Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and
Wizardry or simply Hogwarts is a fictional boarding
school of magic for
witches and wizards
between the ages of eleven and eighteen living in the United Kingdom
and Ireland
. Six of the seven books in the Harry Potter
series are largely set at the school, with each book lasting the
equivalent of one school year. In
Harry Potter and the
Deathly Hallows, however, most of the book is set outside
Hogwarts as main characters
Harry Potter,
Ron Weasley, and
Hermione Granger do not attend their final
year of school (though Rowling has stated that Hermione eventually
does return to school to complete her
N.E.W.T. examinations). The climactic battle of the
book, and the series, however, is set at Hogwarts.
Rowling
has suggested that she may have inadvertently taken the name from
the hogwort plant (Croton
capitatus), which she had seen at Kew
Gardens
some time before writing the Harry Potter
series, although the names 'The Hogwarts' and 'Hoggwart' both
appear in the 1954 Nigel Molesworth
book How To Be Topp by Geoffrey Willans.
Despite it being a fictional school, Hogwarts school was voted as
the 36th best Scottish educational establishment in an online
ranking, outranking Edinburgh's
Loretto
School.
School location and information
J. K.
Rowling says she visualises Hogwarts,
in its entirety, to be:
A huge, rambling, quite scary-looking castle, with a jumble of towers
and battlements.
Like the Weasley's
house, it isn't a building that Muggles
could build, because it is supported by magic.
In the novels, Hogwarts is located somewhere in
Scotland.
"Hogwarts ... Logically it had to be set in a secluded
place, and pretty soon I settled on Scotland in my mind."
Fraser, L.,
An interview with J.K.Rowling, Mammoth,
London, 2000. ISBN 0-7497-4394-8. pp 20–21. The school has numerous
charms and spells on and around it that make it impossible for any
Muggle (i.e., a non-magical person) to locate
it — they can't see the school, only ruins and several warnings of
danger. The castle has extensive grounds with sloping lawns,
flowerbeds and vegetable patches, a
loch
(called the Black Lake in the fourth film), a large dense forest
(called the
Forbidden Forest), a
number of
greenhouses and other
outbuildings, and a full-size
Quidditch pitch. According to Albus
Dumbledore there is a hidden swimming pool located somewhere on the
grounds. There is also an owlery, which houses all of the owls
owned by the school and those owned by students. It should be noted
that some rooms in the school tend to "move around," and so do the
stairs in the grand staircase. Witches and wizards cannot
Apparate or
Disapparate
in Hogwarts grounds, except when the Headmaster lifts the
enchantment, whether only in certain areas or for the entire
campus, so as to make the school less vulnerable when it serves the
headmaster to allow Apparition. Computers, televisions and other
electronic devices, as well as electricity, are not to be found at
Hogwarts. In
Harry Potter and the Goblet
of Fire, Hermione indicates that due to the high levels of
magic, "substitutes for magic (that) Muggles use" such as
computers, radar and electricity "go haywire" around Hogwarts.
Radios however, make an exception. Rowling explains this by saying
that the radios are not powered by electricity and are powered by
magic.
Hogwarts is a
coeducational,
secondary boarding school, taking children from ages
eleven to eighteen. Education at Hogwarts is not compulsory, with
some students being home schooled as stated in the seventh book.
Rowling initially said there are about one thousand students at
Hogwarts. She later suggested around six hundred, while
acknowledging that this number was still inconsistent with the
small number of people in Harry's year. She further explained that
this had resulted from her creating only 40 characters for Harry's
year.
The
Headmaster or Headmistress, assisted
by a Deputy Headmaster or Headmistress, undertakes management of
the school. The Head is answerable to the twelve-member Board of
Governors.
It is unclear how Hogwarts is funded; it is insinuated that the
families pay for the students at least partially (when said
families are able). In
Harry Potter and the
Half-Blood Prince Tom Riddle
says that he cannot afford to go to Hogwarts, to which
Albus Dumbledore replies, "There is a fund
at Hogwarts for those who require assistance to buy books and
robes," as students are required to purchase their own textbooks,
uniform, and other supplies. The
Ministry of Magic's efforts to take
control of the school in
Harry Potter and the
Order of the Phoenix imply that it is a publicly funded
school, though no mention of where the Ministry receives its funds
is made.
Rowling has said that Hogwarts is "a multifaith school."
Admission
Admission to Hogwarts is selective, in that children who show
magical ability will automatically gain a place, and
squibs cannot attend the
school as students (though they can work there in other roles as
Argus Filch does). A magical quill at
Hogwarts detects the birth of magical children and writes their
names into a large parchment book, but there is no
admission test because "you
are either magical or you are not." Every year, a teacher checks
this book and sends a letter to the children who are turning
eleven. Acceptance or declination of a place at Hogwarts must be
posted by 31 July. The letter also contains a list of supplies like
spell books, uniform, and other things that the student will need.
The
prospective student is expected to buy all the necessary materials,
normally from shops in Diagon Alley, a
concealed street near Charing Cross Road
in London found behind a pub by the name of The
Leaky Cauldron. Students who cannot afford their supplies
can receive financial aid from the school, as was the case with the
young orphan Tom Riddle.
Letters to
Muggle-born witches
and wizards, who may not be aware of their powers and are
unfamiliar with the concealed wizarding world, are delivered in
person by a member of Hogwarts staff, who then explains to the
parents/guardians about magical society, and reassures them
regarding this news. They also assist the family in regards to
buying supplies and gaining access to Diagon Alley.
