Alexandria: "Eratosthenes (c.276-195 BCE)"
  35. Assassin's Creed: MirageDatabase: Seleucia-on-the-Tigris
  36. Assassin's Creed: InitiatesDatabase: Pirates of the Mediterranean
  37. 37.0 37.1 37.2 Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodDatabase: Roma
  38. Discovery Tour: Ancient EgyptTours: Roman Military Equipment: "Adopting the Enemy's Technology"
  39. Assassin's Creed: OriginsThe Good Roman
  40. Assassin's Creed: OriginsAya: Blade of the Goddess
  41. Assassin's Creed: OriginsLast of the Medjay
  42. Assassin's Creed: OriginsFall of an Empire, Rise of Another
  43. Assassin's Creed: Origins (comic)
  44. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaDatabase: Boudicca
  45. 45.0 45.1 Assassin's Creed: ValhallaDatabase: The Hidden Ones
  46. Assassin's Creed IIFloating conversations: Unlocking Monteriggioni's Secrets
  47. 47.0 47.1 47.2 Assassin's Creed: ValhallaA Brief History of the Hidden Ones
  48. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsAnabasis Alexandri
  49. 49.0 49.1 Assassin's Creed IIGlyph #5: "Instrument of Power"
  50. 50.0 50.1 50.2 50.3 Assassin's Creed: RevelationsDatabase: Byzantines
  51. Discovery Tour: Ancient Egypt – The Siege of Alexandria: "Lost Knowledge"
  52. 52.0 52.1 Assassin's Creed: ValhallaDatabase: The Order of the Ancients
  53. Discovery Tour: Ancient EgyptTours: The Great Library of Alexandria: "Hypatia (c. 350/370-415 CE)"
  54. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodDatabase: Porta Salaria
  55. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaThe Swan-Road Home
  56. 56.0 56.1 Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – Sword of the White Horse
  57. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodDatabase: Porta Asinaria
  58. 58.0 58.1 58.2 Assassin's Creed IIDatabase: Venezia
  59. Discovery Tour: Viking AgeLearnings: Bishops: A Divided Duty
  60. Discovery Tour: Viking AgeLearnings: Monasteries: Many Roles
  61. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaDatabase: Saxons
  62. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaDatabase: Picts
  63. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaDatabase: Britons
  64. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaSiege of ParisFrancia
  65. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaViking Expansion notes: Fulke's Journal
  66. 66.0 66.1 Assassin's Creed: RevelationsDigenes Akritas
  67. 67.0 67.1 67.2 67.3 Assassin's Creed (film)
  68. 68.0 68.1 Assassin's Creed: MirageDatabase: The Abbasids ... and their Rivals
  69. Assassin's Creed: MirageDatabase: Baghdadi Exports
  70. 70.0 70.1 Assassin's Creed: MirageDatabase: Translation Movement
  71. Assassin's Creed: MirageDatabase: Papermaking
  72. Assassin's Creed: MirageDatabase: Greeks Bearing Gifts
  73. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaDatabase: Vikings
  74. Assassin's Creed: RogueOtso Berg's Profile: "Lindsifarne"
  75. Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – Blood Brothers
  76. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaWrath of the DruidsDatabase: Bárid mac Ímair
  77. 77.0 77.1 Assassin's Creed: The Golden City
  78. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaWar Weary
  79. 79.0 79.1 79.2 Assassin's Creed: ValhallaThe Last ChapterFare Thee Well, King Fair-Hair
  80. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaTo Serve the Light...
