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Hogwarts houses

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In the Harry Potter series, Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry is divided into four houses, each bearing the last name of its founder: Godric Gryffindor, Salazar Slytherin, Rowena Ravenclaw and Helga Hufflepuff. The houses compete throughout the school year, by earning and losing points for various events, for the House Cup. Each house also has its own Quidditch team that competes for the Quidditch Cup. These two competitions breed rivalries between the houses, the greatest of which is that between Gryffindor and Slytherin. Houses at Hogwarts are the living and learning communities for its students. Each year group of a certain house shares the same dormitory and classes. The dormitory and common room of a House are, barring rare exceptions, inaccessible to students belonging to other Houses.

House system

The house system is not unique to Hogwarts as it is a feature of many real schools in some English-speaking countries today. As with many other features of Hogwarts, J.K Rowling has adapted features of real-world boarding schools to add verisimilitude to the Harry Potter universe. House rivalries, separate dormitories, and the point system are all features of the real house system. The house system at Hogwarts may, within the timeline of the books, pre-date the earliest house system in the real world. The house system is also used in a number of Ivy League universities, most notably Yale (which uses the term "residential colleges") and Harvard.

Sorting

In early day of Hogwarts, the four founders handpicked students for their Houses. When the founders worried how students would be selected after their deaths, Godric Gryffindor took his hat off and each "put some brains" in it, allowing The Sorting Hat to choose students. Now, at the beginning of each school year, the magical Sorting Hat is placed on each new student's head, during the Sorting Ceremony. The Sorting Hat announces the house the student is bound to join. Before beginning the Sorting ceremony, it sings a short song about the founding of the school and the four houses; The Sorting Hat's songs are different every year, and the Hat is said to take all year composing the next one (according to Ron Weasley, at least). The songs tend to give advice in troubled times.Template:HP5

The Hat sorts by judging each student's qualities and placing them in the most appropriate house. The student's own choices may affect the decision: the clearest example is the Hat telling Harry Potter that he would do well in Slytherin in the first book, but ultimately selecting Gryffindor after Harry asks it not to put him in Slytherin. Another example is in the fifth book when Hermione Granger states that The Sorting Hat considered sorting her into Ravenclaw, but after she clearly stated in a previous chapter that she wanted to be in Gryffindor, her choice probably ultimately overrides The Sorting Hat, resulting in her placement into Gryffindor. Albus Dumbledore later explains to Harry that this is how it should be, when one considers how a person's choices define them more than their abilities. It is in fact likely that the Hat selects houses according to the predetermined decisions of an informed student, and only genuinely selects those who have no preconceptions or expectations (according to Horace Slughorn, house affiliations tend to run in families, and it is notable that Ron Weasley could not consider being in any house other than that which every other member of his family had been in; however, when Harry mentions this, Hermione points out that Parvati Patil and Padma Patil, who are twins, are sorted differently, into Gryffindor and Ravenclaw, respectively). For example, every member of the Black family had been sorted into Slytherin, with Sirius Black being the sole exception, which was remarked upon by Slughorn, its Head. On the other hand, many House members appear to share common traits: it is unknown if these are present before Sorting and used as criteria, or if they are inculcated into students through their presence in the House.

The hat does not just consider the student's most obvious strengths; it also sees a student's potential qualities. "You could be great you know, it's all here in your head, and Slytherin will help you on the way to greatness", it says to Harry when it suggests Slytherin as the best house for his future. Similarly, Hermione and Neville Longbottom do not immediately jump out as prime examples of Gryffindor courage in the beginning of the series, but they have both gained a tremendous amount of courage as they have grown. Hermione is even asked point-blank in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix why the Hat did not put her in Ravenclaw, considering her intelligence. Her answer is that the Hat "considered it, but decided on Gryffindor in the end" after she insisted on it which could mean that the student's own wishes are the determining factor in most sorts (notably, she wanted to be in Gryffindor before even arriving at the school). Similarly, Neville may have a number of qualities suggestive of Hufflepuff, yet was sorted into Gryffindor. Interestingly, in the final novel of the series, Dumbledore notes that Snape is braver than most men are, and that perhaps Hogwarts sorts too early. Another point of interest is that Peter Pettigrew, who is frequently remarked as being cowardly and following others rather than acting on his own, was sorted into Gryffindor, where bravery is the main attribute of its students.

