![assassins creed 2 glyph locations assassins creed 2 glyph locations](https://guides.gamepressure.com/assassinscreedii/gfx/word/454925234.jpg)
Later Athamas, furious due to the disdain that Nephele showed towards him, fell in love with another woman, Ino, with whom he had two children. They had two children, a boy, Phrixus, and a girl, Helle.
![assassins creed 2 glyph locations assassins creed 2 glyph locations](https://www.supercheats.com/guides/files/guid/assassins-creed-ii/venicefeathermap.jpg)
Goddesses and daughter of Zeus (Jupiter). The backstory is about Athamas, son of Aeolus (god of winds) and king of Boeotia, who, on orders of Hera (Juno), married Nephele, one of the cloud
![assassins creed 2 glyph locations assassins creed 2 glyph locations](https://www.cheatcc.com/images/assassins_creed_2_feather_locations_romagna.jpg)
In this case the idea is that the famous "Golden Fleece" is none other than the Piece of Eden that we are analyzing.īefore describing Jason and his relationship with the golden fleece it's necessary to explain how it appeared in the Greek mythology and probably also in the Assassin’s Creed universe. Getting back to the Shroud, and to Glyph 7, the first owner of the artifact was Jason, in Greece, during prehistory (the glyph - and so Clay - doesn’t specify the exact period). For instance, I don't know, the World Tree, Yggdrasil.
![assassins creed 2 glyph locations assassins creed 2 glyph locations](https://www.supercheats.com/guides/files/guid/assassins-creed-ii/tuscanyglyphmap.jpg)
The pieces were once part of a whole", it seems that also all the other Pieces of Eden were once part of a whole, a tree, as previously stated. Similarly, once again according to the glyphs and to what Clay wrote, " The End. She does it again, and then carefully selects a third one."). The only certain, or better confirmed, element is that the Shroud, originally, during the TWCB era, was part of / was hung to a tree,Įxactly like the Apples (at least according to the legends and indirectly to what was shown in the memories of Kyros of Zarax - “ Instead, she plucks a large apple from a nearby branch. What’s more, the tree and the snake are mentioned several times in the glyphs: Adam and Eve's story, the garden of Hesperides, Iðunn's apples (the Norse mythology, to which Iðunn belongs, also features the world tree, Yggdrasil, jealously protected by a snake, Nídhögg), the golden fleece, which is guarded by a dragon (which looks like a snake, as you can see from the image of the glyph), Sigmund who pulls the sword out from a tree, exactly like Arthur and the sword in the stone, the snake god Quetzalcoatl and many others. The tree and the snake are a clear reference to Adam and Eve, but here the snake guards the tree and so it may have a positive value, in contrast with the negative significance that it has in the biblical text. The clue by Subject 16 is cryptic from the start, because it speaks of the Shroud as something that, aside from performing miracles (for instance the “resurrection” of Jesus), at the beginning was hanging from a tree guarded by a snake. The minigame from Glyph 7 - Source: AC Wiki Our sources mainly are Glyph 7 in Assassin's Creed II, Project Legacy and Initiates but, as you’ll see, we won’t limit ourselves to those ones. Its mention in the Evie Frye demo at Gamescom and the fact that it will be an essential part of the plot dedicated to the female protagonist of Assassin’s Creed Syndicate, as mentioned in our interview with Game Director Scott Philips, brought back to the fore this almost forgotten artifact and, at least at first glance, I can’t help but be happy.įor this reason, and also to get ready for what we might expect in Syndicate, this article is dedicated to showing the story of the Shroud in Assassin's Creed, from the myth to the present day. The Piece of Eden #66 (or #36 in the French version of Assassin's Creed II), namely the Shroud of Eden, is probably one of the artifacts created by Those Who Came Before with the highest number of information about its story and various owners (second only maybe to Ezio's Apple, which was shown in the game dedicated to the Florentine Assassin and in Assassin's Creed III). DISCLAIMER: Just in case we need to mention it, considering the subject of this article, all the arguments, suppositions, theories etc… that can be found in here concern exclusively the plot of Assassin's Creed and don't have to be considered as religious opinions.