  81. 81.0 81.1 Assassin's Creed: ValhallaThe Poor Fellow-Soldier
  82. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaA Brother's Keeper
  83. Discovery Tour: Viking AgeLearnings: Baptism and Victory
  84. Discovery Tour: Viking AgeLearnings: Christianization
  85. Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – The Hidden Codex
  86. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaWrath of the DruidsDatabase: The Children of Danu
  87. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaWrath of the DruidsA Scourging of Snakes
  88. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaWrath of the DruidsThe Cost of Betrayal
  89. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaThe Siege of ParisDatabase: Bellatores Dei
  90. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaThe Siege of ParisThe Siege of Paris
  91. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaThe Siege of ParisThe Count of Paris
  92. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaThe Siege of ParisMadness of King Charles
  93. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaThe Siege of ParisEivor's letters
  94. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaAssassin's Creed Crossover StoriesWhat Dreams May Come
  95. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaMastery ChallengeThe All-Seeing Eye
  96. Assassin's Creed: ValhallaThe Last ChapterFare Thee Well, My Ravens
  97. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsBibliotheca
  98. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsMission to Constantinople
  99. Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants - Fate of the Gods
  100. Assassin's Creed: InitiatesDatabase: Daring Viking Explorer
  101. Discovery Tour: Viking AgeLearnings: Peacemaking, Peacebreaking
  102. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodDatabase: Napoli
  103. Assassin's Creed: A Walk Through History (1189-1868) – Chapter 1: The Third Crusade – Historical Overview: The Rise of Saladin
  104. Assassin's Creed: Initiates – Timeline
  105. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsAbstergo Files: "File.0.03\Hst_GoldenAge"
  106. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsThe History of the Kings of Britain
  107. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsNibelungenlied
  108. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsHeimskringla
  109. Assassin's Creed: The Secret Crusade
  110. Assassin's Creed: Encyclopedia
  111. Assassin's Creed DNA – Timeline: 1231
  112. Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants – Tomb of the Khan
  113. Assassin's Creed: MemoriesAlexander Nevsky
  114. 114.0 114.1 Assassin's Creed IIPaying Respects
  115. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: Jacques de Molay
  116. Assassin's Creed: UnityThe Tragedy of Jacques de Molay
  117. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsAbstergo Files: "File.0.06\Hst_VoxInExcelso"
  118. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: 21. Medieval
  119. Assassin's Creed: Revelations – Discover Your Legacy – Bloodlines: "Lukas Zurburg"
  120. 120.0 120.1 Assassin's Creed: Heresy
  121. 121.0 121.1 Assassin's Creed: RevelationsDatabase: Ottomans
  122. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsDatabase: Janissaries
  123. Assassin's Creed: RebellionDatabase: Ishak Pasha
  124. Assassin's Creed: RebellionThe Impaler's Tomb
  125. Assassin's Creed: Renaissance
  126. Assassin's Creed: InitiatesDatabase: The Printing Press
  127. Assassin's Creed IIDatabase: Firenze
  128. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodThe Da Vinci DisappearanceDatabase: Hermeticists
  129. Assassin's Creed IIPlay Along
  130. Assassin's Creed IIBattle of ForlìCheccomate
  131. Assassin's Creed DNA – Timeline: 1478
  132. Assassin's Creed DNA – Timeline: 1481
  133. Assassin's Creed DNA – Timeline: 1492
  134. 134.0 134.1 Assassin's Creed II: DiscoveryFind King Muhammad
  135. Assassin's Creed: RebellionThe Forge
  136. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodContracts: "Closure"
  137. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsMediterranean Defense: "Just Following Orders, Part I"
  138. Assassin's Creed IIDatabase: Rodrigo Borgia
  139. Assassin's Creed: IdentityDatabase: War of the League of Cambrai
  140. Assassin's Creed IIBonfire of the VanitiesFlorentine Fiasco
  141. Assassin's Creed IIBonfire of the VanitiesMob Justice
  142. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodDatabase: Cesare Borgia
  143. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodVilified
  144. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodMan of the People
  145. 145.0 145.1 Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodAll Roads Lead To...