House dynamics

The four houses are rather separate entities. Each has its own common room and dormitory, its own table in the Great Hall, and students mostly share lessons with classmates of their same house. There is no rule against students from different houses mingling, but in practice, a good majority of social interactions occur within the same house. Each house has one teacher who acts as its Head of House, along with its own ghost. Both Head of House and house ghost were previously pupils within that house.

A great deal of rivalry exists between the houses. This rivalry is demonstrated in the Quidditch matches and the annual school competition for the House Cup, which is determined by the number of points earned or lost by each member of the rival houses. These points are awarded or taken based on students' conduct throughout the school year. All members of the faculty have the authority to grant and deduct points as they see fit in each instance.[1] Some, like Severus Snape, the former Potions master, tend to favour their own house, but that does not seem to be against the rules. He is despised by many students, other than those in Slytherin, where he is very popular. It is unknown how much favouritism the Hufflepuff and Ravenclaw Heads show, although it can be deduced that it is minimal or non-existent, as both Professor Filius Flitwick (Ravenclaw) and Professor Pomona Sprout (Hufflepuff) are kind, light-hearted people, who obviously want to win the House and Quidditch Cups but are not as vindictive as Snape in going about it. It is known that Professor Minerva McGonagall, the stern head of Gryffindor, does not show much favouritism towards her house. In fact, she deducted 50 points apiece and awarded detentions to three students in her house (Harry Potter, Hermione Granger, and Neville Longbottom) when they were caught out of bed after hours in the first book (Ronald Weasley in the movie version), and supported Professor Snape wholeheartedly in giving Harry detentions for the rest of the school year, even on overlapping Quidditch matches, after Harry used the Sectumsempra spell on Draco Malfoy in book six.

According to Rubeus Hagrid, "every wizard that's ever gone bad was in Slytherin." While this appears to be a general rule, there are exceptions; Peter Pettigrew, for example, was from Gryffindor yet betrayed the Potters to Voldemort. Hagrid's statement here is also interesting, as at that time, Sirius Black, an ex-Gryffindor student, was thought to have been a Dark wizard. However, it is possible that Hagrid was unaware of this, given his friendly attitude towards Sirius when he loaned him his flying motorcycle. None of this necessarily means, however, that all Slytherins are evil. For example, Horace Slughorn has been a loyal friend of Albus Dumbledore and has helped him on different occasions. Both Severus Snape and Regulus Black were Slytherins, and both died in fighting Voldemort. Slytherins are chosen for their cunning and pure-blood heritage (although blood purity does not appear to be essential - Lord Voldemort and Snape were half-bloods, though Voldemort certainly is prejudiced). It has also been said that all four houses must band together and fight as one if Hogwarts is to stand. It must be remembered that all of the Houses have their virtues and flaws: none are inherently good or evil. Slytherins may have earned their reputation as evil because they show such contempt towards Gryffindor, the protagonist house. They also do not show much generosity towards other houses either, whether those in them are pure-blood or not.

House rivalry is most seen between Slytherin and Gryffindor ("Gryffindor and Slytherin students loathed each other on principle"Template:HP6). This rivalry likely goes back to the days of Godric Gryffindor and Salazar Slytherin after they founded Hogwarts, because the Sorting Hat said that they were the best of friends before they founded the school.Template:HP5 While it is not clear if there is a similar rivalry between Ravenclaw and Hufflepuff, it seems very much unlikely due to the cheerful disposition of the Heads for said Houses, as opposed to the contempt of Professor Snape and the passion of Professor McGonagall (Rowena Ravenclaw and Helga Hufflepuff, however, once great friends, are documented as having had a severe falling out at some point by the Sorting Hat's song in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix)[citation needed].

Usually, though not always, the other two houses appear (in Harry's eyes) to support Gryffindor in its rivalry with Slytherin, which again is reminiscent of how Slytherin was in the end opposed by all three other Founders. Dumbledore's Army is a representation of the unity between these three houses, as all of its members are Gryffindors, Ravenclaws, and Hufflepuffs. There are no Slytherin members. However, one exception to this occurred when Ravenclaw, Hufflepuff, and Slytherin all initially supported Hufflepuff's Cedric Diggory instead of Gryffindor's Harry Potter in the Triwizard Tournament.Template:HP4 Also in the first Quidditch match of book 6, it is said that many of the Hufflepuffs and Ravenclaws had "taken sides" in the Gryffindor vs. Slytherin match, but does not specify which Houses took which side (due to the nature of previous books however, it is likely that they chose Gryffindor over Slytherin).

