New Delhi: The word "assassin" denotes a mysterious figure in the shadows, bent on murder for purely political reasons rather than for love or money.
Amazingly the usage hasn't changed too much since the eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth centuries, when the Assassins of Persia struck fear (and daggers) into the hearts of the region's political and religious leaders.
The Hashshashin, or Nizari, were a mysterious band of Muslim assassins that operated in the Middle East during the 13th century.
The group was made up of Shia Muslims who broke off from a bigger sect and banded together in order to establish a utopian Shi'ite state.