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Magical objects of the wizarding world - Pottermore
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The following is a list of magical objects used in the Harry Potter series.

Video Magical objects in Harry Potter



Communications

Enchanted Coins

In Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix , Hermione Granger invents the enchanted Galleon that is used for communication between members of Dumbledore's Army. Like the original Galleons, the coins had numbers around the edges; on a regular Galleon, this serial number is not used in the same way as a magic coin is used, the numbers indicate the time and date of the next meeting, and automatically change to match any number that Harry Potter pairs on his coin. [HP5] Because the coin is infused with the Protean Charm, after Harry Potter changes his property, each coin changes according to his wish. Coins get hot when numbers change to remind members to see their coins.

In Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince Draco Malfoy uses a pair of magic coins to cross the line of communication imposed on Hogwarts, thus managing to keep in touch with Madam Rosmerta, which he has placed under the Imperius Curse. Draco reveals that he got the idea of ​​the coins of DA Hermione, who was also inspired by Mark Dark Mark's use by Lord Voldemort to communicate with his Death Eaters.

In Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows , Neville Longbottom uses DA coins to remind people like Luna Lovegood and Ginny Weasley that Harry, Ron and Hermione have returned to Hogwarts. They then arrived at the Room of Requirement to fight in the Battle of Hogwarts on May 2, 1998.

Howler

Howler is a blood red letter sent to signify extreme anger or convey a message very loud and open. When opened, the sender's voice, magically enlarged into an ear-splitting volume, sounds a message at the recipient and then damages itself. If it does not open or there is a delay in opening it, the letters burn, explode violently, and shout out the message louder than usual. [HP2] In the film version, Howler folds himself into a set of origami-style lips and eyes, and shouts outgoing messages and then shreds himself into pieces of paper before it burns on its own.

In Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, Ron Weasley received Howler from his mother, Molly Weasley, after he stole his father's magic car and flew it to Hogwarts with Harry. Neville Longbottom confesses that he once got a Howler from his grandmother, stating that he ignored her and that the results were terrible. Subsequently, Neville received another Howler from his grandmother after Sirius Black used his list of passwords to enter the Gryffindor Public Space in Harry Potter and the Azkaban Prisoner. Hermione received one in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire after Rita Skeeter published an article about the relationship (fictitious) between Hermione and Harry. (In the film version, the incident is not referenced.) Dumbledore sends Harry's aunt Petunia Dursley, a Howler in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix to remind him of the covenant to allow Harry to stay on Privet Drive when Harry Uncle Vernon trying to get rid of him. (This incident is not mentioned in the film version.) In the movie Harry receives a Howler from Mafalda Hopkirk to announce he has been expelled from Hogwarts for using underground magic outside the school and his wand should be broken.

Maps Magical objects in Harry Potter



Concealers

Deluminator (Put-Outer)

Deluminator is a tool created by Albus Dumbledore that resembles a cigarette lighter. This is used to remove or absorb (and restore) light from any light source to provide protection to the user. In Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone , Dumbledore uses Deluminator (then called Put-Outer ) [HP1] to darken Privet Drive, where the Dursleys' households are located. It was later seen in the Order of the Phoenix where Dumbledore borrowed the Deluminator to Moody, who used it when hauling Harry from the Dursleys' house to No. 12, Grimmauld Place. At Half-Blood Prince , Dumbledore uses Deluminator again to darken Privet Drive before collecting Harry.

In Deathly Hallows , it was inherited to Ron by Dumbledore. After Ron left his friends in anger, the Deluminator demonstrated additional capabilities, similar to the devices at home. Ron hears Hermione through the device as he says his name for the first time since he left, and, when he clicks on it, the glowing light bulb enters his body and allows him to search and Apparate around Harry and Hermione's camp. Rowling says Dumbledore handed it to Ron because he believes he might need a little more clues than Harry and Hermione.

Invisibility Cloak

In the universe Harry Potter , a translucent cloak is used to make the wearer invisible. All very rare and expensive, and can be spun from Demiguise's feathers, the magical herbivores found in the Far East. They can also become regular robes with Disillusionment Charms or Bedazzlement Hex placed on them. Over time, these robes will lose their transparent ability, eventually becoming opaque and prone to penetration by various spells. The cloak of Harry, being one of three Deathly Hallows, is a real invisibility cloak, and will retain the translucency forever. It is also resistant to the simplest spells and charms (eg spell summoning). The invisibility cloak protects the wearer from visual detection alone, meaning that although the wearer can not be seen they are still solid, and therefore can be perceived by physical contact. The magical eye of Alastor Moody was able to penetrate it. This cloak is less effective against some animals, such as cats (eg Ny. Norris) and snakes (eg Nagini). Dementors in those books have no sense of sight and instead feel the despair of man, a feeling that is not hindered by the use of invisibility cloaks. In addition to Harry's cloak, Moody is known to have two. One of them was borrowed by Sturgis Podmore in work for the Order of the Phoenix. Barty Crouch, Sr also has one, which he uses to hide his son, Barty Crouch, Jr. to prevent him from going to Azkaban, witch prison. Several times in the series, the character has been shown either suspect or in some other mode of "feeling" that Harry is wearing his cloak: Snape looks suspicious when followed by Harry, even reaching out to grab (what appears to be) thin air; at Half-Blood Prince, Draco Malfoy realizes Harry is in a train carriage and succeeds in disabling him with Petrificus Totalus's (Body-Bind) curse, for despite wearing his robe, Harry inadvertently removes objects nearby; and in the Secret Chamber, Albus Dumbledore felt Harry and Ron beneath him in Hagrid's cabin while talking to Lucius Malfoy during the show when Cornelius Fudge came to take Hagrid to Azkaban and Lucius Malfoy handed Dumbledore the suspension of the letter.