  146. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodDatabase: Viana
  147. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodPax Romana
  148. Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood of Venice
  149. Assassin's Creed: Revelations novel
  150. Assassin's Creed: The Last Quest of Leonardo da Vinci
  151. Assassin's Creed IIDatabase: Agostino Barbarigo
  152. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodContracts: "My Enemy's Enemy"
  153. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodContracts: "A Fighting Chance"
  154. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodContracts: "Weeds and Seeds"
  155. 155.0 155.1 Assassin's Creed: RevelationsMediterranean Defense
  156. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsA Warm Welcome
  157. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsDiscovery
  158. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsThe Prisoner
  159. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsEnd of the Road
  160. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsMediterranean Defense: "For The People, Part III"
  161. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsMediterranean Defense: "The Knights, Part III"
  162. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsMediterranean Defense: "Amid The Rubble"
  163. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsMediterranean Defense: "The Demolition Man, Part III"
  164. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsMediterranean Defense: "An Eye For A Helping Hand"
  165. 165.0 165.1 Assassin's Creed: RogueWar Letters: "The Hospitaller's Plea"
  166. Assassin's Creed: UnityBracers of Candia
  167. Discovery Tour: Ancient GreeceThe Akropolis of Athens: "Parthenon Exterior"
  168. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagDatabase: "An English Ship in Action with Barbary Vessels"
  169. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodCopernicus ConspiracyFalse Censorship
  170. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodCopernicus ConspiracyClose the Book
  171. Assassin's Creed: Project LegacyRome: Chapter 3 – Francesco Vecellio – Spacemen
  172. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodCopernicus ConspiracyDatabase: Niccolò Copernico
  173. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagDatabase: "Introductio Geographica"
  174. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodThe Da Vinci DisappearanceA Roll of the Dice
  175. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodThe Da Vinci DisappearanceThe Temple of Pythagoras
  176. Assassin's Creed: Nexus VRMonteriggioni Tunnels
  177. Assassin's Creed: Nexus VRCult of Hermes Reborn
  178. Assassin's Creed: Project LegacyDivine Science: Chapter 1 – Maria Amiel – Descendants
  179. Assassin's Creed: Project LegacyDivine Science: Chapter 1 – Maria Amiel – Book Keeper
  180. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodContracts: "Scapegoats"
  181. Assassin's Creed IIGlyphs #15: "Guardians"
  182. Assassin's Creed: Project LegacyDivine Science: Chapter 3 – Elizabeth Jane Weston – Introduction Video
  183. Assassin's Creed: Project LegacyDivine Science: Chapter 3 – Elizabeth Jane Weston – Wisdom
  184. Assassin's Creed: Project LegacyDivine Science: Chapter 3 – Elizabeth Jane Weston – Wrath
  185. Assassin's Creed DNA – Timeline: 1600
  186. Assassin's Creed DNA – Timeline: 1633
  187. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsAbstergo Files: "File.0.15\Hst_NewOrder"
  188. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagDatabase: "Sacred Theory of the Earth"
  189. Assassin's Creed IIIDatabase: Electrostatic Generator
  190. Assassin's Creed IIIDatabase: Leyden Jar
  191. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: Flying Magnetic Boy Experiments
  192. Assassin's Creed IIIDatabase: Watt Steam Engine
  193. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: Potassium/Water Reaction
  194. Assassin's Creed IIIDatabase: Joseph Priestley's Soda Apparatus
  195. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: Montgolfier Flight
  196. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodContracts: "School Tax"
