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Avapithecus — Conquest

#assassin #chackram #creed #empire #india #indian #mahal #mughal #taj #assassinscreed
Published: 2016-12-11 15:21:12 +0000 UTC; Views: 3625; Favourites: 30; Downloads: 0
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The Mughals were Muslims who ruled a powerful empire in India for hundreds of years, beginning when the empire's founder, Babur, defeated the forces of the Delhi Sultanate at the First Battle of Panipat on April 21, 1526.  Now, when the Mughals first took control, India had already been quite chaotic.  The Portuguese Templars had been trying to gain control of Calicut with the help of their friend, Vasco de Gama, who laid siege to the city and tried to expel all Muslims in the area in an effort to murder all the local Assassins.  However, the Assassins ultimately stopped their plans and worked day and night to repair the damage the Templars left on the innocent lives of India.  In came the Mughals, and an unsteady alliance formed between the two groups, the Assassins wanting to repair and unify India out of good will towards others, and the Mughals generally just wanting influence over the land.


Now since Muslims were vastly outnumbered by Hindus in India, the Mughals knew they had to find a way to incorporate both cultures in order to stay in favor.  And while this worked to an extent, the Mughal rulers often had to resort to violence and conquering in order to stay in power.  As you can imagine, the Assassins didn't much like the way the new rulers treated the civilians.  But as I said before, the relationship between the two was complicated.  Babur’s grandson, Akbar, became ruler of the Empire in 1556 and he would hold the position until his death in 1605.  Akbar, despite the nice quote on the picture up there, had a nasty habit of conquering new territories in rather violent ways, like when he crushed the Rajputs in the Battle of Gogunda in 1576.  True, because of him and his policies the Empire grew extremely wealthy and somewhat culturally tolerant, he was the kind of guy who locked up babies and denied them any human contact in the name of pseudo-scientific hypotheses.  That is sadly not a joke.  He actually did that.


Welp, I'll just go ahead and add him to the list of people I would not invite to a party.  Dang this list is getting long


Anyways, at this point, the Assassins pretty much said, “You know what?  Screw you guys.  You all suck.”  And thus devoted their time to keeping the people of India free from Mughal oppression, mostly by assisting in riots and helping citizens step away from being dependant on Mughal policy to survive, much like how the Italian Assassins did to combat the Borgia during the Renaissance.


Shah Jahan, Akbar’s grandson, took the throne in 1628, and under his rule the Empire flourished in architecture.  In the 1650s, he had the Taj Mahal built as a massive tomb for his wife.  But, his projects also drove the Empire into terrible economic struggle since they were so expensive, giving the Assassins yet another mess to clean up.  Things didn't get any better when Shah Jahan’s son, Aurangzeb, took the throne in 1658.  Aurangzeb’s rule was defined by intolerance towards other cultures and an overall sense of unfairness and oppression.  By the end of his rule, the people of India were fed up and thus the Assassins helped them rise in rebellion all across the Empire.  While this didn't end Mughal rule, it certainly made Aurangzeb’s life a royal pain up until his death in 1707.


For the next century, the Mughal Empire just kept going downhill.  Dozens of Emperors tried and failed to gain favor with the local people and rebuild what they had lost, but it never happened.  And once the British East India Company started taking control of the lands in the 1780s, the Mughals were essentially doomed.  By 1857, any traces of the original Empire had been gone for good.  Indians had a new threat to deal with afterwards, but that's a long ways away and we'll get to that when we get to that.


For now, we'll head back to the other side of the world.  All this history of religious intolerance is getting on my nerves, so hopefully the next one will hold something more progressive and nice.  *looks at notes to see what time period is next*


…ah crap...

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Comments: 14

andrewa123 [2018-07-24 23:54:31 +0000 UTC]

this will be an cool interesting setting that i will like to see, but i will say the brotherhood in India seem a bit too harsh with each other, especially what happen to Henry Green on a failed mission that almost got him executed but then again this happen way before Henry green's time so it might explain how they became this way.  

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Avapithecus In reply to andrewa123 [2018-07-25 02:51:13 +0000 UTC]

Maybe lol

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Halkras12 [2017-05-03 19:10:13 +0000 UTC]

cities of spices,colours and freakin BOLYWOOD

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Avapithecus In reply to Halkras12 [2017-05-03 19:15:51 +0000 UTC]

Pretty sure that came way later in history lol XD

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Kimberly-SC [2016-12-21 22:17:33 +0000 UTC]

A wonderful picture, you have put so much details in the building (Taj-Mahal or however it is spelled XD)and the assassin

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Avapithecus In reply to Kimberly-SC [2016-12-21 22:41:48 +0000 UTC]

Thanks so much
Real life buildings are always such a pain to draw XD

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Kimberly-SC In reply to Avapithecus [2016-12-21 22:46:21 +0000 UTC]

No problem
Oh, yes!

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Avapithecus In reply to Kimberly-SC [2016-12-21 22:51:28 +0000 UTC]

>w<

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twinfryes [2016-12-11 19:28:35 +0000 UTC]

YEEEESSSSS, MY DREAM SETTING! Oh god, I so want 17th/18th century India to be an actual setting... It would work so well having the Mughals as Non-Templar enemies for the Assassins, since they were descendants of the Assassin's second most noteworthy enemies, the Mongols. I'd so love to see a Rajput or Marathi Assassin (My Grandad was Maharashtrian ).

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Avapithecus In reply to twinfryes [2016-12-11 19:32:29 +0000 UTC]

It certainly is a time period with a lot of story potential.  It would be a lot of fun to see how they handle using non-Templar enemies as the main villains for a change.  I'd imagine the Assassins probably did still hold a grudge from the Mongol Era XD

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twinfryes In reply to Avapithecus [2016-12-11 19:49:26 +0000 UTC]

Oh Gosh, I'd so love it if they did that. Always pinning the Assassins against the Templars makes it seem like those are their only enemies. There's so much potential in showing their rivalry with the Mongols; it would show that the Assassins have a purpose outside of fighting Templars, and greatly expand the number of stories they could tell. 

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Avapithecus In reply to twinfryes [2016-12-11 19:55:28 +0000 UTC]

It would be super cool ^^ It would certainly build the world much more.  I mean, as much as I love killing Templars, it does get a bit old after a while XD

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twinfryes In reply to Avapithecus [2016-12-11 20:17:15 +0000 UTC]

Yeah! I find the philosophy of Assassin's Creed to be one of the best parts (I mean, the series is literally named for the creed of the assassins), so changing the people they're combating is always a good thing. Pitting the Assassin's morals against the Templars, there's a clear dynamic; Freedom obtained through violence vs. Peace obtained through oppression. Changing the ideology of the enemy would give them a chance to compare and contrast different aspects of the Assassins' ideals... The same goes for the Templars, for that matter, since the Mongols produced a very peaceful empire, i.e., exactly what the Templars want, but did so with a horrifying amount of violence and destruction. The Templars would be left to decide whether the ends justify the means in such a case. Pitting the Assassins against an Public Empire, rather than another secret society, would also be pretty cool.

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Avapithecus In reply to twinfryes [2016-12-11 20:22:38 +0000 UTC]

Exactly!  It would add so much depth to both sides!

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