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Deathly Hallows

Deathly Hallows are the three magical objects that are the focus of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - the invincible rods, the stone to revive the dead, and the invisibility cloak. When owned by one person, they are said to give mastery over death. These objects are generally only remembered as part of a witch's fairy tale called the Story of Three Brothers, and have become mythological over time, but a small number of wizards including Dumbledore still believe in their existence and seek them out. According to Rowling, the story of how these objects came into being is based on Geoffrey Chaucer The Pardoner's Tale .

According to the story, three brothers avoid Death, which gives them whatever choice they want. The first brother chose a cane that could not be defeated in battle, the second brother asked for a way to restore a person from death, and a third brother chose a robe that made his wearer invisible, even to his own Death. Finally, the first brother was killed, the second committed suicide, and finally, the third brother made the Death of a friend and gave the cloak to his son. The story is generally believed to refer to Peverell's brother many centuries ago, although very few really believe that the story is entirely true. Dumbledore believes that Peverell is a very powerful and intelligent magician inventor. The Deathly Hall of Death has also been adopted as a personal symbol by the dark magician Gellert Grindelwald; therefore many magicians, such as Viktor Krum, mistakenly understood it as a symbol of dark magic.

Dumbledore had searched for Hallows, originally in his youth as a friend of Grindelwald for the powers they say to give, but later as a means of annuling the death of his unintentional sister. He finally concludes he's "unworthy" to have it. He feels Harry can be a more worthy guard but also fearing Harry will be captivated by their power, so he guides Harry to them in a twisted way.

Instead, Voldemort is only looking for a stick for a power that is supposedly invincible, after his previously unaccountable rod failed to kill Harry Potter. He did not realize that the stick was one of three Hallows, or looking for two other Hallows. He also has the Resurrection Stone but only uses it as a horcrux. Dumbledore says that he doubts Voldemort will be interested in Cloak or Stone even though he knows about them.

Harry finally comes to possess all three Hallows - a cloak inherited from his father James Potter, then understood as a descendant of one of Peverell's brothers, the Resurrection Stone in the Golden Snitch bequeathed to him by Dumbledore, and the loyalty and mastery of the Elder Wand when he defeats and disarms the previous owner, Draco Malfoy, who unwittingly won him from Dumbledore at the time of his last death.

After Voldemort's death, Harry uses the Elder Wand to fix his own broken wand, then decides to return it to Dumbledore's grave, so that when he has a natural death, the Elder Wand's power will die with him. In the movie, Harry realizes that the Elder Wand is too strong to fall into the wrong hands again, so he snaps into two and throws it off the bridge. He also dropped the Resurrection Stone in the Forbidden Forest but decided not to look for it in the hope that no magicians or magicians would be able to have all three Hallows. He keeps the Cloak he inherited, thinking that he might pass it on to his children someday.

Elder Wand

The Elder Wand, known throughout history as Deathstick or Wand of Destiny, [HP7] is a very strong stick made of old wood with Thestral tail hair core. While most magicians have heard of a wand allegedly invincible in the history of magic, sticks and seekers after the Deathly Hallows realize that this is the same rod, reappearing periodically in the hands of the new owner.

According to legend, the loyalty of a stick can only be won by killing the previous owner, and therefore his "bloody imprint" has become "scattered in the pages of wizard history", making it the most easily verified Hallow as a real object. However, Harry discovers from Garrick Ollivander the stick maker, this popular notion is not true; Elder's wand actually transferred his loyalty to defeat or disarmament, and not necessarily murder, from the previous master. It will not work completely for the new owner. This subtle distinction becomes the basis upon which Voldemort is finally defeated, when he believes he has won the loyalty of the stick by killing Snape, who killed Dumbledore, while Harry realizes he has already defeated the true owner of the stick, Draco Malfoy, who has disarmed Dumbledore. before Snape kills him. This left Harry and not Voldemort as the true masters of the sticks in their last encounter, although neither Draco nor Harry physically had Elder Wand at the time.

According to the witch folklore, the Elder Wand used by his true master can not be defeated in a duel; this is not true, as Dumbledore was able to defeat the legendary dark magician Gellert Grindelwald, who was the master of the Elder Wand at the time. It also appears, because his wand is somewhat alive (like all sticks), that he will not allow himself to cause real damage to his true master. If his master dies naturally without ever being defeated or paralyzed, the overwhelming power of the baton will end up for the next owner, having never won from the first.

The Elder Wand's Strength was first shown in history, because Antioch Peverell, the eldest of the Three Brothers myth, dueled with an enemy he had long desired to defeat. He wins, and leaves his enemy dead on the floor; But after boasting about his unchallenged wand, Antioch was robbed and killed in his sleep by a rival who wanted to take his wand. Finally came into possession Mykew Gregorovitch, a Bulgarian stick maker. Gregorovitch brags about having the Elder Wand, believing it will increase his popularity, and he tries to reverse his secret as he faces competition from Ollivander. It was stolen from him by Grindelwald, a former friend of Dumbledore who sought to impose magical powers in the world. Grindelwald was defeated "at the height of his power" by Dumbledore, who in his last years considered him "the only [space] he possessed to possess, not to boast or to kill with it, but to tame it."

Dumbledore arranged his own death with Severus Snape, intending for Snape to "end with the Elder Wand." Because his death will be prearranged and not the result of his defeat, he hopes this can destroy the power of the wand. However, Draco Malfoy disarmed Dumbledore before his death at Snape's hands, causing the plan to fail; The stick is buried in Dumbledore's grave, but Draco has unwittingly become the new master, though he never takes his physique from Dumbledore. After Harry defeats Draco (though Draco does not use the Elder Wand), the wand becomes loyal to Harry instead.

In the last book, Voldemort looks for a stick to defeat Harry - his previous stick failed - and goes into Dumbledore's grave to claim the stick as his own. During the Battle of Hogwarts, he understands that the wand did not appear to him as the legend should have said, and mistakenly concludes this because it became true to Snape when Snape killed Dumbledore, and would only be loyal to him after he killed Snape. So he kills Snape, and is sure that the wand will give him and invincibility, but during his final duel with Harry the Killing Curse soar and he dies - as Harry warned him - because the Elder Wand will not allow himself to be used by him against his true master.

