LOCATIONS,
LOCATIONS, LOCATIONS -
PLOTABLE AND
UNPLOTABLE
Hope you have your maps and
"point me" spells ready because there we are going to be visiting quite a few
interesting places.
Portkey Links:
4 Priivet Drive
12 Grimmauld Place
Updated
September 20, 2005
Azkaban Prison
The Burrow
Chamber of Secrets
Diagon Alley - Fred and George WeasleyS' Joke Shop
Forbidden Forest
Ministry of Magic -
Department of Mysteries
Godric's
Hollow
Updated
September 20, 2005
Gringotts Bank - london
Hogsmeade
HogsHead Pub
Three Broomsticks Pub
Honeydukes Sweet Shoppe
Zonko's Joke Shoppe
Hogwarts Castle
Knockturn Alley
The Leaky Cauldron
THE ROOM OF
REQUIREMENT
Updated
September 20, 2005
Shrieking Shack
Coming soon
SPINNER'S END
*Updated
November 12, 2005
4 PRIVET DRIVE, LITTLE
WHINGING, SURREY
Ah, we arrive at the
number four right off the bat in the very first Harry Potter book. Four is
not a welcoming number for Harry. And Number 4 Privet Drive is about as
unwelcome a place as you there is... with the exception of maybe Snape's
classroom. Interestingly, a privet is a small hedge that
defines the boundary of an area. And in this case, if you live on Privet
Drive (which is very similar to Private Drive) you seem to be telling the world NO TRESPASSING - KEEP OUT!
But what is it
specifically about Number 4 that makes it so unwelcoming? Well that's
obvious, isn't it? The Dursleys, of course. Blood is definitely not
thicker than water in regards to Harry's only surviving relations.
Happy will be the day Harry can once and for all leave his aunt and uncle's
house and never come back.
I've put together a
small list of the ways that Vernon Dudley is always trying to shut out the
world... especially Harry's world which, of course, includes shutting out
(or even away) Harry. I've also mentioned how Uncle Vernon's
efforts are always thwarted by someone or something from Harry's wizarding
world.
PS/SS - Uncle
Vernon sealed up the mail slot, windows, and fireplaces to keep Harry's Hogwarts
letters from getting in. He also locked Harry in the cupboard under the
stairs. Harry is rescued by Hagrid.
COS - Uncle
Vernon put bars on Harry's bedroom window and bolts on his door, imprisoning
Harry in his room. Harry is rescued by Ron, Fred, and George.
POA - Harry
leaves on his own because of the prison like atmosphere.
Harry is "rescued" by the Knight bus.
GOF - Uncle Vernon's
sealed up fireplace is blasted to smithereens by Mr. Weasley when the latter,
Fred, George, and Ron arrive to take Harry to the Quidditch World Cup.
OOTP - Ordered to
stay in his room, Harry once again escapes the confines of 4 Privet Drive
when he is rescued by Lupin, Mad-eye, Tonks and other members of the Order of
the Phoenix.
BACK TO THE TOP
12 GRIMMAULD PLACE, LONDON
Generally speaking, Sirius’s family home is a dreary and dreadful place, albeit
literally a grim, old, place. Of course, the very fact that the number “twelve”
is part of the address is an obvious hint that something wicked in this place
dwells. It’s a house of dark foreboding, death, and insanity. For proof, just
look and listen to the mad ravings of the house elf, Kreacher, and Mrs. Black’s
portrait. And I’m not so sure Phineas Nigellus’s portrait-self isn’t a bit
touched either. This depressing abode invites in pests and creatures of all
sorts and it’s only by the concentrated and concerted efforts of Mrs. Weasley,
Harry, Ron, Hermione, Ginny, Fred, George, Sirius and sometimes Remus, Mad-eye,
and Tonks, that the rooms are becoming habitable.
The noble (and I use this term loosely) House of Black is the official secret
location of The Order of the Phoenix. How long it will remain secret and
can we trust Kreacher to obey Harry, his new reluctant master, and to keep his
mouth shut? I'm sure he wouldn't mind punishing himself to let a few
secrets drop in Draco's earshot. So Number Twelve Grimmauld Place, London may not be so
safe. Yes, yes, I know
that Dumbledore is its secret keeper and that it is enchanted by all sorts
of unplotable spells but what if something happens to Dumbledore?