Each student is allowed to bring a cat, toad, rat or owl. Along
with the acceptance letter, first year students are sent a list of
required equipment which includes a wand, subject books, a standard
size 2 pewter cauldron, a set of brass scales, a set of glass or
crystal phials, a kit of basic potion ingredients (for Potions),
and a telescope (for Astronomy). The Hogwarts uniform consists of
plain work robes in black, as well as a plain black hat, a pair of
protective gloves, and a black winter cloak with silver fastenings.
Each uniform must contain the wearer's nametag. First years are not
allowed a
broomstick of
their own, though an exception to this rule is made for Harry in
his first year after it is discovered that he has an excellent
ability as a Seeker in
Quidditch.
Academic years are separated by holidays of about two months in the
summer, and each year is divided into three terms by shorter
holidays around
Christmas and
Easter.
Arrival
The primary mode of transportation to Hogwarts is the
Hogwarts Express that students take at the
start of each school year.
Students board the train from Platform 9¾ at King's Cross
station
in London. The train leaves at 11:00 am and
arrives at Hogsmeade Station, near Hogwarts, some time after
nightfall.
From there, first year students are accompanied by the Keeper of
the Keys, Game and Grounds(in Harry's case, Hagrid) – or another
suitable teacher if he is absent – to small boats, which magically
sail themselves across the lake that get them near the entrance of
Hogwarts. The older students ride up to the castle in carriages
pulled by creatures called
Thestrals. When
the first-year students initially arrive at the castle, they wait
in a small chamber off the entrance hall until the older students
have taken their seats, and then enter the Great Hall for the
Sorting Ceremony to determine their House assignments. As
Minerva McGonagall said in
Harry Potter and the
Philosopher's Stone,
After the
Sorting Hat
sings a song each student in turn is seated upon the stool in front
of the rest of the student body. The Hat is placed on the student's
head, whereupon it examines his/her mind and assigns him/her to one
of the four Houses based on abilities, personality, and
preferences. After the Sorting Ceremony, the students and teachers
enjoy a feast, prepared by the Hogwarts
house-elves. If Dumbledore is feeling particularly
cheerful, he will lead the students in singing the school
song.
Houses
Hogwarts 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 (correctly answering a question
in class, for example, may earn five or ten points; lateness to
class may cost ten points). Each house also has its own Quidditch
team that competes for the Quidditch Cup. These two competitions
breed rivalries between the houses. Houses at Hogwarts are the
living and learning communities for their students. Each house is
under the authority of one of the
Hogwarts staff members. The Heads of the
houses, as they are called, are in charge of giving their students
important information, dealing with matters of severe punishment,
and responding to emergencies in their houses, among other things.
Each year, year level groups of every separate house share the same
dormitory and classes. The dormitory and common room of a House
are, barring rare exceptions, inaccessible to students belonging to
other Houses.
In the 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
they each added knowledge to it, allowing the Sorting Hat to choose
the students 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 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.
The translators of the books’ foreign editions had difficulty
translating the "house" concept; in countries where this system
does not exist, no word could adequately convey the importance of
belonging to a certain house, the loyalty owed to it, and the pride
taken in prizes won by the house.
Gryffindor
Gryffindor values courage, bravery, nerve and
chivalry. Its mascot is the lion, and its colours are scarlet and
gold. The Head of this house is the
Transfiguration teacher,
Minerva McGonagall, and the house
ghost is Sir Nicholas de
Mimsy-Porpington, more commonly known as
Nearly Headless Nick. According to
Rowling, Gryffindor corresponds roughly to the element of
fire. The founder of the house is
Godric Gryffindor.
The Gryffindor common room is located in one of the castle's
highest towers, the entrance to which is located on the seventh
floor in the east wing of the castle 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, as was distinguished in the third book, when Sirius Black
tried forcing entry into the tower, only to be blocked by The Fat
Lady after he could not give the correct password. In the first
book, Neville Longbottom tends to forget the password and must wait
near the painting until other Gryffindors arrive to open the way.
Rowling, J.K.
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, Ch. 9,
p. 156. Scholastic: 1997.
Hufflepuff
Hufflepuff values hard
work, loyalty, tolerance, and fair play. They are also particularly
good finders. The house mascot is the badger, and canary yellow and
black are its colours. The Head of this house is the
Herbology teacher
Pomona
Sprout, and the house ghost is
The Fat
Friar. According to Rowling, Hufflepuff corresponds roughly to
the element of
earth. The
founder of this house is Helga Hufflepuff.
The Hufflepuff dormitories and common room are located somewhere in
the basement. The entrance is found behind a life-like painting
that is somewhere near the kitchens. Students must give the
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).
Ravenclaw
Ravenclaw values
intelligence, creativity, learning, and wit. The house mascot is a
raven, and the house colours are blue and bronze (blue and grey in
the films). The head of this house is the
Charms professor,
Filius
Flitwick, and the house ghost is
The Grey Lady. According to
Rowling, Ravenclaw corresponds roughly to the element of
air. The founder of this house is
Rowena Ravenclaw.
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 replica statue of Rowena wearing
her diadem. Harry also notes that, by day, the Ravenclaws
"would have a spectacular view of the surrounding
mountains." A logical riddle must be solved in order to gain
entry, whereas the Gryffindor, Hufflepuff and Slytherin common
rooms only require a password, indicating that it may be easier for
intelligent students of other houses to enter this common room than
others (indeed, Professor McGonagall, a very intelligent witch, is
able to answer a riddle and enter the common room in the last
book).
