Assassin's Creed : Origins | #17 - "End Of The Snake"
Eudoros (c. 100s BCE – 48 BCE), also known as the Hippo, was a Greek scribe who served in the royal court of pharaoh Ptolemy XIII. He was also a member of the Order of the Ancients who sought to manipulate the young pharaoh for their own gain.
At some point in 48 BCE, Eudoros sought to promote himself further by publishing a scientific treatise on the Nile. Unbeknownst to all, his work was, in fact, plagiarized from the famed intellectual Aristo of Alexandria. Aristo sued him in court, and after months of pointless arguing, Eudoros finally used his influence to have the case settled in his favor. Aristo was then arrested by the phylakitai and condemned to public humiliation by being driven through the streets in a cage until he finally escaped and fled Egypt.
That same year, Eudoros wrote a letter to Medunamun, a fellow member known as "The Ibis", informing him to remain vigilant due to recent deaths of Rudjek, Actaeon, and Ktesos. Eudoros kept these letters in his office at the Ptolemaic Royal Palace, and they were eventually found by the Medjay Bayek of Siwa, who later infiltrated the bathhouse that Eudoros was in and killed him with the Hidden Blade. The incident cost Bayek his ring finger during a brief struggle between the two. As Eudoros laid dying, Bayek accused him of being the Snake, who was responsible for his son Khemu's death, but Eudoros told him he had nothing to do with what happened in Siwa and taunted that the Snake could never die.
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