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  1. Isn’t it essentially because every Assassin (and perhaps a large number of humanity) have some Isu DNA that allow some to perform seemingly super-human feats? Perhaps it’s like Star Wars where near-everyone has some level of The Force, but not many can actually do anything tangibly with it.

  2. Aug 11, 2008 · In his new book, Wolves, Jackals, and Foxes, Kris Hollington argues there are three types of assassins: professionals, amateurs who kill for a cause, and social misfits looking for fame.

  3. Currently, in the AC universe there are the ISU, then standard humans, assassins, sages, and tainted ones (hybrids). All 5 have different properties, these could be both physically and mentally. ISU as we all know are the overlord race, who created humans as slaves and used pieces of Eden to control the humans.

    • Karan Verma
    • The Real-Life Legacy. Not to get into too many technical details, but the book called Alamut inspired the Creed. The novel features the origins of the Assassins, their base fort, and the ultimate leader.
    • The Original Assassins. Nizari Ismailis or Hashashins was the actual name of the Assassins. These Nizari Ismailis were an Islamic order living in different spots beginning during the 1000s.
    • Templars In Real Life. The Templars group formed during the Crusades, as a militia, to sort the conflict about the ownership of the Holy Land. The Templars initially protected the pilgrims who visited their sacred land.
    • Myths from Marco Polo. As is the tradition with most legends, most of it is hyped up due to myths, and the assassin’s Order is not any different. People were spreading rumors about the crusade left, right, and center.
  4. Yes, the Hidden Ones is the origin of the brotherhood proper (with the eagle symbol, the feathers, the creed and the tenets), but the same could almost be said about Altair's mentor-ship. The way he made the Assassins worldwide, in the shadows and learned much more from the Pieces of Eden.

  5. Jan 13, 2024 · Some killed for money, some for their religious beliefs, and some out of loyalty to their nations. From poisoners to zealots, from revolutionaries to outcasts, here are seven of history’s greatest assassins. Or at least the ones we know about.

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  7. In 1167 CE Benjamin of Tudela, a Spanish rabbi, visited Syria on a 13-year journey through the Middle East and Asia. His description of Syria includes what is probably the first European account of a group that would provoke horror and fascination in the West: the Assassins.

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