Slytherin
Slytherin house values
ambition, cunning, leadership and resourcefulness and most of all
pure wizard blood. Slytherins tend to be pure-bloods or half-bloods
who believe in the supremacy of pure wizard blood; Muggle-borns,
vulgarly known as "Mudbloods," are less commonly found in Slytherin
than in other houses. The house mascot of Slytherin is the
serpent,and the house colours are green and silver. Salazar
Slytherin founded the house. The Head of House is
Severus Snape in the first five books and most
of the sixth book. At the end of the sixth book and in the seventh
book, the old Potions master and previous Head of House who has
come out of retirement,
Horace
Slughorn, reassumes authority of the house. The ghost of
Slytherin house is
The
Bloody Baron. 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. The room is described in the 2nd book as
having a greenish glow.
The Sorting Hat claims that
blood purity is a factor in
selecting Slytherins, although this is not mentioned until the
fifth book. There is no reason to believe, however, that
Muggle-born students are not sorted there, merely that pure-blooded
students are more desirable to that house, as there are several
examples of half-bloods in the house (such as Snape and Voldemort).
In
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.
When believing Harry 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 his defeat and death, after
which Slytherin becomes more diluted in its blood purity, no longer
remaining the pureblood bastion it once was. Its dark reputation,
however, does linger.
Terms and holidays
Hogwarts' school year is structured in a similar way to other
'non-magical' schools and colleges in the UK, with a three-term
year punctuated by holidays at Christmas and Easter and bounded by
the long summer holiday of nine weeks. Term begins every year on
September 1, and finishes at the end of June the following year.
Students have the option of staying at Hogwarts for the winter and
spring holidays. Those who choose to stay at the castle do not have
lessons and attend a feast on Christmas Day. Students also do not
have classes the week of Easter, but this is much less enjoyable
due to the large amount of work that the teachers assign students
at this time in preparation for final exams.
Other than the aforementioned breaks, and weekends, students do not
receive any other holidays. However, students third year and above
may visit Hogsmeade, the local village, occasionally. There are
normally four feasts per year, the start-of-term feast at the
beginning of the school year and end-of-term feast at the end of
the school year, as well as feasts at
Halloween and Christmas. Feasts are also called to
mark any special occasions, as in
Goblet of Fire, when
there was a feast to celebrate the beginning of the Triwizard
Tournament.
Subjects and teachers
Throughout the series, numerous lessons are described, instructing
the students in various branches of magic. There are twelve named
teachers (each referred to as Professor), each specialising in a
single subject. Transfiguration, Defence Against the Dark Arts,
Charms, Potions, Astronomy, History of Magic, and Herbology are
compulsory subjects for the first five years. At the end of their
second year, students are required to add at least two optative
subjects to their syllabus for the start of the third year. The
five choices available are Arithmancy, Ancient Runes, Divination,
Care of Magical Creatures, and Muggle Studies.
Transfiguration
Transfiguration is essentially the art of changing
the properties of an object. Transfiguration is a theory-based
subject, including topics such as "Switching Spells" (altering only
a part of some object, such as giving a human rabbit's ears);
Vanishing Spells (causing an object to completely disappear); and
Conjuring Spells (creating objects out of thin air). It is possible
to change inanimate objects into animate ones and vice versa —
McGonagall transfigures her desk into a
pig and
back in
Philosopher's Stone.
Defence Against the Dark Arts
Defence Against the Dark Arts, commonly shortened
to
D.A.D.A., is the class that teaches students
defensive techniques in order to defend themselves from the
Dark Arts, and to be
protected from Dark creatures.
The subject has an extraordinarily high turnover of staff members —
throughout the series no Defence Against the Dark Arts teacher has
remained at Hogwarts for more than one school year. It is suggested
by Hagrid in
Harry Potter and the
Chamber of Secrets that
"They're startin' ter think
the job's jinxed. No one's lasted long for a while
now." In
Half-Blood Prince, Dumbledore suggests that
Voldemort cursed the position because his application for it was
rejected. The existence of the jinx was eventually confirmed by
Rowling. The position had also been coveted by Snape, but he was
denied the position as well. Snape was finally appointed D.A.D.A.
professor in
Half-Blood Prince. Rowling announced in an
interview that once Voldemort had died, the jinx he placed on the
office was lifted and a permanent professor had been teaching the
subject between the end of
Deathly Hallows and the
epilogue, set nineteen years afterwards.
Furthermore, she imagines that Harry Potter occasionally comes to
the class to give lectures on the subject.
Charms
Charms is the class that teaches how to develop
incantations for the uses of bewitchment. Rowling has described
Charms as a type of magic spell concerned with giving an object
new and unexpected properties. Charms classes are
described as notoriously noisy and chaotic, as the lessons are
largely practical. Many of the
exposition sequences in the
books are set in Charms classes, which are on the second floor of
Hogwarts.
Potions
Potions is described as the art of creating
mixtures with magical effects. It requires the correct mixing and
stirring of ingredients at the right times and temperatures. It is
related to Chemistry, but with a more sinister twist. As to the
question of whether a Muggle could brew a potion, given the correct
magical ingredients, Rowling has said, "Potions seems, on the face
of it, to be the most Muggle-friendly subject. But there does come
a point in which you need to do more than stir." Snape's lessons
are depicted as unhappy, oppressing times set in a gloomy dungeon
in the basement of the castle, whilst Slughorn's, who replaces
Snape as Potions Master, is shown as more cheerful and even fun at
times.
