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The following is a list of assassins with short comments on the assassination(s) that made them famous. It also contains some individuals who were famously suspected, but then acquitted, of particular assassinations.See also:
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z __NOTOC__
- (name?) - assassin of Alejandro Gonzalez Malave
- (name?) - assassin of Carthaginian general Hasdrubal
- ("three black Africans and an Arab") – assassins of Zanzibar's leader sheik Abeid Karume
- (a tank corps major) - assassin of Ngo Dinh Diem
- (name?) - assassin of Waclaw III king of Bohemia, Poland and Hungary.
- (name?) - assassin of Vlad Tepes
- (name?) - assassin of Vlad II DraculVlad II, Dracul (c. 1390 1447) was a ruler of Wallachia (located in present day Romania) from 1436 to 1442 and again from 1443 to 1447. He was a member of the royal House of Basarab and son of Mircea cel Batran. The ruler of Wallachia was officially a vas, father of Vlad Tepes
- (a Christian slave) - assassin of ZengiImad ad-Din Zengi (also Zangi or Zengui ( 1087- 1146) was the son of Aq Sunqur al-Hajib, governor of Aleppo under Malik Shah I. He became atabeg of Mosul in 1127, and of Aleppo in 1128, uniting the two cities under his personal rule, and was the founder o
- (an anonymous HashshashinThe Hashshashin (also Hashishim , or Assassins were a religious group (some would say, a cult) of Ismaili Muslims (from the Nizari sub-sect) with a militant basis, thought to be active in the 8th to 14th (?) centuries as a group of brigands on the medieva) - assassin of Conrad of MontferratConrad of Montferrat was one of the major participants in the Third Crusade, and was briefly king of Jerusalem in 1192. Conrad had fought as an ally of Isaac II Angelus of Byzantium, and was married to Isaac's daughter Theodora. However, the Greeks were s
- (a Persian slave) - assassin of Umar ibn al-KhattabUmar ibn al-Khattab, al-Farooq (in Arabic, ) (c. 581 November, 644), sometimes referred to as Umar Farooq or just as Omar or Umar was the second caliph of Islam and one of the first four caliphs, also referred to as the Khulfa-e-Rashidun (or "Rightly Guid
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