After Voldemort's death, Harry uses the Elder Wand to fix his holly wand and his damaged phoenix feather, which he says he is "happier with", and says he will return the Elder Wand to Dumbledore's tomb, feeling that if he dies peacefully, his superior strength will expire. In the film, Harry puts the stick in half and throws the pieces off a bridge.

Ron states that the Elder Wand will be the Hallow he will choose, simply because it is an "unbeatable wand", arguing that it is only dangerous for the brother who asks him because he keeps talking about his ownership and encourages people to oppose him. Hermione (who says she will choose the Cloak) is skeptical, reminding her that the Wand, in essence, will make the owner overconfident and braggadocious. Rowling revealed in an interview that the first working title for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows is Harry Potter and the Elder Wand.

Resurrection Stone

The Resurrection Stone allows the holder to bring back loved ones who have died, in semi-physical form, and communicate with them. The shape of Sirius Black produced by a stone tells Harry that he and the other forms created by the rock are part of him and are invisible to others. This seems to indicate that these apparitions are conjured up from memory and not the person actually raised. According to the tale about the origin of the Deathly Hallows, using the Resurrection Stone prompts the owner to commit suicide because he brought his fiancé from the dead, and he is very unhappy in the real world because he does not belong there. By the time the stone is seen in Marvolo Gaunt's possession, it has been arranged into a ring containing the symbols of Deathly Hallows, which Gaunt fools believe to be Peverell's emblem; he used the ring to boast about his ancestry and blood purity. Both Dumbledore and Grindelwald wanted the stone, but for different reasons. While Dumbledore wanted to communicate with his deceased family, Grindelwald allegedly intended to use it to create an army of Inferi-like zombies. Harry says this is the Hallow he most wants, because like Dumbledore he can mention the people he wants to communicate with again. Voldemort realizes the beauty of the ring and ends up using it as a Horcrux, a container for the part of his soul, oblivious to the extra magical nature.

Dumbledore found the ring from Marvolo real estate, recognizing it as a Horcrux and one of the Deathly Hallows. Forgetting that as a Horcrux, it may be protected by a curse placed by Voldemort, and blinded by personal desires, Dumbledore attempted to use the Resurrection Stone to speak with his deceased relative. The curse destroyed his hand and began to spread throughout his body. Although the spreading is partly contained in Snape's blackened and blackened hands, Dumbledore is destined, one year to live. In their Kings Cross meeting, Dumbledore tells Harry that this proves he has not learned anything from his past mistakes and ambitions for using Hallows, and is part of the reason for his fear that Harry may also become obsessed with their powers if told about them.

The stone was then forwarded to Harry by Dumbledore's will, hidden in the Gold Snitch that Harry had captured with his mouth, almost swallowing it, in his first Quidditch match. Snitch revealed the message "I opened on closing" when touched by Harry's lips. Harry could not open Snitch until he was almost dead in the Forest, and then realized that "closure" meant the end, or his death. Harry used the Stone to call the beloved loved ones - his parents, his godfather Sirius Black, and Remus Lupine - to console him and fortify his courage, before he went to see his death in the hands of Voldemort. The stone fell invisible from Harry's dead fingers in the Forbidden Forests when he reached the Voldemort camp. Harry survived the encounter and he and Dumbledore's portrait then agreed that Harry would not look him or tell anyone else where it was. In a 2007 interview, Rowling said that he wanted to believe a centaur nail pushed him to the ground, burying him forever.

Invisibility Cloak

According to legend, the Invisibility Cloak has the power to protect the wearer from being seen by Death. It was Hallow's brother's youngest brother, who did not believe in Death and took the robe to hide from him, only giving up when he was old and ready to die. Owned by Harry throughout the series, though only later he finds its significance and origin.

Unlike other invisibility cloaks that are known to exist, this is a completely unique invisibility cloak, where it is able to fully protect the wearer and others from sight and can not be damaged by time or mantra; other robes will lose their ability to hide the wearer from time to time or become obsolete, but Hallow's robe will never fade or become damaged. At the end of Deathly Hallows, Dumbledore explains to Harry that the Magician's true magic can protect and protect others and their owners. This is seen when not responding to Death Eaters while hiding Harry, Ron and Hermione in Deathly Hallows. Hermione claims that this is the Hallow she will pick, citing the usefulness Harry has found.

The cloak was originally owned by Ignotus Peverell. After his death, the robes were passed from father to son through Peverell's descendants to James Potter. The cloak did not belong to James the night he was killed; he had previously lent it to Dumbledore, who was very interested in Deathly Hallows and suspected that more Potter family heirlooms had emerged. Dumbledore returned Cloak to Harry a few years later as a Christmas present during his first year at Hogwarts. Harry uses the Cloak throughout the series to sneak around the school on various adventures. Harry's father also used the cloak for the same purpose. It's big enough for Ron and Hermione to accompany him, and they often do it, though this becomes increasingly difficult as they grow taller throughout the series.

While making the wearer invisible to the Muggles and wizards, some creatures are able to feel the person hidden beneath. Snakes, for example, can not see through the Invisibility Cloak, but they can somehow detect the people below it. Mrs. Norris, Filch's cat, also seems to feel Harry when she wears a robe. Users can also be detected by the "Homenum Revelio" mantra. In Goblet of Fire , Moody's magical eye can see Harry under his cloak. In Prisoner of Azkaban, Dumbledore warned that Dementors' perception of humans is not hindered by invisibility cloaks, because they are blind and feel people through emotions.

In the drama Harry Potter and the Cursed Son Harry gave the gift of the Invisibility Cloak to his eldest son, James Potter, noting that he "has been talking about the Invisibility Cloak since the time itself". However, James Albus's sister (drama protagonist) steals the Cloak and uses it to avoid bullies at Hogwarts.