Astronomy
Astronomy is the only field of study at Hogwarts
that has a direct equivalent in the Muggle world. Astronomy classes
take place in the Astronomy Tower, the tallest tower in Hogwarts,
and are taught by Professor Aurora Sinistra. Lessons involve
observations of the night skies with
telescopes. No Astronomy lesson, or even a
fragment of one, is ever depicted in the books or movies. However,
Rowling does describe one of Harry's Astronomy exams in
Harry
Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. Known student homework
activities include learning the names of stars, constellations and
planets, as well as their location and movements, and describing
the environments of planets and moons.
History of Magic
History of Magic is the study of magical
history.
Cuthbert
Binns' lessons are depicted as some of the most boring at
Hogwarts. They only ever take the form of lectures, given without
pause, about significant events in wizarding history. Topics have
included goblin rebellions, giant wars, and the origins of
wizarding secrecy. This is the only class at Hogwarts that is
taught by a ghost.
Herbology
Herbology is the study of magical plants and how
to take care of, utilise and combat them. There are at least three
greenhouses described in the books, holding a variety of magical
plants of varying degrees of lethality. Herbology is also the only
subject in which Neville excels; it is explained in the epilogue to
Deathly Hallows that he later becomes the Herbology
teacher, taking the place of Professor Sprout.
Arithmancy
Arithmancy is a branch of magic concerned with the
magical properties of numbers. As neither Harry nor Ron takes this
class, almost nothing is known about it. It is, however, a
favourite subject of Hermione. Arithmancy is reportedly very
difficult, as it requires memorizing or working with large number
charts.
Ancient Runes
Ancient Runes is a generally theoretical subject
that studies the ancient runic scripts. It is studied by Hermione
but not by Harry or Ron, so little else is known about this
subject.
Divination
Divination is the art of
predicting the future. Various methods are described, including
tea leaves,
fire
omens,
crystal balls,
palmistry,
cartomancy
(including the reading of conventional
playing cards and the
tarot),
astrology, and
dream interpretations.
Divination is described by Professor McGonagall as "one of the most
imprecise branches of magic". Supporters of the subject claim that
it is an inexact science that requires innate gifts like the "Inner
Eye". Those opposed claim that the subject is irrelevant and
fraudulent. Harry is first taught Divination by Professor
Trelawney, and then later by Firenze after Trelawney is sacked by
Dolores Umbridge in Harry's fifth
year. In the sixth (and presumably seventh) year, both Firenze and
Professor Trelawney teach Divination.
Care of Magical Creatures
Care of Magical Creatures is the class which
instructs students on how to care for
magical beasts. Classes are
held outside the castle. In Harry's first two years, the class is
taken by Professor Silvanus Kettleburn who then retires "in order
to enjoy more time with his remaining limbs". Dumbledore then
recruits the gamekeeper
Rubeus Hagrid
to teach in addition to his gamekeeping duties. Although Hagrid is
obviously very experienced and knowledgeable, he consistly
misjudges the level of risk that the animals he uses in his lessons
pose to his students , which sometimes results in chaos.
Muggle Studies
Muggle Studies involves the study of the
Muggle (non-magical) culture "from a wizarding point
of view." The only need for witches and wizards to learn about
Muggle
ways and
means, is to ensure they are able to blend in
with Muggles while needing to do so (e.g. at the 1994 Quidditch
World Cup). As the class is only mentioned as being taken by
Hermione, and for just one year, little is known about its
curriculum. In the opening chapter of the final book, Voldemort
murders Professor
Charity Burbage
because she portrays Muggles in a positive light and is opposed to
limiting wizardry to only people of pure-blood origins. For the
remainder of the academic year covered by
Deathly Hallows,
the Death Eater
Alecto Carrow teaches
Muggle Studies. However, her "lessons" (which are made compulsory)
mainly describe Muggles and Muggle-borns as subhuman and worthy of
persecution.
Flying
Flying is the class that teaches the use of
broomsticks made
for the use of flying and is taught only to Hogwarts first years.
The subject is the only one that requires physicality. The only
flying lesson depicted in the Harry Potter series is in
Harry Potter and
the Philosopher's Stone. The class is taught by Madam
Hooch.
Apparition
Apparition is the magical form of teleportation in
the
Harry Potter series. Lessons are
optional to those in the sixth and seventh years. Performing
Apparition requires a licence and may only be legally performed by
people over seventeen years of age. The described reason for the
restriction is that Apparition is dangerous if done improperly:
body parts can be left behind in an unfortunate side-effect known
as "splinching." Although, as Hermione points out innumerable times
throughout the series, magical enchantments on Hogwarts castle and
grounds prevent Apparition and Disapparition inside the castle, it
is explained in
Half-Blood Prince that these protections
are temporarily relaxed within the Great Hall for short periods to
permit students to practise Apparition.
Wilkie Twycross, a "Ministry of Magic
Apparition Instructor" offers lessons in
Apparition
in
Half-Blood Prince.