  197. Assassin's Creed DNA – Timeline: 1517
  198. Assassin's Creed DNA – Timeline: 1558
  199. Assassin's Creed DNA – Timeline: 1559
  200. Assassin's Creed DNA – Timeline: 1563
  201. Assassin's Creed: SyndicateDatabase: St. Paul's Cathedral
  202. Assassin's Creed: SyndicateDatabase: Royal Exchange
  203. 203.0 203.1 Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: Statue of Henri IV
  204. 204.0 204.1 Assassin's Creed DNA – Timeline: 1570-1613
  205. Assassin's Creed: Fragments – The Witches of the Moors
  206. Assassin's Creed IIGlyph #3: Descendants
  207. Assassin's Creed: SyndicateDatabase: 10 Downing Street
  208. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagDatabase: "Crónicas dos Feitos de Guine"
  209. 209.0 209.1 Assassin's Creed: RogueThe Naval Campaign
  210. Assassin's Creed Chronicles: ChinaDatabase: Port of Macau
  211. Assassin's Creed: Forgotten TempleEpisode 41
  212. Philippines on Wikipedia
  213. 213.0 213.1 Assassin's Creed: Memories
  214. Assassin's Creed: ShadowsDatabase: Luis Frois
  215. Assassin's Creed: ShadowsDatabase: Kirishitan
  216. Assassin's Creed: ShadowsDatabase: Rift 2 - The Heart of an Assassin
  217. Assassin's Creed: Fragments – The Blade of Aizu
  218. Assassin's Creed Chronicles: IndiaDatabase: East India Company
  219. 219.0 219.1 Assassin's Creed: Forgotten TempleEpisode 2
  220. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagFreedom CryDatabase: Slavery in Saint-Domingue
  221. Assassin's Creed: InitiatesDatabase: The Man Behind the Name
  222. Assassin's Creed: RevelationsThe Fourth Part of the World
  223. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagDatabase: The Spanish Empire
  224. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagDatabase: The British Empire
  225. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagFreedom CryDatabase: Triangle Trade
  226. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagVainglorious Bastards
  227. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagFreedom CryDatabase: Maroons
  228. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagFreedom CryDatabase: Louis Godin
  229. Assassin's Creed: RogueCold Fire
  230. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagOverrun and Outnumbered
  231. Assassin's Creed: RogueDatabase: Achilles
  232. Assassin's Creed: InitiatesDatabase: Executed After Death
  233. Assassin's Creed: InitiatesDatabase: Stepped Ashore as King
  234. Assassin's Creed: InitiatesDatabase: Monarchy Restored
  235. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: Village de Versailles
  236. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagDatabase: "Harbour Scene at Sunset"
  237. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagDatabase: "Nymphs By A Fountain"
  238. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagDatabase: Violoncello
  239. Assassin's Creed: Initiates – Timeline:1688 – Glorious Revolution
  240. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagThe Observatory
  241. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagDatabase: The Spanish Empire
  242. Assassin's Creed: InitiatesDatabase: Before the Golden Age
  243. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagWe Demand a Parlay
  244. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagDatabase: Woodes Rogers
  245. Assassin's Creed IV: Black FlagEdward Kenway's fleet
  246. Assassin's Creed: SyndicateDatabase: The Assassin Brotherhood
  247. Assassin's Creed: RogueWar Letters: "Lawrence of America"
  248. 248.0 248.1 248.2 Assassin's Creed: Forsaken
  249. Assassin's Creed IIIA Deadly Performance
  250. Assassin's Creed: SyndicateA Spanner in the Works
  251. Assassin's Creed: RogueWar Letters: "The Siege of Louisbourg"
  252. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: Napoleon Bonaparte
  253. Assassin's Creed IIIDatabase: Battle of Fort Necessity
  254. Assassin's Creed: RogueKyrie Eleison
  255. Assassin's Creed: RogueFreewill
  256. Assassin's Creed: RogueKeep Your Friends Close
  257. Assassin's Creed: RogueShay Cormac's fleet
  258. Assassin's Creed: RogueThe Battle of Quiberon Bay