Before the final Battle of Hogwarts, Hufflepuff and Ravenclaw join Gryffindor in defending Harry Potter against Slytherins willing to turn Harry in to Lord Voldemort. After Slytherin Pansy Parkinson screams for someone to "grab Harry Potter", students from the other three houses rise in a "massive movement" and stand facing the Slytherins with their wands drawn. In addition, when the school is evacuated, seventh-year students are given the option of staying to fight; many Ravenclaws, even more Hufflepuffs, and nearly half of all Gryffindors (including several underage students who need to be forcibly evacuated by McGonagall) remain, but all of the Slytherins leave; Voldemort later remarks that several of them have even joined their parents on his side. Only Slughorn helps defend the school in the final battle, rallying the citizens of Hogsmeade Village to join the fight and eventually duelling Voldemort himself,Template:HP7 but even his loyalties are initially called into question by McGonagall.

The Slytherin students' unwillingness to stand with their schoolmates and defend Hogwarts against Voldemort seems to go against the Sorting Hat's warning that the school could only survive if the four houses stood united. When Harry visits the headmaster's office following the battle, however, Phineas Nigellus Black seems proud of Slytherin's "contribution." This seems to indicate that despite Dumbledore's seeming assertion that the courage Snape displayed by acting as a double agent for the Order of the Phoenix indicated a courage more befitting Gryffindor house (wondering whether Hogwarts "sort(s) too soon"), his sacrifice went a long way towards redeeming his former house's standing in the school's history. Still, one has to wonder how meaningful this "uniting" of the houses really is when one considers that not a single Slytherin student chose to fight for the school rather than save themselves.

Each of the four Hogwarts houses has its own Quidditch team. In the first book, Ravenclaw wins the Quidditch final. In the second book, the tournament is not finished due to the opening of the Chamber of Secrets. In the third, fifth, and sixth books, Gryffindor wins the Quidditch finals. Quidditch is not played in the fourth book because of the Triwizard Tournament.

The Houses of Hogwarts

Gryffindor

Gryffindor crest
Gryffindor crest

Gryffindor values courage and chivalry above all else. Its animal is the lion, and its colours are scarlet and gold. Nearly Headless Nick is the house ghost. According to Rowling, Gryffindor corresponds roughly to the element of fire. The founder of the house is Godric Gryffindor. To emphasise the House's affiliation with fire, Gryffindor alumni like Albus Dumbledore and Minerva McGonagall, seem to prefer fire as their weapon of choice.

Located in one of the castle's highest towers, the entrance to which is located on the seventh floor and is guarded by a painting of the Fat Lady, who is garbed in a pink dress. She permits entry only after being given the correct password.

The current Head of Gryffindor House is Professor Minerva McGonagall.

A few notable Gryffindors (for a complete list, see List of characters in the Harry Potter books):

Hufflepuff

File:Hufflepuffcolours.svg
Hufflepuff crest
Hufflepuff crest

Hufflepuff, founded by Helga Hufflepuff, values hard work, loyalty, tolerance, and fair play above all else. Its animal is the badger, and canary yellow and black are its colours. The Fat Friar is its ghost. According to Rowling, Hufflepuff corresponds roughly to the element of earth. The Hufflepuff dormitories and common room are located somewhere in the basement (corresponding to earth), their entrance found through a still-life painting that is somewhere near the kitchens. You must give a password to the painting to enter. The Hufflepuff common room is filled with yellow hangings and fat armchairs and it has little underground tunnels leading to the dormitories, all of which have perfectly round doors, like barrel tops (very much like a badger sett).[2] Very few Hufflepuff members are specifically mentioned, and, in general, they are not seen much in the Harry Potter books.

The current Head of Hufflepuff House is Pomona Sprout.

A few notable Hufflepuffs (for a complete list, see List of characters in the Harry Potter books):

Ravenclaw

Ravenclaw crest
Ravenclaw crest

Ravenclaw values intelligence, creativity, wit, and wisdom."Wit beyond measure is man's greatest treasure" is an oft-repeated Ravenclaw proverb.Template:HP5Template:HP7 Its animal is an eagle, the house colours are blue and bronze (changed to blue and silver in the movies), and its ghost is the Grey Lady, who was revealed in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows to be Helena Ravenclaw, daughter of Hogwarts co-founder Rowena Ravenclaw, after whom the house was named and whose diadem was one of Voldemort's Horcruxes. According to Rowling, Ravenclaw corresponds roughly to the element of air.