Grading and assessment
During their first four years, students need only to pass each of
their subjects before advancing to the next level the following
year. Regular exams and lessons usually seem to be graded on a
numerical scale from 0 to 100, even though Hermione is known to
have received 112% in Charms in
Philosopher's Stone, and
320% in
Prisoner of Azkaban in Muggle Studies. If students
fail in their year, they need to repeat it in the following school
year. To qualify as a registered practitioner of magic, students
must study for the compulsory Ordinary Wizarding Level (O.W.L.)
examinations taken at the end of the fifth year. If a student
scores well enough on an O.W.L., he/she may take advanced classes
in that subject for the final two years in preparation for the
Nastily Exhausting Wizarding Tests (N.E.W.T.), an in-depth
examination given at the end of the seventh year. In general, a
U.K. student takes only three or four
A-Level subjects and exams, just as a typical
Hogwarts student takes only a few N.E.W.T.-level subjects.
Most O.W.L.s consist of two parts, a written theoretical test and a
practical demonstration of skills before the examiners. Subjects
are graded on the following scale:
Passing Grades
- O = Outstanding
- E = Exceeds Expectations
- A = Acceptable
Failing Grades
- P = Poor
- D = Dreadful
- T = Troll
The O.W.L.s roughly corresponds to the General Certificate of
Education
O-Level (now replaced
by the
GCSE), and the N.E.W.T.s to the
A-level, (now sometimes replaced by the
IB) examinations used in the English, Welsh and
Northern Ireland secondary school system. In order to proceed to a
N.E.W.T., a student usually needs to have achieved at least an E in
the O.W.L. of the same subject, although some professors (e.g.
Professor Snape) insist upon a grade
of O. Students who fail in their exams or who do not achieve high
enough grades do not continue with the subject in their sixth and
seventh years.
At the end of their fifth year, students speak briefly with their
head of house to decide which classes to continue in depending on
their O.W.L. scores and their goals after school. The classes they
decide to continue are considerably more advanced. Because they
dropped one or more classes, students in their sixth and seventh
year may get several class sessions off per week. The heavy
workload that each of these classes requires means that students
usually spend these times studying and doing homework. At the end
of their seventh and final year, students take the N.E.W.T. exams,
which test what the student has learned over the past two years.
Many professions require high grades in these tests, meaning that
students must work very hard to ensure that they pass.
Student life
The day begins at Hogwarts with breakfast in the Great Hall.
Students sit at their own House table and can eat as well as
socialise, or finish homework. The Headmaster or Headmistress eats
with the professors at the High Table placed at the far end of the
hall. During breakfast, owls bring in the students' post, generally
consisting of
The
Daily Prophet, letters from parents or friends, or
packages from home. A bell signals the start of the first class of
the morning at 9 a.m.
There are two long morning classes with a short break in between
them for students to get to their next class. After lunch, classes
resume at 1 p.m., and there is a break around afternoon teatime
before another class period. The classes are about one hour in
length, with occasional double periods lasting two hours. Classes
end around five o'clock. First year students get Friday afternoons
off, while sixth- and seventh-year students have several free
periods during the week. In the evening, students eat their dinner
in the Great Hall, after which they are expected to be in their
common rooms. Astronomy classes take place late at night in the
Astronomy Tower.
The four House dormitories have secret entrances, generally known
only to members of that house and require a password (with the
exception of the entrance to the Ravenclaw dormitory, where one is
required to correctly answer a riddle) in order to gain entrance.
Inside is the common room, which contains armchairs and sofas for
the pupils, as well as tables for studying. There are fireplaces to
keep the rooms warm, and students either relax here in the evenings
or else complete their homework. There are notice boards in each
common room too, as well as at other strategic points throughout
the school. The students sleep in their House dormitories, which
branch off from the common rooms. Each dormitory gets at least two
rooms; one for boys and one for girls (an enchantment prevents boys
from entering the girls' area, although there is no spell to
prevent the reverse from occurring). Each student sleeps in a large
four-poster bed with bed covers and heavy curtains in the House
colours, and thick white pillows. There is a bedside table for each
bed, and each dormitory has a jug of water and goblets on a
tray.
On designated weekends, Hogwarts students in their third year or
higher, with a signed permission slip, are permitted to walk to the
nearby wizarding village of Hogsmeade, where they can relax and
enjoy the pubs, restaurants and shops. There appears to be a good
relationship between the school and the village, and the students
get on well with the locals. Favourite places in Hogsmeade include
Honeydukes Sweetshop,
Zonko's Joke Shop,
clothing stores such as
Gladrags Wizardwear, the
Shrieking Shack, rumoured to be the
most haunted building in Britain (although this rumour was proven
to be false in the third book), the pubs
The Three Broomsticks and
The Hog's Head, and
Madam Puddifoot's coffee
shop.
Food
The
house-elves at Hogwarts are skilled
chefs, and cook a wide variety of dishes for every meal. The
various dishes are prepared in the kitchens directly below the
Great Hall and, at meal times, magically transported up so that
they appear served for the students. Many of the dishes eaten at
Hogwarts were originally derived from the spells of House Founder
Helga Hufflepuff. Hogwarts food is typically British, although the
school sometimes makes exceptions (during the
Triwizard Tournament, foreign dishes,
such as
bouillabaisse, were served in
honour of the visiting schools). The usual drinks (apart from
water) are milk, tea, coffee, orange juice, and pumpkin juice.
Butterbeer was only once served at the school during the Yule
Ball.
Discipline
Apart from losing points from a house, serious misdeeds at Hogwarts
are punishable by detention.
According to the school caretaker,
Argus
Filch, detention meant subjection to various forms of torture
until relatively recently. Arthur Weasley claimed still to bear
physical scars inflicted by Apollyon Pringle, Filch's predecessor.
