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User:Sol Pacificus/Odyssey canon

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Timeline[edit | edit source]

Novel[edit | edit source]

Exact years are never given, only a sequence of seasons.

  • Winter 451 BCE – Kassandra and Alexios are thrown off Mt. Taygetos[1]
  • Spring 431|430 BCE[2] – Kephallonia (Peloponnesian War is known to have already started[3])
  • Spring to Summer (at least 1 month) – Megaris
  • June 431|430 BCE– Kirrha, Kassandra kills Elpenor (1/44)
  • Summer 431|430 BCE– Delphi, Deimos kills Epiktetos (2/44)
  • Summer 431|430 BCE– Thermopylae (after sailing all the way around Greece from Kirrha)
  • Summer 431|430 BCE– Athens 1st time
    • Kassandra escapes from Hermippos at the symposium. Hermippos & 4 other Cultists give chase on ships but are destroyed by the Adrestia. (7/44)
  • Summer 431|430 BCE– Argos
    • Kassandra kills 2 Cultists about to murder Hippokrates. (9/44)
  • Autumn 431|430 BCE– Korinth
  • Winter 431|430 BCE – Kassandra scours the Cyclades but fails to find her mother (Xenia is cut from the book)
  • Summer 430|429 BCE – return to Athens in the midst of the Plague, Perikles is already dying but gets assassinated.

1 year later...

  • Summer 429|428 BCE – Kassandra reunites with Myrinne in Naxos
  • Autumn 429|428 BCE – Return to Sparta
  • Winter 429|428 BCE – Kassandra trains Testikles
  • Spring (4 years since the war began) 428/427 BCE – Kassandra in Boeotia, Myrinne & Brasidas deal with Lagos in Arkadia

After Myrinne kills Lagos, only 6 Cultists remain, including Pausanias and Kleon but excluding Deimos and Aspasia.

  • Spring or Summer 428/427 BCE – Pausanias is exposed as a Cultist and "killed" off-screen
  • Autumn 428|427 BCE – Kassandra trains Testikles
  • Winter 428|427 BCE – Kassandra trains Testikles
  • Spring 427|426 BCE – Brasidas marches off to Pylos while Kassandra and Testikles sails to Elis
  • Summer 427|426 BCE – Kassandra at the Olympics, Brasidas trapped on Sphacteria, Kassandra goes to rescue him upon being done with the Olympics
  • Autumn 427|426 BCE – Kassandra and other Spartan POWs are transported across Greece to Athens
  • Winter 427|426 BCE – Kassandra in jail
  • Spring 426|425 BCE – Kassandra in jail

"As the seasons wore on, through heat and cold..." (It is not entirely certain that the following summer is in the same year.)

  • Summer 426|425 BCE – Kassandra escapes
  • Summer 426|425 BCE – Battle of Amphipolis
  • August 426|425 BCE – Kassandra returns to Sparta
  • Late autumn 426|425 BCE – Kassandra kills Deimos.

Myrinne only tells Kassandra to find Pythagoras after Deimos dies.

  • Spring 425|424 BCE – Kassandra goes to Thera for the first time and meets Pythagoras
  • Summer 425|424 BCE – Kassandra returns to the Cave of Gaia and discovers Aspasia is the last Cultist.

Events that are said to have happened while Kassandra was in jail:

  • Athens destroys Melos – historically occurred in 416 BCE, although Athens did raid Melos c. 426 BCE, they did not destroy its city as Kleon says they did
  • Athens defeats Aeginians
  • Athens conquered Kythera – historically 426 BCE
  • Battle of Delium – historically 424 BCE
  • Capture of Amphipolis by Spartans – historically 424–423 BCE
  • Thucydides was exiled for his failure to prevent the fall of Amphipolis to Sparta
  • Kassandra's crew kills 4 out of the last 5 Cultists (excluding Deimos and Aspasia, "last one" being Kleon) without her

Of particular note is that both the game and the novel bring up the Mytilenean revolt, and Kleon plotting to get the Athenians to vote on massacring the Mytilenians as though this is just about to happen when Kassandra escapes from jail. Historically, this occurred in 427 BCE, before the Battle of Pylos.