The dormitories are located in Ravenclaw Tower on the west side of the school. The common room, which went undescribed in the series until the climax of Deathly Hallows, is round and filled with blue hangings and fat armchairs, has a domed ceiling painted with stars, and also features a statue of Rowena Ravenclaw wearing her diadem. A logical riddle must be solved in order to gain entry, whereas the Gryffindor, Hufflepuff and Slytherin common rooms only require a password.

The current head of Ravenclaw house is Filius Flitwick.

A few notable Ravenclaws (for a complete list, see List of characters in the Harry Potter books):

Slytherin

File:Slytherincolours.svg
Slytherin crest
Slytherin crest

Like Salazar Slytherin, its founder, Slytherin house values ambition, cunning, resourcefulness, and pure blood heritage. Most Slytherin students display a high level of Machiavellianism. The book also suggests that the hunger for power is a characteristic of Slytherins. The animal representing Slytherin is the serpent, and the house's colours are green and silver. The Bloody Baron is the house ghost. According to Rowling, Slytherin corresponds roughly to the element of water. The Slytherin dormitories and common room are reached through a bare stone wall in the dungeons. The Slytherin common room is a long, low, dungeon-style room, located under the Hogwarts Lake, furnished with green lamps, and carved armchairs.

Until the end of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, the head of Slytherin House was Professor Severus Snape. After Professor Snape fled with the Death Eaters, Professor Horace Slughorn filled in for him. Slughorn had been Head of Slytherin for many years before retiring, and had just returned to Hogwarts in Half-Blood Prince.

Harry Potter has a negative view of Slytherin and asks the Sorting Hat not to place him in that house because of its sinister reputation. Hagrid told him, "There isn't a witch or wizard who went bad who wasn't in Slytherin." This seems to be an exaggeration on Hagrid's part, as at the time, he believed that Sirius Black, a Gryffindor, was a follower of Lord Voldemort (ironically the true perpetrator of Black's crimes was Peter Pettigrew, another Gryffindor). This proposition is also statistically unlikely. Still, Slytherin House seems to have produced more evil wizards than any other house, including the Dark Lord Voldemort, the Malfoys, Bellatrix Black Lestrange, Avery, and Wilkes. However, Slytherin itself is not evil, it is simply that having ambition as a core quality results in a disproportionate amount of self-important, competitive students. There are some good Slytherins such as Horace Slughorn, Phineas Nigellus Black (despite his use of the derogatory term 'Mudblood'Template:HP7), Regulus Black, Andromeda Tonks and Severus Snape.

The Sorting Hat claims that blood purity is a factor in selecting Slytherins, although this is not mentioned until the fifth book. This suggests that it bases its decisions more upon the ideals of its members, than directly on any accurate test of blood. There is no reason to believe that Muggle-born students are not sorted there, merely that pure-blooded students are more desirable to that house, as there are definite examples of half-bloods in the house (Snape and Voldemort). In Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, a group of Snatchers claim that "not many Mudbloods" are sorted into Slytherin, which suggests that while Muggle-born Slytherins may be uncommon, they are not unknown. The fact that Rowling intended to place a character named Mafalda, a half-blood who was the daughter of a Squib and a Muggle, in Slytherin, suggests that Rowling at least does not view the Slytherin House desire for blood-purity as particularly influential upon the Sorting Hat. Mafalda, intended to be a cousin of the Weasley children, was ultimately cut from final edits of the book, to allow more room to develop other plot lines.

According to Albus Dumbledore in Chamber of Secrets, the qualities which "Slytherin prized in his hand-picked students" include, "Parseltongue, resourcefulness, determination, [and] a certain disregard for the rules", qualities, he notes, that are possessed by Harry.