In present times however, detention usually involves assisting
staff or faculty with tedious tasks. Examples of detention include
the one imposed on Harry by Umbridge in
Order of the
Phoenix. In this case, Harry was forced to write, "I must not
tell lies" repeatedly using a magical quill which then carves what
is written into the back of the writer's hand. However, sensible
teachers at the school never use this cruel punishment. In another
case, when Snape caught Harry using the Sectumsempra curse on
Malfoy, he was forced to go through over a thousand boxes of files
describing wrongdoers at Hogwarts and their punishments. Harry was
supposed to order them in alphabetical order, and rewrite the cards
whose words were hard to see or otherwise damaged. The Weasley
twins Fred and George had a whole drawer of these cards to
themselves.
For even more serious offences, students may be suspended or even
expelled from Hogwarts. Harry and Ron are threatened with expulsion
after crashing Ron's car into the Whomping Willow at the start of
their second year, and Harry is expelled before the start of his
fifth year (although the sentence is quickly changed to a
disciplinary hearing) after he is detected using magic in the
presence of Muggles, a serious offence among the wizarding
community. Dumbledore argued in Harry's defence, stating that
besides the fact that it was done in self-defence, the Ministry has
no authority to expel students – such powers are invested in the
Headmaster and the Board of Governors. Snape has attempted to have
Harry expelled, and he attempted to have Harry's father,
James Potter, expelled
when they were at Hogwarts together. The only student known to have
actually been expelled is Hagrid, for possessing the murder of
Myrtle
with an
acromantula believed to be the
Monster of Slytherin and for opening the Chamber of Secrets –
crimes for which Tom Riddle had actually framed him.
Professors seem to be able to punish students with relative
impunity and can hand out detention, even for unsatisfactory
grades. Enforcement of rules outside of class mainly falls to the
caretaker, with the assistance of the prefects. A student's Head of
House usually has the final say in disciplinary matters. However,
during Umbridge's tenure at Hogwarts, she quickly obtains the power
to have the final say in any disciplinary actions whatsoever, due
to an Educational Decree (one of many) passed by Minister for Magic
Cornelius Fudge.
In the summer before their fifth year, two fifth year students from
each House are picked to be
prefects, which grants them extra
privileges and responsibilities (e.g. using the prefect's bathroom,
controlling younger students) and disciplinary responsibilities;
they remain Prefects, unless appointed Head Boy or Girl or stripped
of their position, for the rest of their school career. There are
four to six prefects per house, all from the fifth, sixth and
seventh year students: if one of them has been appointed
Head Boy or
Head Girl,
they are not replaced as Prefects. The leaders of the student body,
the Head Boy and Head Girl, are drawn from the seventh year
students. A student may be chosen as Head without first being a
Prefect as according to Hagrid, James Potter was Head Boy although
he was not a Prefect. Prefects have the authority to give
detentions for infractions. Quidditch house captains are given some
of the same privileges as Prefects, such as the Prefect's
bathroom.
The only known cause for being suspended from Hogwarts is mentioned
in passing by Snape in
Prisoner of Azkaban. He tells
Harry, Ron, and Hermione that they are in enough trouble and facing
suspension for being out of bounds while they are in the Shrieking
Shack, 'consorting with a werewolf and a convicted murderer.'
Secrets of Hogwarts
Hogwarts is home to many secret locations and passages.
The hiding place of the Philosopher's Stone
Accessed by entering a trapdoor in the forbidden corridor on the
third floor, and protected by a gauntlet of seven magical
challenges set up by the teachers.
- A giant three-headed dog named Fluffy placed specially to guard the
trapdoor by Hagrid.
- Devil's Snare, grown by Professor Sprout.
- A room containing dozens of keys, charmed by Flitwick to sprout
wings and fly near the ceiling. One of these keys will unlock the
door to the next section. However, in the film adaptation, the keys
attack the seeker of the Stone.
- A large chessboard with an army of large
chessmen, transfigured by McGonagall. To proceed to the door on the
opposite side, the person in question must beat the chessmen at a
game of wizards’ chess where the player must risk his life if he
loses. Ron and Professor Quirrell are the only wizards to win the
game of wizards’ chess.
- A room with a large troll
inside. This is Quirrell's challenge. In the book, Quirrell had
knocked out his own troll to get to the last room and thus the trio
did not have to fight it; in the film, it does not appear, but it
appears in the PlayStation One version of the game.
- A series of potions, brewed by Snape. A logical riddle, not
magic, has to be solved. There are two doors, blocked by fire. One
potion will allow the person to exit the way he/she arrived,
another will allow him/her to proceed to the next chamber, two are
nettle wine, and the other three are poison. This challenge does
not appear in the film, but does in the video game adaptation.
- The Mirror of Erised can be
found in the final chamber, further enchanted by Dumbledore to
bestow the Philosopher's
Stone upon a seeker only hoping to acquire the stone but not
use it for selfish means.
Chamber of Secrets

The Chamber of Secrets as seen in the
second film
The Chamber of Secrets, which is deep under the school, was home to
an ancient
Basilisk,
intended to be used to purge the school of
Muggle-born
students.
Salazar Slytherin, one
of the founders of Hogwarts, built the Chamber before he left the
school.
The Chamber is well hidden and the entrance is in
Moaning Myrtle's bathroom on the second
floor, which leads down into a dark, slimy stone tunnel. There are
many skeletons of small animals littering the floor and even a
gigantic skin shed by the Basilisk. The tunnel leads to a solid
wall, carved with two entwined serpents with emeralds for eyes.