I'm still not convinced that Lucius Malfoy can’t and
won’t find it. Old houses like that must have secret passages. I wonder if
Harry will discover their entrances and where they lead… maybe to the Malfoys?
Chilling thought. I’m sure Draco would be too chicken to explore dark tunnels…
but his dad is another story. If there are tunnels that connect the two
residences I really hope Lucius doesn’t know about them and never learns they
exist.
Can Dumbledore lift the black cloud that hangs over this house? Or will Number
Twelve and all who go there drown in its blackness… Better get your wand out and
say “Lumos” just to make sure you can find your way out again.
BACK TO THE TOP
We first learn of Azkaban Prison in CoS
when Hagrid is accused of opening the Chamber of Secrets and sent there.
In PoA, Sirius escapes from Azkaban.
In GoF we learn, via the pensieve, whom of Voldemort's followers were sent to
Azkaban, including the Lestranges, and Barty Crouch Jr.
It is revealed in OotP with the escape of Bellatrix Lestrange, her husband, and
several of Death Eaters from Azkaban that the Dementors are no longer taking
orders from the Ministry of Magic and have returned to Voldemort's camp. If I
were Cornelius Fudge I'd disapparate to Bermuda.
Why? Because. Lucius Malfoy is a lot smarter than our dapper Mr. Fudge. Let's
see if I'm as smart as Malfoy. I think that in HBP dear Lucius, in addition to
usurping the Minister of Magic's position and power, will invite Cornelius to an
extended stay in Azkaban.
Sturgeous Podmore is sent to Azkaban for 6 months for trying to break into the
Dept. of Mysteries in the Ministry of Magic in OotP. The fact that he was under
the Imperious Curse so wasn't acting of his own free will didn't seem to matter
to Fudge.
The Burrow
A burrow is a typically a hole in the ground that
animals hollow out and make their home. Well, since the Weasley’s aren’t
animals or hobbits but humans I can understand why they built their burrow
above ground. Still, I’m sure there’s more to the name Weasley than just its
similarity to weasel.
Ron’s family’s home is a ramshackle tangle of wood
and glass held together with magic and spello-tape, more than likely, and filled
with a collection of mismatched odds and ends. Not exactly the Ritz,
nevertheless, it’s a home filled with love and that in itself transforms it into
a palace. It’s not far from Ottery St. Catchpole, a muggle village, although I
am guessing that the muggles aren’t too aware of the Weasleys and vice-versa
since the postman doesn’t deliver mail there, and Mr. and Mrs. Weasley
apparently don’t shop in the village since they don’t use or know how to use
muggle money. That leads me to assume that the Burrow must also have either in
invisibility, disillusionment, or unplotable spell, or any combination thereof,
cast upon it so that only magical folks can see it.
Ron’s room is near the top of a rickety turret
just under the attic, which is where the family’s resident ghoul lives, bangs on
the pipes and carries out other ghoulish occupations. However, Ron has never
said that it causes any major problems or disturbances; rather it’s almost like
a pet. I just wonder if it has some protective power it holds over the Burrow?
Chamber of Secrets
A
thousand years before Harry Potter’s birth Salazar Slytherin discreetly built a
labyrinth of tunnels under Hogwarts and the surrounding countryside and dubbed
his hidden den the Chamber of Secrets. But for what purpose did he do this? To
secretly carry on covert activities behind the backs of his fellow Hogwarts
founders? To give his Basilisk a place to grow and slither around through the
maze of tunnels and pipes century after century until it was killed by Harry in
our hero’s second year at Hogwarts? Well, basically yes, although I’m sure
Professor Slytherin never expected his deadly pet to be slain by a
twelve-year-old boy.
Still
this mysterious wizard of old must have had other mysteries hidden in his
underground cavern that Harry and we have yet to discover. After all, it’s
called the Chamber of Secrets not Secret. Did he have a laboratory down
there where he conducted his alchemy experiments, spells, enchantments and
curses? Perhaps he also had his own library filled with great tomes about the
dark arts.