History[edit | edit source]

  • March 431 BCE – The Peloponnesian War begins with an attempted coup of Plataea by pro-Spartan Thebans.[4]
  • May 431 BCE – Sparta invades Attica and besieges the Athenians who shut themselves in within the Long Walls per Perikles' strategy.[4]
  • Autumn 431 BCE –
    • Perikles sends a fleet of ships raid Epidauros, Ermioni, and Methoni. It continues around the Peloponnese to capture Kephallonia. Athens seizes control of the seas around the Peloponnese.[5]
    • A smaller fleet captures Naupactus, defeating the Korinthians at sea.[5]
    • Perikles invades Megaris with 10,000 hoplites and 3,000 metics.[5]
  • Winter 431 BCE – Perikles gives his famous Funeral Oration.[5]
  • 430 BCE – Plague of Athens[6]
  • Summer 429 BCE – Sparta invades Plataea in retaliation for the failed Theban coup, beginning a 2-year siege.[5]
  • 429 BCE – Perikles perishes in the Plague of Athens.[5]
  • 428 BCE -
    • Olympics
    • Mytilene revolts against Athens, believing that they are about to collapse from the plague. They secede from the Delian League and hope to unite Lesbos under their control. Athens blockade Mytilene.[5]
  • Summer 427 BCE – Plataea surrenders to Sparta. The Thebans burn the city to the ground.[5]
  • 427 BCE –
    • Spartan reinforcements arrive too late to assist Mytilene. Athenians debate on massacring the Mytilenians.[5] Kleon vehemently pushes for massacre.
  • 426 BCE – Athens raid Melos
  • 426 BCE – Athens conquer Kythera
  • 425 BCE – Battles of Pylos and Sphacteria
  • 424 BCE – Battle of Delium
  • 424-423 BCE – Sparta captures Amphipolis
  • 422 BCE – Battle of Amphipolis, deaths of Kleon and Brasidas
  • 416 BCE – Athens destroy Melos

Game[edit | edit source]

  • 431 BCE – Start of the story
  • Myrinne asks Kassandra to visit Pythagoras before returning to Sparta.

Order as implied by level:

  • Kephallonia (1–5)
  • Megaris (6–9)
  • Phokis (9–13)
  • Lokris (12–14)
  • Malis (12–14)
  • Euboea (12–16)
  • Skyros (12–16)
  • Andros (13)
  • Makeonia (14–42)
  • Attika (15–19)
  • Keos (17–19)
  • Lestris (17–19)
  • Seriphos (17–19)
  • Melos (18–20)
  • Hydrea (18–20)
  • Argolis (18–22)
  • Korinthia (19–23)
  • Naxos (22–26)
  • Paros (23–24)
  • Delos (25–29)
  • Mykonos (25–29)
  • Pephka (26–30)
  • Samos (26–31)
  • Kos (26–31)
  • Anaphi (27)
  • Thera (27)
  • Messara (28–33)
  • Lakonia (32–36)
  • Arkadia (33–37)
  • Boeotia (34–38)
  • Elis (34–38)
  • Messenia (35–39)
  • Kythera (35–39)
  • Achaia (42–46)
  • Lemnos (42–48)
  • Thasos (42–48)
  • Lesbos (46–50)
  • Chios (46–50)

Game guide suggests an order of Keos > Argos > Korinth Game guide suggests an order of Arkadia > Boeotia > Elis

Cyfiero[edit | edit source]

431 BCE[edit | edit source]

  • Spring – Kephallonia
  • Autumn – Megaris

430 BCE[edit | edit source]

  • Summer –
    • Kirrha, Kassandra assassinates Elpenor. (1/44)
    • Delphi, Cultist of Kosmos meeting, Deimos executes Epiktetos. (2/44)
    • Kassandra sails to Thermopylae, docking at Lokris.
    • Thermopylae
    • Kassandra makes a detour to assassinate Zoisme in Malis. (3/44)
    • Euboea, Kassanndra assassinates Skylax the Fair and The Centaur of Euboea (5/44)
    • Andros, Kassandra assassinates Asterion and The Chimera (7/44)
    • On the way to Athens, Kassandra stops at the Temple of Poseidon in Sounion to assassinate Okytos the Great. (8/44)
    • Kassandra visits Athens for the first time to meet Perikles.
    • Kassandra assassinates The Master and Hermippos. (10/44)
    • As she leaves Athens, Kassandra makes a brief detour to assassinate Brison in Salamis and Sotera at the Port of Nisaia. (12/44)
  • Late summer – Keos, Kassandra assassinates Harpalos. (13/44)
  • Autumn – Argos, Kassandra assassinates Midas and Chrysis. (15/44)
  • Winter – Korinth, Kassandra assassinates The Monger. (16/44)
  • If Kassandra did not take the detour to Nisaia to assassinate Sotera earlier, she assassinates Sotera on the way back from Korinth by land.

References[edit | edit source]

  1. Assassin's Creed: Odyssey – Prologue
  2. "Twenty years was enough for one to forget their debt..." (pp. 9)
  3. pp. 10
  4. 4.0 4.1 Gee, Lisa; Horne, Alastair; and Woolf Alex. (2019). "The Start of Hostilities". In The Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece. Edited by Carlos Gómez. London: Amber Books, pp. 294–307.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 5.8 Gee, Lisa; Horne, Alastair; and Woolf Alex. (2019). "The Endless Conflict". In The Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece. Edited by Carlos Gómez. London: Amber Books, pp. 308–329.
  6. Peloponnesian War on Wikipedia