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Detector

Glass-Whizs

A Foe-glass is a mirror that detects and shows its owner's enemies in or out of focus, depending on how close they are. Moody, in fact Barty Crouch, Jr. who is disguised, saying that when their white eyes are visible, he's in trouble. When Moody/Crouch attacked Harry, Harry watched Professor Snape, McGonagall, and Dumbledore approach the room in the mirror before they got there. A Foe-glass hung in the Room of Requirement in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix when Harry used Space for D.A. meeting. Like all dark detectors, it can be fooled, as mentioned by Harry at the beginning of D.A. first. meeting.

Marauder's Map

The Marauder's Map is a Hogwarts magic map created by Remus Lupine, Peter Pettigrew, Sirius Black and James Potter (respectively dubbed "Moony", "Wormtail", "Padfoot "and" Prongs ") while they were students at Hogwarts. During this time, they gain extensive knowledge of the school yard, such as hidden sections, from their frequent night-time adventures together.

In Harry Potter and Prisoner Azkaban, Fred and George Weasley gave maps to Harry so he could travel to the village of Hogsmeade through a hidden passage. The previous twins had stolen a map from a drawer in Filch's office containing dangerous encounters; It is revealed by Lupine that Filch probably knows what it is but not how it works. Snape then discovers the map belongs to Harry and tries to force him to reveal his secret, but the map only mocks and insults him. Lupine (one of the creators of the map), the current Defense Against the Dark Agent, was called in to investigate this "dark object," and confiscated it to keep Harry safe, even though he returned it to Harry after resigning from his post at Hogwarts. From then on, the map became one of Harry's most useful tools in his ongoing adventure.

At first glance, the Map is just an empty parchment; but when the user pointed his wand at the Map and said, "I swear that I have nothing", the message "Gentlemen Moony, Wormtail, Padfoot and Prongs, the aid supplier for magical delinquency makers, proud to present the Marauder's Map," and the detailed Hogwarts layout appears. Saying, "Mischief succeeds!" pointing at the person's stick on the parchment to return the map to its original empty state. This map shows the location of everyone inside the castle and its yards, and includes the location of the secret passage and instructions on how to access it. Some locations such as the Room of Requirement and the Chamber of Secrets do not appear on the map either because Marauder has no knowledge of them, or, in the first case, they are not fixed locations. In addition, the undercover Animagus, Polyjuice Potion, and Invisibility Cloak can not fool the map, as shown in Goblet of Fire when Barty Crouch, Jr., uses the Polyjuice Potion to disguise himself as Moody, [ HP4] and in Prisoner of Azkaban when Peter Pettigrew, supposedly dead [HP3] but as Animagus has turned into a mouse, both are shown on the map.

In the prop version of the map made for the films, the lines consist of what is at first glance only random letters, but after closer inspection are Latin words. This series does not mention Harry recovering a map from Moody's office, though he continues to use it in later books; when asked about this difference, Rowling replies that Harry did sneak into the office and recover it in the days after the Third Task, and that he forgot to include this detail in the book. When asked during an online questioning session, "What kid Harry gave the Marauder Map, if any?" (after his school years), Rowling replied, "I have a feeling he did not give it to them, but that James (the eldest son of Harry) slipped out of his father's desk one day." However, in Cursed Child, Harry is shown to still have the Marauder's Map and give it to Professor McGonagall to supervise his recalcitrant son Albus Potter.

Probity Probe

Pro Probity detects hidden mantras and hidden magical objects. The detector made his first appearance in the Order of the Phoenix in the Ministry of Magic as a thin gold stick. Once Voldemort returns, the Probe is used as part of the increased security at Gringotts as well as for Hogwarts student scans for dark objects. They were last seen when Harry, Ron, and Hermione arrive at Gringotts in Deathly Hallows to rob Bellatrix Lestrange's safe from one of Voldemort's Horcruxes.

Remembrall

Remembrall is a small, clear ball, the size of a large marble, filled with smoke that turns red when it detects that the person holding it has forgotten something. Unfortunately, it does not tell the owner what has been forgotten, which makes it somewhat worthless. The forgotten Neville Longbottom sent Remembrall by his grandmother at Philosopher's Stone. Remembrall is prohibited for use during O.W.L. exam, as it will allow students to find out if they have written the wrong answer.

Revealer

A Revealer is a bright red deletion, used to make invisible ink appear. It made her first appearance at the Chamber of Secrets when Hermione tried to make hidden writing appear in Tom Riddle's diary.

Sensor Confidential

The Secrecy Sensor is a dark detector described as "an object that looks like a squiggly golden television antenna." Vibrate when it detects concealment and lies. In Harry Potter and Goblet of Fire, Moody mentions that "there is no use here, of course, too many distractions - students in every direction lie about why they are not doing their homework." However, it may respond to Moody's own trickery, as he is actually Barty Crouch Jr in disguise with Polyjuice Potion.

In the Order of the Phoenix , Sensor Confidentiality is used in the Atrium Desk at the Ministry of Magic on visitors to the government site. Later in the book, Harry mentions to Dumbledore's Army that they can be easily fooled like other dark detection counterparts. At Half-Blood Prince , due to Hogwarts new stringent security measures, Argus Filch is assigned to check every student entering the castle with the Secret Sensor. All owls flying to Hogwarts are also placed below this measure to ensure that no dark objects enter the castle by mail. Hermione then explains that although the Secret Sensor detects curses, curses, and Charming Spells, they can not detect the love potion, since they are not considered Dark.

Sneakoscope

Sneakoscope serves as a Dark Art detector. This device is described as a miniature top-spinning glass that emits shrill voices in the face of fraud, for example, when an unbelievable person is near or when a hoax event occurs nearby.