When
Parseltongue
is spoken they open into a very long, dim corridor, lined with
monumental statues of snakes, including two towering stone pillars
with more carved serpents that brace the ceiling. A colossal statue
of Salazar Slytherin, looking ancient and monkey-like, is at the
centre. The Basilisk rested inside the statue and emerged from its
mouth when the Heir of Slytherin, Tom Riddle, summoned it.In his
second year at Hogwarts, Harry uses Parseltongue to open the
chamber and destroys the diary containing the embodied memory of a
16-year old Tom Riddle from his own days at Hogwarts. It is later
revealed that the diary was a Horcrux.In
Deathly Hallows,
Ron and Hermione enter the Chamber. Ron opens the door (despite not
speaking Parseltongue) by imitating sounds he heard Harry use to
open Slytherin's locket. They find a basilisk fang to use to
destroy the Horcrux made from Helga Hufflepuff's cup.
Moaning Myrtle's bathroom contains
the entrance to the Chamber of Secrets. The entrance is a sink with
a snake scratched onto the tap, opened by speaking Parseltongue.
This causes the sink to open into a pipe large enough for a person
to slide down it. At the bottom of this chute is a tunnel leading
to the Chamber of Secrets. When Tom Riddle opened the Chamber,
Myrtle was sulking in a stall. When she heard him, she opened the
door, saw the
Basilisk, and
died immediately, becoming a ghost. Her bathroom remains
operational, but is rarely used by students because of Myrtle's
disagreeable presence and her habit of flooding it when she is
distraught.
Passages
There are nine known secret passages in and out of the school.
Filch knows just four of these while the Marauders (Remus Lupin,
Peter Pettrigrew, Sirius Black and James Potter) and the Weasley
twins know of seven (the latter discovering the Hog's Head passage
just before the Battle of Hogwarts), though where some lead is
unknown. The other five are:
- A passage beneath the Whomping Willow, leading to the Shrieking Shack.
- A passage behind a mirror on the fourth floor, which is caved
in. It leads to Hogsmeade, but where in Hogsmeade it leads to is
unknown.
- A passage beneath a one-eyed witch statue by the stairs to the
Defence Against the Dark Arts, leading to the cellar of Honeydukes. Speaking aloud the word ‘Dissendium’
to the witch allows access this passage; the hump on the statue
then opens and reveals the hidden passageway.
- A link between two vanishing cabinets, one in the school and
the other in Borgin and Burkes in
Knockturn Alley. This link
presumably worked until Chamber of Secrets when Peeves (persuaded by Nearly Headless Nick) smashed the
Hogwarts cabinet. The passage was reopened in Half-Blood
Prince when Draco Malfoy fixed the
cabinet. This passage is not shown on the Marauder's Map as it's not part of the castle
itself.
- A passage in the Room of Requirement, leading to the Hog's Head bar, however due to the nature of the
Room of Requirement, it is possible that several passages to
different locations could be accessed from it. This passage is
created in Deathly Hallows and is therefore not shown on
the Marauder's Map.
Room of Requirement
Located on the seventh floor opposite an enormous tapestry
depicting Barnabas the Barmy attempting to train trolls for the
ballet, the Room of Requirement appears only when someone is in
need of it. To make it appear, one must walk past its hidden
entrance three times while concentrating on what is needed. The
room will then appear, outfitted with whatever is required. To the
Hogwarts house-elves, it is also known as the Come and Go
Room.
Dumbledore was first to mention the room, noting that he discovered
it at five-thirty in the morning, filled with chamber pots when he
was trying to find a toilet. However, Dumbledore did not appear to
know the Room's specific secrets.
Dobby later told Harry of the Room in
detail and admitted to frequently bringing
Winky to the room to cure her bouts of
Butterbeer-induced drunkenness, finding it full of antidotes and a
"nice elf-sized bed." Filch was said to find cleaning supplies here
when he had run out; when
Fred
and George Weasley needed a place to hide, it would appear in
the form of a broom cupboard. Trelawney also makes a habit of using
it to hide her empty sherry bottles after she is sacked in
Order of the Phoenix. It would seem that when one wishes
to hide something it produces the same room for everyone: the Room
of Hidden Things, which is full of many centuries worth of
abandoned objects, such as broken furniture, books, and
possessions, which were presumably forgotten by their owners.
Harry learned of the room's abilities from Dobby, finding it the
perfect location for his
Dumbledore's
Army meetings, during which it would be filled with bookcases
full of Defence Against the Dark Arts volumes, many different kinds
of Dark Detectors, and a plethora of floor cushions for practicing
defensive spells. When the D.A. was betrayed, the room provided
Pansy Parkinson with the list of
members of the organisation. In
Half-Blood Prince Harry
used the Room of Hidden Things to stash his copy of
Advanced
Potion-Making, describing it as the size of a large cathedral
and packed to overflowing with items hidden by Hogwarts inhabitants
over the years, such as old potions, clothing, ruined furniture, an
old tiara (which happened to be one of Voldemort's Horcruxes), or
books which were "no doubt banned or graffitied or stolen." He
later realised that Draco had been using the room in that same
state to hide and repair the
Vanishing
Cabinet in order to use it to smuggle Death Eaters into
Hogwarts. Ironically, while Harry tries many times to get into the
Room of Requirement to see what Malfoy is doing, the only time he
succeeds to get into the room (and he is not thinking about
Malfoy), he gains access to the room where Malfoy has been
working.