Contrary to the wishes of the other founders, Salazar Slytherin wanted a stricter policy of admittance—one limited to pure-blood students. The controversy this created apparently led to Salazar leaving the school and the Chamber of Secrets behind. A millennium later, the house's students are still considered affiliated with Salazar's reputed ideals, although some half-bloods, most notably Voldemort and Snape, have been in Slytherin. "Pureblood" lineage is certainly one of Voldemort's public goals. It is often mentioned in the novels (especially in The Philosopher's Stone and The Chamber of Secrets) that most of the dark wizards were in Slytherin (though how many were from this house before Tom Marvolo Riddle began recruiting there is unstated: as his own House, it was certainly easiest for him to recruit there).

Although most former or current Slytherins are portrayed by Harry as either bullying, haughty or downright evil, the House also contains some of the series' most striking and dramatic stories of redemption. Severus Snape, a devoted Slytherin, spends much of his adult life as a spy for the Order of the Phoenix and in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, is acknowledged by Harry as the bravest man he has ever known. Similarly, Regulus Black, a former Death Eater and the younger brother of Sirius Black, turns against Voldemort at the age of seventeen, ultimately giving his life and putting himself in great pain to return his old master to mortality. Even Draco Malfoy, Harry's spoiled schoolboy rival, feels moral uncertainty in Books 6 and 7 and ultimately, does not commit to true evil. His mother, Narcissa Malfoy, another Slytherin, turns against Voldemort near the end of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (out of concern for her son), saving Harry's life. It is therefore important to note that the primary Slytherin qualities (resourcefulness, cunning, and a degree of self-import) are not, in and of themselves, evil attributes; they are simply attributes that are easily turned toward evil. An excellent example of a "good" Slytherin would be Horace Slughorn, who, although very jovial and friendly to all his students, nevertheless wishes to be connected to powerful people to provide connections for his promising students (and for some of his own reasons).

When believing Harry Potter to be dead and thinking that he has final victory in his grasp, Voldemort proclaims his intention to abolish the other three houses and force all Hogwarts students into Slytherin. This design is foiled by Voldemort's defeat and death.

Following Voldemort's ultimate defeat, Slytherin becomes more diluted in its blood purity, no longer the pure-blood bastion it once was. Its dark reputation, however, does linger.[3]

A few notable Slytherins (for a complete list, see List of characters in the Harry Potter books):

The Founders

In Rowling's fictional universe, Hogwarts was founded a millennium ago by "four of the greatest wizards and witches of the age"Template:HP2: Godric Gryffindor, Helga Hufflepuff, Rowena Ravenclaw and Salazar Slytherin. Each of these founders had one of the four Hogwarts houses named after them.

Godric Gryffindor

Template:HP character

File:GryffindorGodric.jpg
Godric Gryffindor on J. K. Rowling's site as Wizard of the Month for July 2007. Notice the sword he is holding.

Godric Gryffindor hailed from a moor which is now known as Godric's Hollow a small West Country village.Template:HP7 Gryffindor is said to have praised courage, determination and strength of heart above all other qualities. Indeed, he selected students for his house based upon their daring and bravery, according to the Sorting Hat. He also was the most in favour of allowing Muggle-borns into the school. He was initially a close friend of Salazar Slytherin, but over time, their friendship deteriorated; though never stated, it is likely that the two's contrasting beliefs and intentions regarding Muggle-borns may have been part of the reason for the split.

His known relics are a goblin-made sword, adorned with rubies, and the Sorting Hat. The two items share a particular bond; whenever a "true Gryffindor" needs it, the Sword will let itself be pulled out of the hat. Godric's sword was capable of acquiring powers from those it had slain and thus was imbued with venom from Harry's defeat of the Basilisk, making it suitable as a tool for destroying Voldemort's Horcruxes: Albus Dumbledore used it to destroy Gaunt's ring, Ron Weasley used it to eliminate Slytherin's locket, and Neville Longbottom used it to kill Nagini.

Gryffindor was named the July 2007 "Wizard of the Month" on Rowling's website. "One of the four famous Founders of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, Godric Gryffindor was the most accomplished dueller of his time, an enlightened fighter against Muggle-discrimination and the first owner of the celebrated Sorting Hat."[4]

The name Godric is Anglo-Saxon in form, and can have several meanings, including, "he who rules with God" or "he who rules well."[5]

Helga Hufflepuff

Template:HP character

File:HelgaHufflepuff.jpg
Helga Hufflepuff on J. K. Rowling's site as Wizard of the Month for May 2007. Notice the cup she is holding.