Sneakoscopes were introduced at Prisoner of Azkaban when Harry received a pocket-sized version of Ron for his 13th birthday. Bill says that Pocket Sneakoscopes is unreliable, because it lights up and spins at dinner because there seems to be no reason, but Fred and George have put beetles into the soup without his knowledge. Sneakoscope reappears at Hogwarts Express, and again in the dorms of Harry and Ron. Harry later discovers that Scabbers, Ron's rat, who is present every time the Sneakoscope spins, is actually Peter Pettigrew in Animagus form. In the Goblet of Fire, a rather paranoid Moody has some sneakoscopes somehow he is disabled (probably related to the cracks described as having), claiming, "It will not stop whistling", keeping them in one from seven compartments of his magic trunk. Moody was later revealed to actually become Barty Crouch, Jr. under the influence of the Polyjuice Potion, thus explaining the constant warning before him. Finally at Deathly Hallows, Hermione gives Harry Sneakoscope for his seventeenth birthday which they then use as a scout while in hiding.

Weasley family clock

The Weasley family has a special clock in their home, Burrow, with nine hands, one for each family member. Instead of notifying the time, hours show the location or status of each member of the family. Known locations are: Home , Schools , Jobs , Traveling , Missing Hospital , Prisons , and Mortal Peril . The Weasley family is the only family mentioned in the series to have such a clock. Dumbledore called the clock "amazing" and was impressed by him.

The Location Mortal Peril is located where the number 12 is usually located. Throughout the first five books the hand changes to reflect the various statuses of family members, but with the sixth book all nine hands point to mortal dangers at any time, except when one travels. Mrs. Weasley assumes this means that with Voldemort's return, everyone is always in mortal danger, but he can not verify this because he does not know anyone else who has a clock like his. [HP6]

Various fans have re-created hours for their own families, for example by using geofencing for mobile phones.

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Games

Explode Snap

Exploding Snap is a magic card game in which cards spontaneously explode during a game. The game is popular among Hogwarts students. In the Chamber of Secrets, Harry and Ron refrain from investigating why spiders escaped from Hogwarts because Fred and George suspended them with this game. Ron then sings his eyebrows while building a card house with Exploding Snap cards. In the Order of the Phoenix , Lee Jordan was punished by Dolores Umbridge for saying that she could not tell them to play this game, because one of her Education Decisions stated that teachers can only talk to students about the subject they are paid to teach. In Cursed Child Ginny remembers playing this game with Harry after the Chamber of Secrets event and notes that it helps her to recover from trauma (all other students avoid it after learning the truth).

Baldones

Gobstones is one of the many magical games played by young magicians in books, along with Wizard's Chess and Exploding Snap. Gobstones are similar to Muggle games from marbles and pÃÆ'Ã… © tanque, except that in Gobstones, spit balls, or gob, foul-smelling fluids in the face of opposing players when they lose one point. Hogwarts students are seen playing Gobstones throughout the book, and there is even a Gobstones Club at school. It is also recorded in the Harry Potter series that Eileen Prince (Snape's mother) was captain of the Gobstone Club Hogwarts, as a student, at the age of 15.

Quidditch Ball

The Quidditch ball consists of a Quaffle, a large red ball (and the only one that is not bewitched for flying alone) that Chaser must pass through three circles on the field, earning ten points each time this happens; two Bludgers, who flew around trying to disrupt the game and knock people off their brooms, and who beat Beaters from teammates and headed for opposing teams; and Golden Snitch, a very quick and hard-to-see gold ball the size of a walnut with wings, sought by Seeker on each team to finish the game and earn 150 points. Quidditch players wear gloves, foot protectors, soft padded headgear, and sometimes glasses.

Shuffle Playing Cards

At Chamber of Secrets , a pack of Self-Shuffling Cards is referred to as one of the many items that littered Ron's bedroom floor at Burrow.

Chess Wizard

Wizard's Chess is played with pieces and boards that are identical to Chess. The rules are also unchanged. The pieces of animation were magical, and they violently attacked each other while making the arrest, by dropping the pieces that were caught out and dragging them off the board. The players ordered pieces to move using algebraic chess notation.

Ron had a magic chess set left to him by his grandfather and Harry first played pieces borrowed from Seamus Finnigan, who kept shouting his advice because they did not believe him. [HP1] Harry then gets a set of his own in one of his wizard crackers during his first Christmas at Hogwarts.

During the climax chapters of the Philosopher's Stone Harry, Ron and Hermione became human chess pieces in a human-sized Chess game, which Harry won by Ron's advice and sacrifice as a work. In the films, chess pieces are depicted using a Lewis Chessmen replica.

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Horcrux

Horcrux is an object used to store a part of one's soul, protecting it from death. The concept of horcrux is very similar to the phylactery described by James George Frazer in the comparative study of mythology and religion, The Golden Bough.

If the body of the creator of the Horcrux is destroyed, that person can still survive. When the body of the Horcrux owner is killed, the part of the soul that remains in the body does not move into the next world, but will more exist in the non-physical form that other magicians can generate, as stated in the Half-Blood Prince >. If all one's Horcrux is destroyed, then the only anchor of the soul in the material world is the body, the destruction which will then cause the final death.

This method was chosen by Voldemort to achieve immortality. This concept was first introduced in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince , though the Horcrux was present in the previous novel without being identified as such. Rowling uses Horace Slughorn's expository dialogue to reveal that the creation of the Horcrux requires a person to commit murder, which, as the ultimate crime act, "tears apart soul". After the murder, the spell is cast to include part of the torn soul into the object, which then becomes the Horcrux. Rowling never published the true charm. In the last book of the series, Hermione finds a spell in a book titled The Secret of the Art of Darkness . Rowling has revealed that she intends to elaborate on the processes and spells used to create Horcruxes in her book that have long been called the Harry Potter Encyclopedia.

Both inanimate objects and living organisms have been used as Horcruxes, although the latter is considered more risky to use, since living things can move and think for themselves. There is no limit to the number of Horcruxes that can be made by a wizard or wizard. Because the soul of the creator is divided into increasingly smaller parts, they lose more of their natural humanity and the soul becomes increasingly unstable. Consequently, in very specific circumstances, soul fragments can be sealed within an object without the intention or knowledge of the creator. While the affected object will, like any Horcrux, preserve the creator's immortality, it does not become a "Dark object". For example, Voldemort has unusual control over Nagini, and as a result Nagini is able to communicate with Voldemort about Harry's presence in Godric's Hollow in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.