In
Deathly Hallows, the students who need a place to hide
from the Carrows, two Death Eater professors, use the room. It is
also revealed that the Room of Requirement's current version can
change while still occupied, though should a completely different
version be required (e.g. the Room of Hidden Things instead of DA
Headquarters) the room must be empty. The Room can also answer to
the desire of the wizard within the room, such as providing Harry
with a whistle when he needed one during a Dumbledore's Army
meeting, or creating a passage to the Hog's Head (as the room
cannot produce food). Later,
Ravenclaw's diadem is
found to be one of Voldemort's Horcruxes and has been hidden in the
Room of Hidden Things by Voldemort himself. Harry, Ron, and
Hermione enter the Room, with Harry knowing that he must look for a
place to hide things, and find the tiara; but they are ambushed by
Draco,
Crabbe and Goyle. The diadem
is finally destroyed when Crabbe fills this version of the Room
with what Hermione believes to have been
Fiendfyre; a particularly
destructive magical fire. It is not known if the room continues to
function after the events of
Deathly Hallows; Ron
expresses concern that it may have been ruined in all of its forms
by the cursed fire.
Forbidden Forest
The Forbidden Forest is a large, dark forest in the boundaries of
the school grounds. It is usually referred to simply as "the
Forest" and in the film series as the "Dark Forest". It is strictly
forbidden to all students, except during Care of Magical Creatures
lessons and, on rare occasions, detentions.
Among the plant species within the Forest are trees such as beech,
oak, pine, sycamore, and yew, as well as undergrowth including
knotgrass and thorns. Though the Forest is vastly dense and wild,
there are a few paths and clearings. Hagrid, who frequently travels
into the Forest for various reasons, mostly makes these trails. The
Forest is also home to an assortment of creatures. The following is
an incomplete list of beasts that inhabit the forest:
- A herd of at least fifty Centaurs,
including Bane, Magorian, Ronan, and Firenze.
- A colony of Acromantula, Aragog and his
family, which may have been wiped out by Death Eaters.
- Unicorns
- Thestrals
- Trolls
- Bowtruckles
- Gytrash (large spirit dog)
- Fluffy, a three-headed dog who was
released into the forest after the events of Philosopher's
Stone.
- Grawp, a "small" giant, lived in the
Forest during Order of the Phoenix. Dumbledore later
arranged for him to move up to the mountains surrounding Hogwarts
and live in a big cave, where he is "much happier than he was in
the Forest"
Hogwarts Express
The
Hogwarts Express is a magical intercity train that
carries students between London
and Hogsmeade. The train starts from King's Cross
railway station
Platform 9¾ and
goes non-stop to Hogsmeade railway station. Prefects of the
school ride in a separate carriage near the front of the train. The
compartments on the train appear to be lettered; in
Half-Blood
Prince, the "Slug Club" meets in compartment C. In
Philosopher's Stone, Harry meets his two best friends, Ron
and Hermione, on his first ride on the Hogwarts Express. In the
books, he has been on the train ten times: twice each in the first,
third, fourth, and fifth books, and once each in the second (in
which he and Ron arrive instead in a
flying car)
and the sixth (which ends before Harry leaves Hogwarts).
The steam engine used in the film adaptations is the
GWR 4900 Class 5972 Olton
Hall, but it was not the first real locomotive to be disguised
as the Hogwarts Express. To promote the books, the
Southern Railway locomotive
Taw Valley was repainted and renamed
temporarily, but was rejected by Chris Columbus as looking ‘too
modern’ for the film.
Filming locations for the Hogwarts Express
sequences include Goathland
on the North Yorkshire Moors Railway,
Kings Cross
railway station
and the route of the Jacobite Express which follows
the West Highland Line from
Fort
William
to Mallaig
in Scotland
, as it crosses the Glenfinnan Viaduct
.
Several model trains have been made of the Hogwarts Express. An
00 gauge is produced by
Hornby, though this is of a
Castle Class locomotive rather than the
Hall Class used in the films. A
three-rail H0
gauge model is produced by
Märklin,
and a two-rail H0/00 was produced in the early 2000s by
Bachmann. Several now-discontinued
L gauge models have been produced by
LEGO.
Lionel
has released an
O gauge set in their 2007
catalogue, as well as a
G gauge set for
2008.
References
- 1999: Accio Quote!, the largest archive of J.K.
Rowling interviews on the web
- 2001: Accio Quote!, the largest archive of J.K.
Rowling interviews on the web
- LRB: Thomas Jones, Swete Lavender 17 February
2000
- Independent: Potter's Magic School 22 September
2000
- Harry Potter School Outranks Loretto
- How do you remember everything from different books when
you are still writing the HP series? from JKRowling.com.
- 2007: Accio Quote!, the Largest Archive of J.K.
Rowling quotes on the web
- [1] accio-quote.org.
- We haven't heard the school song since the first book. Did
the teachers rebel against it? jkrowling.com.
- J.K. Rowling Web Chat Transcript - The Leaky
Cauldron
- The Leaky Cauldron and Mugglenet interview Joanne
Kathleen Rowling: Part Three accio-quote.org Retrieved
on 04-17-08
- 1998: Accio Quote!, the Largest Archive of J.K.
Rowling quotes on the web
- 2007: Accio Quote!, the Largest Archive of J.K.
Rowling quotes on the web
- 2006: Accio Quote!, the largest archive of J.K.
Rowling interviews on the web
- 2001: Accio Quote!, the largest archive of J.K.
Rowling interviews on the web
- set reference BrickLink Reference Catalog
External links