Helga Hufflepuff came from a broad valley. She favoured loyalty, honesty, fair play, and hard work. Members of her house usually display at least one of these traits in varying degrees: Cedric Diggory, deceased Triwizard contestant, was one of the students who appears to embody all four.

The Sorting Hat further describes her as ‘‘“good Hufflepuff”‘‘or ‘‘“sweet Hufflepuff”‘‘. She does not appear to have applied particularly strict standards of selection to her house. Although in Goblet of Fire, she is stated as having considered “hard workers most worthy of admission,” she is elsewhere described as taking “all the rest” of the students after selection by her colleagues, and is quoted by the Sorting Hat as having said, “I’ll teach the lot, and treat them just the same.” This sets her apart from the other Founders, by making her an egalitarian.

Hufflepuff was the May 2007 "Wizard of the Month" on Rowling's website. "One of the four celebrated Founders of Hogwarts; Hufflepuff was particularly famous for her dexterity at food-related Charms. Many recipes traditionally served at Hogwarts feasts originated with Hufflepuff."[6] Her wizard card, penned by Rowling, describes her as having “brought people from different walks of life together to help build Hogwarts,” and being “loved for her charming ways.” According to an interview between Rowling and staff from The Leaky Cauldron, Hufflepuff introduced house-elves to Hogwarts, where she offered them refuge.[7] Both the famous wizard card and the illustration on Rowling's website depict her as a plump woman with red hair.

One relic of Hufflepuff, a small golden cup, had been passed down to her distant descendant, Hepzibah Smith, who said the cup was supposed to have some magical powers, many of which she had not tested.Template:HP6 The cup fell into the hands of Voldemort, who transformed it into a Horcrux, and was destroyed by Hermione during the final battle of Hogwarts.

The name Helga is of Scandinavian origin, meaning "holy".[8]

Rowena Ravenclaw

Template:HP character

File:RowenaRavenclaw.jpg
Rowena Ravenclaw on J. K. Rowling's site as Wizard of the Month for August 2007. Notice the diadem she is wearing.

Rowena Ravenclaw[9] was a witch noted for her cleverness and creativity, and was described by Xenophilius Lovegood as "beautiful." The Sorting Hat introduced her as “Fair Ravenclaw, from glen,” suggesting she was from Scotland or Ireland. She was a good friend of Helga Hufflepuff; their friendship is used to emphasise the failed friendship between Godric Gryffindor and Salazar Slytherin. Ravenclaw devised the ever-changing floor plans and moving staircases in the Hogwarts castle, and coined the proverb "Wit beyond measure is man's greatest treasure."

Ravenclaw is described by the Sorting Hat as having selected students according to intelligence and wisdom. Ravenclaw House thus values in its members a sharp mind, wisdom, creativity, and cleverness for its own sake, and thus, rather than asking for a password from her members to get to the dormitories, a bronze eagle knocker asks them a riddle-like question which, if answered incorrectly, would force the student to wait until another could answer the question correctly, allowing the failed student to learn.

In Deathly Hallows, Harry learns that an artefact of Ravenclaw's became a Horcrux: her lost diadem, which grants enhanced wisdom to its wearer. Her daughter, Helena Ravenclaw (The Grey Lady) had once run away with it to surpass her mother in terms of intelligence and wisdom and hid it in Albania, in which its whereabouts remained unknown ever since. She, however, revealed its location to a young Tom Riddle, who proceeded to retrieve it and turn it into a Horcrux. In the original uncursed form, it is said to be able to imbue its wearer great wisdom. Late in her life, Rowena, suffering from a terminal illness, sent for the Bloody Baron to find her daughter so she could see her one last time before she died. However, Helena refused to go with the Baron, and he killed her in a sudden fit of rage. Immediately overcome with guilt, he then took his own life.

Ravenclaw was featured as Rowling's "Wizard of the Month" for August 2007. "One of the four famous Founders of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, Rowena Ravenclaw was the most brilliant witch of her time, though legend has it that a broken heart - cause unknown - contributed to her early demise." Her Wizard of the Month status was cleverly revealed, for she appeared the month after the release of "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows", thus concealing what possible Horcrux item, she possessed until after the book's release.