Horcrux made from inanimate objects is very difficult to destroy. They can not be destroyed by conventional means such as smashing, breaking, or burning. To be destroyed, the Horcrux must be so severely damaged that repair through magical means would not be possible. Very few magical objects or spells strong enough to achieve this (mentioned and used are Fiendfyre, Gryffindor Sword and Basilisk, the latter two only capable of causing such damage because the basilisk's poisons absorb both). After the damaged Horcrux is repaired, the soul fragment inside is destroyed. Horcrux can be magically released only if the author undergoes a deep remorse process for the murder committed to create the Horcrux. The pain of regret can be so miserable that it can kill the creator. [HP7]

The Horcrux Creation Voldemort is the centerpiece of the novels of novels Harry Potter . Since the seventh is a powerful figure in magic, Voldemort intends to divide his soul into many parts, with six Horcruxes and the last piece retained in his body. When Voldemort attacked Potter's family, and his body was destroyed by a rebounding Killing Curse, a piece of his soul split and affixed himself to the only living thing left in the room, Harry Potter, in a similar way to the Horcrux. Then, Voldemort proceeded to complete the collection of the six Horcrux intended by turning the snake Nagini into one, thus breaking his soul into a total of eight (counting one in his own body) instead of seven, cut. More complicated, no more than six Horcruxes (including Harry) ever existed at one time in the series: at the time Nagini had made Horcrux, one of Horcrux (Tom Riddle's diary) was destroyed.

All Voldemort's deliberately Horcruxes are made using objects that are important to him or that have sentimental value. He hides some of them carefully so that no one can find and destroy them, but uses Nagini to bid on several occasions, and the diary is always meant to be a weapon to carry out Voldemort's plan to remove the Muggle-born from Hogwarts. Even without magical protection, the Horcrux can not be destroyed by the use of a stick or any physical force. In Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, Harry deliberately destroys the diary with the Basilisk's fangs, though not realizing it was a Horcrux at the time, to free Ginny from his influence. In Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince , the discovery of this diary is revealed as evidence leading to Dumbledore who started another Horcrux hunt, because it not only provided the absolute proof that Voldemort shared his soul. , but also that there is the possibility of other protected artifacts better, given the risks that Voldemort took to using the diary as a weapon.

Rowling revealed to Pottermore that Quirinus Quirrell served as a temporary Horcrux when Voldemort's soul had his body during Harry's first year at Hogwarts. However, the striking difference is that the part of the soul inside Quirrell can exist without its container, because it leaves Quirrell and lets it die in the crypt.

Tom Riddle Diary

Tom Riddle created his first Horcrux during his fifth year at Hogwarts, using his own school diary. He cast a spell after killing fellow student Myrtle Warren using the Basilisk. The diary was introduced in the thirteenth chapter of the Chamber of Secrets and was destroyed by Harry Potter during the climax of the same book.

Before the fall of Voldemort, he entrusted the Horcruxes to Lucius Malfoy. While aware of his destructive magical nature, Malfoy does not know the diary is a Horcrux, Voldemort has told him of his value as a weapon but believes that he will be in a position to coordinate the use of Malfoy. In an effort to discredit Arthur Weasley and throw away a burdensome dark object, Malfoy hid the diary in Ginny Weasley's pot in the middle of his other books. The soul trap of Tom Riddle owned by Ginny and, through him, reopening the Chamber of Secrets, finally begins to draw his life from him. At the end of the second book, Harry rescues Ginny and destroys the diary by stabbing it with poisonous fangs from the Basilisk, making it the first destroyed Horcrux. His report on Dumbledore's diary behavior was his first premonition that Voldemort might have created not just one Horcrux, but a few: "What I am most curious and most worried about is that the diary is meant as a weapon as well as a protector" implying that Voldemort definitely has some sort of backup. It is also mentioned that Lucius intended to wait for Voldemort's remark so that before allowing the diary to be smuggled into Hogwarts, and that he never received it before Voldemort's first defeat; Voldemort did not know the diary was destroyed until he imposed the truth from Lucius, making him very angry at Lucius's attitude that so cheerfully harmed some of his soul.

For Rowling, the diary is a very scary object, after saying in an interview: "The temptation specifically for a young girl, is to pour out her heart into the diary." Rowling's sister, Diane, is vulnerable to this, and her great fear is that someone will read her diary. This gave Rowling the idea of ​​having a diary that, in itself, against the person who acknowledged it. When asked what would happen if Ginny died and Riddle managed to escape, Rowling revealed that "it will strengthen Voldemort this time." Marzolo Gaunt

Marvolo Gaunt's Ring

Tom Riddle created the second Horcrux using a ring owned by maternal grandfather Marvolo Gaunt during the summer before his sixth year as a student at Hogwarts, when he was fifteen. This ring was introduced during the fourth chapter of Half-Blood Prince, having been destroyed by Albus Dumbledore.

In Pensieve's memory, it was revealed that Riddle had taken a golden ring, which had a black stone bearing a magical symbol, from his uncle, Morfin Gaunt, whom he had placed for the murder of his Muggle father and grandparents by turning his uncle's memories. Riddle wore a ring while still a student at Hogwarts, but eventually hid it in the house where the Gaunts lived. It remained hidden beneath the floorboards, placed in a golden box and protected by some charm, until Dumbledore found it during the summer vacation between the Phoenix Order and Half-Blood Prince events. Dumbledore destroyed the first Horcrux with Godric Gryffindor's sword, but, as revealed in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, he also recognized the stone in the ring as the Resurrection Stone, one of the three Deathly Hallows. The Resurrection Stone is the most desirable Hallow Dumbledore, hoping to reduce his error on his part in the death of his sister Ariana. Though after that, he admits it is totally unwise, Dumbledore, forgetting it is also a Horcrux and thus tended to be protected by a destructive charm, hoping to activate it and apologize to his long-dead family, placing the ring in his hand. He was badly injured because of the curse of the ring. The injury left his right hand permanently disabled and would have killed him quickly if not for Snape's intervention that slowed the curse on Dumbledore's right-hand arm and his dying arm, but could not stop him to eventually kill him, if it went on by itself. The broken rings are kept temporarily on the table in the principal's office.

