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This scene comes from Niccolò Machiavelli's account of the event. In his political book 'Discorsi sulla prima Deca di Tito Livio' (Discourses on the first Ten of Titus Livy) he wrote: "E per mostrare che de' suoi figliuoli non si curava, mostrò loro le membra genitali, dicendo che aveva ancora il modo a rifarne" which roughly translated in English is: "And in order to show that she didn't care about her sons, she show them [the besiegers] her genitals saying that she had the way to make other children". In another Machiavelli's book, called Istorie Fiorentine (Florentine Histories), he mentions the quote without mentioning the skirt lifting. However, Machiavelli is the only contemporary source that tells it that way. Some accounts tell that she said she didn't care about her hostage sons because her eldest son was in Milan and she was also pregnant and these two sons were enough for her. These accounts don't mention any genital show. Most accounts don't mention any answer at all. Even if we can't say with certainty that the actual historical Caterina Sforza didn't act like this scene in AC, most probably Machiavelli fabricated this story. What all accounts agree on is that Caterina fought bravely, leading the defense sword in in hand. She was a real badass and she was nicknamed The Lioness of Romagna. (I've decided to modify the comment because it wasn't clear enough and I feared it would spread historical misinformation) TL;DR: This scene was inspired by Machiavelli's account of the event. But he was the only contemporary source to tell it that way. Most probably it's just a folktale.
The fact that she uses "instrument", which is typically used to describe the male component is such a power move. She not only shut down his threat, but immasculated him in the process. Well played Caterina, well played. A flawless bluff.
@@hippokrates4494 It's a historical figure and a videogame character. How? Literally how? Admiration and simpery aren't the same thing you knob. Simpery as far as I know would involve monetary gifting, excessive attention seeking, and unwarranted/unwanted advances, all of which are impossible. Learn what an insult means before using it fukwit.
@@armandowillem Lol she is literally calling herself an o' bject. And showing off her instrument, which men use to get babies. Effectively o ' bjectifying herself. well played woman. u literally called urself, what men consider u anyways. An instrument for babies 🤣
@@bigmonke7661 boi it's mythology you can't go back to all these ancient times and not have mythology and they still do a good job for example assassins creed odyssey's sea shanties are in perfect ancient Greek
@@flamewolf552 I have no problem with mythology as their is a large ahistorical part of assassins creed like the first civilization however I’m not talking about the mythology or the changing history so it will be more fun or to fit a large time period in a short game I’m talking straight up didn’t exist or making shit up
@WillWest-il2mw nope it assassin's creed 2 Since I remember etzeo didn't have a beard this time. Also cuz I been replaying all assassin's creed games right now.
I'm not sure, showing off ur "instrument" and being a garden tool is brave. I'm sure a lot of guys, would be happy for sure😋 and the only guys humbled, would be their dad 🤣.
@@blursedfly3504I'm not sure she knows what humbled means. maybe she needs to show her instrument in real life, and let the reaction from every guy humble her. 😂🤣
@@SyamDaRos-EndoManno If pursued by a predator, Quokkas will loosen their pouch muscles and drop their baby, which will kick and scream and draw the predator’s attention. This works because the quokka can always make more children if it is left alive, while if the predator caught it both it and the child would die.