And just
where did all of the tunnels lead? To Hogsmeade? I am guessing that Hogsmeade
village was established shortly after the school so that’s highly reasonable.
So many
secrets!!
I am
unsure if Harry will return to the Chamber of Secrets in his sixth or seventh
years at Hogwarts but it’s possible that more of Salazar Slytherin’s secrets may
be revealed when we learn the identity and intentions of the Half-Blood Prince.
I can’t wait!
Diagon Alley - FRED
AND GEORGE WEASLEYS' JOKE SHOP
Number ninety three, Diagon
Alley -- Weasleys' Wizarding Wheezes in Half-Blood Prince. This
seems like a perfect location, not only for the twins mirth-filled magical
merchandise but also a secret location for undercover work for the Order.
By the end of GOF Fred and George were legally of age and even though Molly
Weasley intentionally refuses to accept the fact that her two sons are not
longer in nappies, they could join the Order. I'm not so sure that number
twelve Grimmauld Place is still a safe hideaway, even though Dumbledore is its
secret keeper. Regardless of whether the Black house stays the
headquarters for the Order of the Phoenix, I'm willing to bet a dozen Skiving
Snack Boxes that Fred and George's joke shop laboratory will also be bubbling
with covert activities.
BACK TO THE TOP
Forbidden Forest
Dark
and thickly wooded, the Forbidden
Forest is non-the-less
home-sweet-home to countless magical and mythical birds, beasts, insects, and
one Ford Anglia. Hagrid assured Harry during his first trip into the dense wood
in PS/SS that as long as you keep to the paths you’ll be okay. Of course,
Harry, more than once strayed clear of the safe forest paths only to find
himself face to face with a giant, giant spiders, angry centaurs, howling
werewolves, and yes, more frightening than all the rest combined, Lord Voldemort.
GODRIC'S HOLLOW
Is this just coincidence that the village where the Potter's lived is named after Godric Gryffindor
or is it a purposeful tribute to the founder of Hogwarts? I may be wishing
but I just keep thinking that James Potter was a descendant of the great wizard
and that perhaps the family home was (maybe still is) in Godric's Hollow.
When Harry pulled Godric's sword from the Sorting Hat, Dumbledore remarked only
a true Gryffindor could have done that. Yes, Harry is in Gryffindor house
at Hogwarts, but maybe the true house of Gryffindor is Harry's birthright.
My last question, for now, is where is this place and is the house where Harry
last lived with his parents more than a pile of rubble? At any rate,
I feel Harry must go there and, in deed, he intends to return to his childhood
home after his 6th year at Hogwarts. He has to relive his past in order to be able to
get on with his future and the best place to start is where it all started.
There must be clues lying around in the debris.
BACK TO THE TOP
Gringotts Bank
- LONDON
Just like
the Bank of England, Gringotts represents the might and power of its nation’s
people. I don’t know what lies beneath the marbled floors of the Bank of
England but I do know that the London Underground isn’t the only rail system
speeding beneath the streets of the city. Under the equally beautiful marble
floors of Gringotts are miles of roller coaster type mine cars whiz and weave a
their way between hundreds of vaults containing countless gold Galleons, silver
Sickles, bronze Knuts, and many other priceless treasures.
Goblins
are clever, cunning and money-savvy folks, and they take theirs and everyone
else’s galleons very seriously… just ask Ludo Bagman. But just how secure is
the wizard’s bank? We are told in PS/SS that anyone trying to steal from its
subterranean vaults may find themselves permanently sealed inside a vault door –
not a pretty sight, I’m sure. Yet when Quirrell/Voldemort tried to abscond with
the philosopher’s stone he/they successfully escaped that gruesome fate even
though they failed to snatch the stone. Maybe the latter is why they didn’t
suffer the former doom.
I really
think there will be a major bank coo in either HP six or seven and I’m curious
to see just whose fate is safe and secure, and who becomes a life long door
jam. For more thoughts about this read up about Goblins, Cornelius Fudge and
Bill, Fred and George Weasley.
