Sir Guy of
Gisbourne. A Medieval Assassin.
In early legends of Robin Hood, Guy of Gisbourne is an assassin who
tries to kill Robin, only for Robin to kill him. In these accounts, Guy is
depicted wearing a robe made of horse hide, “topp and tayll and mayne.” So very distinctive! As horse leather is also tough
and hard-wearing, an assassin out in all weathers would find it useful.
In later stories, Guy is shown as keen to woo and win Maid Marian, but it is the assassin aspect of his character that intrigues me. In the west, the most famous assassins were those of the order of assassins, the Hashishiyun. Founded in the late eleventh century by the Persian Hasan as-Sabah, the order of the assassins soon became notorious for their obedience to their master and their deterination to kill their opponents, whatever the personal cost. It was believed that to aid their goals, the assassins would use drugs such as hashish (cannabis) to make them utterly fearless and ruthless.
The Assassins were Shia Muslims and many of their
killings took place within the Islamic kingdom to remove political and
religious enemies. From his stronghold in Alamut Castle in Persia (Iran) the
Grand Master of the Order, who became known as The Old Man of the Mountain,
sent out his deadly emissaries. They killed by dagger, poison or arrows and
murdered many men, including three caliphs and the King of Jerusalem, Conrad of
Montferrat. Saladin, the Kurdish Sunni who fought against the crusaders, was
twice targeted by the Assassins, who failed each time. After the second
attempt, the Old Man of the Mountain and Saladin appear to have come to terms.
Nevertheless, the Assassins were feared. As an
unknown poet of the middle ages said, “By a single warrior on foot, a king may
be struck with terror, though he may own more than 100,000 horsemen.”
I have an assassination attempt in my romance, “The
Snow Bride,” and have included an excerpt.
Excerpt.
He heard a faint click and creak behind him and
knew at once it was a bow and arrow being readied and aimed. There was no game
in the wastes and thickets of hazel ahead, so he must be the target.
Before he completed his conscious thought, he had
reacted, dragging his left foot out of its stirrup and head-butting down into
the snow, not considering the speed of his cantering horse or where he might
land. Snow-crusted brambles snagged and broke his fall, and as he urged his
flailing limbs to roll away, he felt the vane of the arrow score the top of his
shoulder, where the middle of his back would have been.
“Magnus’s! Areee yeee weeeeelllll?”
Gregory Denzil’s question crawled from his mouth as
the world about Magnus slowed into thick honey. As his jaw crunched against a
branch and threatened to loosen more teeth, he felt a trickle of blood run into
his eye.
He compelled his sluggish body to sit up, a devil
caught in a thicket. He knew he would make that picture, and he grinned,
raising an arm to his men and yelling, “Hola! What a ride!”
Denzil and his mob nudged their horses closer. Mark
had already leapt from his own with his hunting spear aimed at Denzil's throat.
Magnus stood up, cursing with all the oaths of Outremer he could remember, and
looked around him. His own men were honestly puzzled, while Denzil's wore
expressions of studied innocence.
“Not a good time for archery practice,” he said. All
good fun, all men together.
Denzil smiled thinly. “A fool, too eager for
sport.”
“Indeed.” As an assassination attempt, Magnus rated
it as poor to moderate, but Gregory Denzil had always been lazy. And in the
clustered mass of hunters, he saw no skinny stranger with distinctive rings.
“Time to go on?” he asked, knowing if he suggested
it, Denzil would say the opposite, which he did.
“We go back.”
The Snow Bride: To buy on Amazon https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07VSHHX4N
Fascinating history of assassins there, and hard to believe that medieval royalty didn't have their own versions, even if less formally organised. Great excerpt.
ReplyDeleteAssassins by the nature of their occupation are secretive and when any information shows up, well, I'm totally interested. Thank you for this insight. Doris
ReplyDelete