On April 22nd, 1806, the Colonial brigantine named 'Venus', which was owned by Templar Robert Campbell and under the command of the Templar-affiliated Captain, Samuel Chase, rested at anchor at Twofold Bay, Port Dalrymple, on the northern coast of Tasmania, Australia. Opposing colonial Templar rule and occupation, the New Zealand Brotherhood has been associated with numerous key events, from encouraging foreigner-Maori relations and immigration, to the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840, vigorous participation in the 30 year Land Wars, and ultimately, empowering the country to attain full independence from Britain in 1947.Īn exceptional mutiny of a wayward crew, a couple of damsels, a cunning first mate, and a company of convicted criminals would ultimately form the foundation of the modern-day New Zealand Brotherhood bred from a unique and unlikely origin. Over the course of 200 years, the guild has been influential in a variety of phases in the history of New Zealand. Fortunately, in 1872, the branch was reorganized by emissaries of the British Brotherhood, instilling traditional Assassin ideals, intentions, and practices within the New Zealand branch while preserving their original conceptions. The founder members, though Assassin affiliates, had no true knowledge of how the creed was originally operated and had invented their own concepts as they lived. This Assassin Brotherhood branch is unique and unconventional when compared to other, more organized orders of the creed, as they were established through non-traditional means, built upon through appropriation and misinterpretation. Founded in 1806 by Charlotte Badger, John O'Reilly and Catherine Hagerty, all former pirates and criminals, they escaped to uncharted lands in search of freedom and liberty. The New Zealand Brotherhood of Assassins, originally the Aoteaharakore, is the branch of the Assassin Brotherhood that operates in and around New Zealand.
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