Before his death, Dumbledore hid the ring's black stone inside the Gold Snitch and he left the Snitch to Harry in his will. Voldemort remained unaware of the additional magical nature of the stone throughout his life, Dumbledore noted that Voldemort's fear of death and lack of a loved one did not give him any reason to be interested in the Rock for his original purpose, and doubted that Marvolo would be far from there. interested or aware of the true history of the Stone.

Helga Hufflepuff's Cup

Tom Riddle created his third Horcrux using Helga Hufflepuff's cup. This cup was introduced during the twentieth chapter of Half-Blood Prince and was destroyed by Hermione Granger in chapter thirty-one Deathly Hallows .

Hepzibah Smith, who had the cup, was a descendant of Helga Hufflepuff. Riddle kills Smith by poisoning him, stealing the cup, then framing his Hokey house for crime. Voldemort entrusted the cup to Bellatrix Lestrange, who kept it in a vault at Gringotts Bank, where Harry Voldemort, who had no money, always wanted a relationship. Additional protective spells, including Gemino (multiplied by the curse) and Flagrante (fire curse), are used to protect the dome's contents. Harry, Ron, and Hermione, with Hermione disguised as Bellatrix, entered the bank and stole the cup. Hermione then destroys the Horcrux using the fangs of the remains of the Basilisk still in the Chamber of Secrets.

Pendant Salazar Slytherin

Riddle created his fourth Horcrux using his ancestor's pendant, Salazar Slytherin, formerly belonging to Riddle's mother, Merope Gaunt. The spell was cast after Riddle killed the Muggle bum. The pendant was briefly introduced in the sixth chapter of the Order of the Phoenix (described only as "a heavy locket that can not be opened by either of them") and destroyed by Ron Weasley in the nineteenth chapter of Deathly Hallows .

Slytherin pendants are inherited from generation to generation and eventually end up with ownership of Merope Gaunt. After being abandoned by her husband Tom Riddle Sr., Merope sold the pendant to Caractacus Burke, shopkeeper of Borgin & amp; Burkes, for 10 Galleons, a fraction of the actual value of the pendant. The pendant was eventually sold to Hepzibah Smith. Riddle steals the locket, along with Helga Hufflepuff's cup, after killing Smith. After the locket became a Horcrux, Voldemort hid it in a cave by the beach where he once terrorized two orphaned children. The cave's magical cloak includes a door that can only be opened with blood offerings, a magic boat, a herb basin that causes terrible pain and vision for the drinker, and the use of Inferi. Dumbledore and Harry Potter chase the pendant on The Half-Blood Prince just to find the fake at the bottom of the basin.

Death Eaters who had died, Regulus Black, had learned about the Horcruxes and his hideout from his home, Kreacher, who at first he volunteered to accompany Voldemort to hide the Horcruxes. In an attempt to realize Voldemort's downfall, he and Kreacher navigate magical protection and steal the locket, replacing it with a fake to fool Voldemort. While Black died in an attempt, killed by the surrounding Inferi, Kreacher brought the pendant back to their home at Number 12, Grimmauld Place. Unable to destroy it as Black ordered, Kreacher continued to protect the locket for years. While the Order of the Phoenix used the house as its headquarters, it was stolen by Mundungus Fletcher, a small criminal and a member of the Order. She gave it to Dolores Umbridge as a bribe when she caught her selling a stolen property.

Two weeks after knowing these details, Harry, Ron, and Hermione infiltrate the Ministry of Magic, where Umbridge works, and steal the locket. Ron then saves Harry from being strangled by him as he wears it around his neck while trying to take Godric Gryffindor's sword from the bottom of the lake in Dean Forest. When Ron attempts to destroy the locket, the soul fragments inside take the form of Harry and Hermione and play with Ron's fear that his two friends have started a romantic relationship during his absence. Briefly at this point, Ron's eyes glowed red, like Voldemort's. Ron destroys the locket using a Gryffindor sword in the same forest.

Diadem Rowena Ravenclaw

Tom Riddle created his fifth Horcrux using Rowena Ravenclaw's diadem. The Diadem was introduced briefly in the twenty-fourth chapter of the Half-Blood Prince (described as "the stained tiara" in the Need Room), but was later introduced by name and crushed by Vincent Crabbe in chapter thirty-one from Deathly Hallows .

Ravenclaw's daughter, Helena, steals the diadem from her mother in an attempt to become smarter than her mother. He fled to Albania, where he hid the diadem in the tree pit when Bloody Baron searched for him. After Helena was killed by Bloody Baron, she became the home ghost of Ravenclaw and Tom Riddle, while a student at the school, dazzled her to tell the location of the diadem. Not long after leaving Hogwarts and after the assassination of Hepzibah Smith, he went to Albania and seized the artifact. Voldemort kills an Albanian farmer to turn diadems into Horcruxes. Years later, when Voldemort returned to Hogwarts, reapplying for the Defense Against the Dark Arts position but denied the work by Albus Dumbledore, he hid the diadem in the Room of Requirement. Because Voldemort believed that he was the only one who found Space, he never condemned diadem.

In Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, Harry first comes into contact with the diadem when he hastily hides Snape's old potions book in the Room of Requirement. The diadem is mentioned only as "old obsolete tiara" in the sixth book; Harry used it to help mark the place so that he would later find out where he put the book. Then, after the diadem described to him by the ghost of Ravenclaw, Harry remembers this scene and rushes to retrieve it from the Chamber. Diadem was accidentally destroyed by Fiendfyre's curse by Vincent Crabbe when he, Gregory Goyle, and Draco Malfoy attacked Harry, Ron, and Hermione indoors. In the movie version, Harry stabs diadem with other basilisk fangs and Ron kicks him into the Room of Requirement, when Fiendfyre reaches the door.