  259. Assassin's Creed: RogueNon Nobis Domine
  260. Who's In Your Blood? – Catherine the Great
  261. Assassin's Creed IIIDatabase: French and Indian War
  262. Assassin's Creed IIIDatabase: Patriots
  263. Assassin's Creed IIIDatabase: Declaration of Independence
  264. Assassin's Creed: RogueDatabase: Benjamin Franklin
  265. Assassin's Creed IIIDatabase: Marquis de Lafayette
  266. Assassin's Creed IIIFloating conversations: George Washington
  267. Assassin's Creed IIIFloating conversations: Jacob Zenger
  268. Assassin's Creed IIIDatabase: Treaty of Paris
  269. Assassin's Creed DNA – Timeline: 1720's
  270. Project Widow – Thinking man's café
  271. Assassin's Creed: UnityEncyclopédie Diderot
  272. Assassin's Creed: BrotherhoodRifts: Cluster 2
  273. 273.0 273.1 Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: King Louis XVI
  274. 274.0 274.1 274.2 Assassin's Creed: UnityThe Temple
  275. Assassin's Creed: UnityThe Estates General
  276. Assassin's Creed: UnityHigh Society
  277. 277.0 277.1 Assassin's Creed: Unity (novel)
  278. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: Estates General of 1789
  279. Assassin's Creed Unity: Abstergo Entertainment – Employee HandbookHistoric Personage Sheets: Mirabeau
  280. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: Storming of the Bastille
  281. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: Women's March on Versailles
  282. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: Journal de Paris 1789
  283. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: Le Patriote 1791
  284. Assassin's Creed DNA – Timeline: 1789
  285. 285.0 285.1 Assassin's Creed: InitiatesEseosa's Codex
  286. Assassin's Creed: UnityThe Food Chain
  287. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: War with Austria
  288. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: 10 August
  289. Assassin's Creed: UnityA Dinner Engagement
  290. Assassin's Creed: UnityThe Execution
  291. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: Marie Antoinette
  292. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: Dauphin Louis-Charles
  293. Assassin's Creed Unity: Abstergo Entertainment – Employee HandbookHistoric Personage Sheets: Robespierre
  294. Assassin's Creed: UnityPolitical Persecution
  295. Assassin's Creed: UnityThe Fall of Robespierre
  296. Assassin's Creed: UnityJacobin Raid
  297. 297.00 297.01 297.02 297.03 297.04 297.05 297.06 297.07 297.08 297.09 Assassin's Creed Unity: Abstergo Entertainment – Employee HandbookHistoric Personage Sheets: Napoleon
  298. Assassin's Creed: UnityDead KingsA Crown of Thorns
  299. Who's In Your Blood?: Napoleon Bonaparte
  300. Assassin's Creed DNA – Timeline: 1808
  301. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: Joachim Murat
  302. Assassin's Creed DNA – Timeline: 1814
  303. Assassin's Creed DNA – Timeline: 1820-1823
  304. Discovery Tour: Ancient GreeceTours: The Battles of Pylos and Sphakteria: The Athenian Fleet Arrives
  305. Assassin's Creed: SyndicateDatabase: Queen Victoria
  306. 306.0 306.1 306.2 306.3 306.4 306.5 Assassin's Creed: The Engine of History – The Magus Conspiracy
  307. Assassin's Creed: SyndicateDatabase: Crimean War
  308. 308.0 308.1 308.2 308.3 Assassin's Creed: The Engine of History – The Resurrection Plot
  309. Assassin's Creed: SyndicateDatabase: Charles Dickens
  310. Assassin's Creed: SyndicateDatabase: Agnes MacBean
  311. 311.0 311.1 Assassin's Creed: SyndicateDatabase: Karl Marx
  312. Assassin's Creed: SyndicateVox Populi
  313. Assassin's Creed: SyndicateA Spanner in the Works
  314. 314.0 314.1 Assassin's Creed: SyndicateA Night to Remember
  315. Assassin's Creed: Underworld
  316. Assassin's Creed: SyndicateSomewhere That's Green
  317. Assassin's Creed: SyndicateFreedom of the Press
  318. Assassin's Creed: SyndicateDatabase: Alexander Graham Bell
  319. Assassin's Creed IIGlyphs #11: The Inventor
  320. Assassin's Creed IIGlyphs #12: Titans of Industry
  321. Assassin's Creed: UnityDatabase: 19. Belle Époque
  322. Assassin's Creed IIGlyphs #8: Martyrs
  323. Assassin's Creed: The FallIssue #1