Rowena is a Latinised form of an old Germanic name. The elements in the name mean "Fame," (cf. the Anglo-Saxon hrōd, or hrōð), and "Joy," (cf. the Anglo-Saxon wyn(n)), or "Friend," (cf. the Anglo-Saxon wine). Rowena, Queen of Britain is a figure in Britain's traditional history; she was supposedly the daughter of Hengest and the wife of Vortigern.[10]

Salazar Slytherin

Template:HP character

File:SlytherinWizard.JPG
Salazar Slytherin on J. K. Rowling's site as Wizard of the Month for June 2007. Notice the locket around his neck.

Salazar Slytherin is described as "power hungry" by the Sorting Hat, and was known as "shrewd Slytherin from fen". The Fens of eastern England are marshlands around Norfolk, Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire and adjoining counties, although it is not established that Slytherin actually came from that particular region. Slytherin is the only founder whose physical appearance was ever described in any detail; his statue in the Chamber of Secrets depicts a man "ancient and monkey-like, with a long thin beard that fell almost to the bottom of his sweeping robes."

Slytherin was a Parselmouth, a wizard with the rare ability to speak with snakes. Like Rowena Ravenclaw and Godric Gryffindor, Slytherin appears to have carefully selected members of his House. According to Albus Dumbledore, the qualities which Slytherin prized in his "handpicked students" included resourcefulness, determination, and a certain disregard for the rules, along with the ability to speak Parseltongue. He also selected his students according to cunning, ambition, and blood purity.

Slytherin's background is first discussed by Professor Binns in Chamber of Secrets: he describes the foundation of the school and of the breach between Slytherin and the other founders, that the castle was founded far from Muggles because, at that time, common people feared magic and persecuted suspected wizards and witches. Slytherin wished after a time to be more selective in admissions to Hogwarts, but not restricted to only his own house; he used blood purity as a factor of selecting students since the school's inception. He wanted magical learning restricted to all-magical families, as he believed Muggle-born students to be untrustworthy and he disliked teaching such students.

According to ancient legend, Slytherin was responsible for the construction of the Chamber of Secrets, the home of a magically-created basilisk. This snake was known to be susceptible to control by his Parselmouth descendants, and thus left it there to purge the school of all Muggle-borns. This occurred shortly before infighting among the four founders broke out and resulted in Slytherin's departure. The last known heir of Slytherin, Tom Riddle, discovered the Chamber and released the basilisk, resulting in the death of a student (Moaning Myrtle) and Rubeus Hagrid's wrongful expulsion from Hogwarts. Though the Hogwarts faculty denied the chamber's existence, it was rediscovered by Harry and Ron in their attempt to rescue Ginny Weasley.

Slytherin owned a locket that became an heirloom of his last known line of descendants, the Gaunts. The locket was sold to Caractacus Burke by Merope Gaunt, then bought by Hepzibah Smith, who then had it stolen from her by Voldemort. Voldemort turned the locket into a Horcrux and hid it in a cave he had visited during his youth. The locket was later stolen by Regulus Black with the aid of his house-elf, Kreacher, but it was then taken by Mundungus Fletcher for a short time until the locket was confiscated by Dolores Umbridge. The locket was recovered by Harry and later destroyed by Ron with Gryffindor's sword.

Slytherin was the featured "Wizard of the Month" for June 2007 on J.K. Rowling's website. "One of the four celebrated Founders of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, Salazar Slytherin was one of the first recorded Parselmouths, an accomplished Legilimens, and a notorious champion of pureblood supremacy."[11]

The name Salazar is originally a Portuguese family name. António de Oliveira Salazar was the dictator of Portugal (where Rowling lived for several years) from 1932 to 1968.

References

  1. ^ http://www.jkrowling.com/textonly/faq_view.cfm?id=40 JKrowling.com Retrieved on 05-29-07
  2. ^ http://the-leaky-cauldron.org/2007/7/30/j-k-rowling-web-chat-transcript
  3. ^ http://the-leaky-cauldron.org/2007/7/30/j-k-rowling-web-chat-transcript
  4. ^ Section: Wizard of the Month Godric Gryffindor JKRowling.com Retrieved 30 June, 2007
  5. ^ Oxford Minidictionary of First Names
  6. ^ New Wizard of the Month May 2007 mugglesguide.com.
  7. ^ PotterCast 122 "the-leaky-cauldron.org."
  8. ^ Oxford Minidictionary of First Names
  9. ^ New Wizard of the Month August 2007 mugglesguide.com.
  10. ^ Oxford Minidictionary of First Names
  11. ^ New Wizard of the Month June 2007 mugglesguide.com.