Nagini

The sixth horcrux is Nagini, Voldemort's snake is always with him. This Horcrux was invented by Voldemort when he was hiding in the forests of Albania; the murder victim he used for his creation was Bertha Jorkins. He finds Nagini, and becomes smitten by a snake, turning it into a Horcrux, connected to it. In the last chapter of Deathly Hallows , Nagini was killed by Neville Longbottom using Godric Gryffindor's sword. The destruction of the remaining Horcrux makes the man Voldemort dead.

Harry Potter

When Voldemort attempted to kill Harry, he accidentally sealed his soul fragment inside him in a manner similar to a Horcrux. This event took place just before the opening chapter of Philosopher's Stone . Rowling explicitly states that Harry was never the right "dark object" because the Horcrux spell was not cast. Regardless, as with all Horcruxes, Voldemort will remain immortal as long as the fragment of his soul remains inside Harry. Part of Voldemort's soul was accidentally destroyed by Voldemort himself at the close of the thirty-fourth chapter Deathly Hallows with the help of the Elder Wand.

As a baby, Harry was in the room when Voldemort's fatal Killing Curse backfired. Voldemort's soul has been weakened and unstable due to continuous killings and the creation of previous Horcruxes. Harry becomes a Horcrux when a fragment of Voldemort's soul attaches to him after an unsuccessful curse. The lightning scar on Harry's forehead is a direct result of this assassination attempt, and the relationship formed as a result is used to explain some important plot points. Throughout the series, Harry is able to receive insights into Voldemort's mental and emotional state, enabling the reader to eavesdrop on the main antagonist series. This insight is usually accompanied by pain in the scar on Harry's forehead. Through Voldemort, Harry also inherited the ability to speak and understand Parseltongue. It is also revealed by Rowling in an interview that Harry often feels pain in his scar when Voldemort is active, close, or feeling a strong emotion, really is a trapped soul to leave Harry's body and rejoin the soul of his master.

The longing is one of the reasons why the Killing Curse used by Voldemort on Harry in the Forbidden Forest destroys part of Voldemort's soul inside Harry, but only sends Harry's soul into near-death. Harry can return to his body despite being hit by the Killing Curse of the Elder Wand because Voldemort has used Harry's blood to regain his full strength in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, and because the real master of the Elder Wand, Draco Malfoy, has been defeated by Harry makes Harry the new Master of Elder Wand. Harry's possession of a stick used for curses and connections like Horcrux between Voldemort and Harry reduces Voldemort's curse and protects Harry from an irreversible death.

When Voldemort studied Harry's telepathic connection, Voldemort never realized that Harry inadvertently brought his soul fragments. With this destroyed, the connection between the two was also damaged, and Harry never again felt any pain in his scar. Rowling reveals Harry has also lost the ability to speak Parseltongue, though he regained the ability to understand it in Harry Potter and the Cursed Son after his scar began to hurt again after the appearance of Voldemort's daughter and Bellatrix, Delphi. who Harry, his son Albus Severus, and his allies were defeated and sent to Azkaban. In the movie epilogue, his scar has faded into a common scar on Harry's forehead.

√ Harry Potter Inspired Illustrations A series of “artifacts ...
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Legendary magical artifact

Goblet of Fire

The Goblet of Fire is a trophy made of wood and used at the beginning of every Triwizard Tournament. It is used solely for selecting participating school champions, serving as an "impartial judge." [HP4] The parchment slips with the names of potential candidates are placed in the Cup and, at the appointed time, a representative from each school is selected when the parchment slip containing their name spits out from the Cup in a magical flame fountain. Moody falsely states once that Goblet of Fire is "a very powerful magical object" and very difficult to deceive, unless someone uses a very strong Charm Confundus.

During use at Goblet of Fire, it is placed in the front hall and surrounded by the "Age Line", a charm placed by Dumbledore to prevent underage witches entering the tournament. Anyone under age will grow a long white beard, as the Weasley twins show as they try to trick the cup with the Aging Potion. When not in use, the Cup is stored in a jewel box in Dumbledore's closet.

Godric Gryffindor's Sword

Godric Gryffindor's sword is a goblin-made sword that is adorned with large rubies on its hilt. It was formerly owned by Godric Gryffindor, one of Hogwarts' medieval founders. At Chamber of Secrets , Harry pulls the Sword out of the Sorting Hat to fight and kill the Basilisk. When Dumbledore learned of Harry's concern that he was not included in the House of Gryffindor, in part because of being a parseltongue like Lord Voldemort, the principal could easily place the child's fears by telling him only the true member of the house could be called the sword when he needed it. The sword also plays a key role in the Deathly Hallows , where it is revealed to have become imbued with the Basilisk's poison after its use against the Basilisk, since "it only takes that makes it stronger". This was later used to destroy three Voldemort Horcruxes.

Because the Sword was goblin-forged, it was indestructible, and according to Gobhook goblin, the Sword was originally forged by the First Ragnuk goblin and "stolen" by Gryffindor, as the Sword was taken by Griphook when the Sword fell from Harry's grasp during the raid in the Bellatrix Lestrange book seven. The sword returns to the wizard's hand, when Neville pulls him out of the Sorting Hat and uses it to chop off Nagini, Voldemort's snake. This shows that wherever the sword is at that moment, it will reappear in the Hat when a real Gryffindor member of the house needs it.

Rowling has confirmed that Gryffindor did not steal a sword from Ragnuk and that this belief is only part of Griphook goblin distrust and prejudice against witches. Godric Gryffindor commissioned the First Ragnuk to create a sword for him under his specifications. After Ragnuk made the sword, he loved it that after he handed it to Gryffindor, he told the goblins that it had been stolen and sent the maid to take it for her. Gryffindor defeats the goblins using magic instead of killing them, he bewitches them to return to Ragnuk and says that if he tries to take the sword again, he will use it against them. The king took the threat seriously, but kept insisting that it had been stolen from him until the day of his death.

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Source of the article : Wikipedia

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