Hogsmeade:
HogsHead Pub
Albus Dumbledore’s brother, Aberforth, runs this rather grungy pub in
Hogsmeade. Layers of dust and dirt cover the pub’s floor and cling to the
glasses under the bar counter, while a less than respectable clientele usually
passes through its ancient doors. Hagrid, highly respectable in my book, does
occasionally indulge in a round or two with strangers passing through and
bearing an assortment of oddities including dragon eggs and three-headed dogs.
Even our highly respected Hogwarts Headmaster himself interviewed Sybill
Trelawney there before he hired her as Divination teacher. And don’t forget
that Harry, Hermione, Ron and twenty-five other students met there to discuss
establishing the D.A. It’s an interesting place, you’d have to agree, and I’d
bet a hundred butterbeers that ol’ Aberforth has overheard a dungeon-full of
secrets whispered between one unsavory witch or wizard to another. But just
what are they and how many of these juicy tidbits does he pass on to his
brother?
Three Broomsticks Pub
Honeydukes Sweet Shoppe
Bertie
Botts Every Flavored Beans, Chocolate Frogs and every other confectioner’s
delight of whimsy can be purchased at Honeydukes in Hogsmeade. Even Hermione’s
dentist parents can be appeased with sugar-free treats. And while my mouth
waters at the idea of such succulent sweets my mind is stirring with wonder at
what lies beneath the floorboards of the famous confectionary. Who built the
tunnel that leads from the candy store basement to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft
and Wizardry? A chocoholic? Perhaps but then again, perhaps Honeydukes hasn’t
always been the shop of preference on that spot? Maybe in days gone by the
current building or another was used for other means, along with its secret
passage leading to the castle. Indeed, this secret may never be revealed by J.K.
Rowling but it does give us muggles some candy-coated gum to chew and ponder
upon.
Zonko's Joke Shoppe
Zonko’s
– Hogsmeade’s premier fun place to shop… if you don’t count Honeydukes Sweet
Shoppe, of course. Zonko’s is a haven of brilliant tricks and laughs, and it is
probably Fred and George’s favorite place to visit. I know they have bought
many a magic joke item there during their school days at Hogwarts. I wonder if
Zonkos will become a favorite customer of Weasley’s Whizzes now that the boys
have started their own joke shop? It looked like the boys were thinking
about in it HBP. Let's hope nobody else decides to take it over
because I don't we'd find their jokes magic too funny. Well, just keep your rubber wands ready…
Hogwarts Castle
Enchantments
to fill a castle… or protect and hide one in the case of Hogwarts Castle. It is
apparently definitely a charmed fortress in more ways than one. What exactly
are all the spells enchanting Hogwarts? Well, it’s apparently unplotable to
muggles who only see a crumbling old ruin with a warning to stay aware should
they happen to wander by. It’s also protected from those who might try to use
Legilimency who are outside the castle grounds… although we know that in Harry’s
case this didn’t include Voldemort slithering into his dreams even inside the
thick castle walls. We also know, thanks to Hermione’s constant reminders, that
witches and wizards cannot apparate or disapparate into and out of Hogwarts… but
this doesn’t seem to have any affect on House Elves diligently popping here and
there doing their household duties. There are ways to come and go, however,
that are magical… like using portkeys and phoenixes… and undoubtedly a myriad of
other means. But it’s also apparent that it’s not completely sealed to
intruders… as in the case of the troll that Quirrell let in during Harry’s first
year… or worse yet, Voldemort!
So where exactly is Hogwarts
Castle? Somewhere in Scotland is my understanding. It was built around a
thousand years ago by Godric Gryffindor, Rowena Ravenclaw, Helga Hufflepuff and
Salazar Slytherin, the latter adding a few secret chambers on his own. A
veritable architectural labyrinth filled with clearly accessible classrooms,
offices, kitchens, great halls, dormitories, and dungeons, Hogwarts has no less
number of secret tunnels, vanishing room, hidden doors, and moving trick
staircases. Harry, Ron, and Hermione have stumbled upon or purposefully found
several of the castle’s invisible or at least disillusioned interior locations,
I just have a feeling we’ve not seen it all yet.
I assume the Dumbledore’s office was
once occupied by Godric Gryffindor. Are they’re other secrets in that room that
we will discover along with Harry in the last two books? And what of Snape’s
dungeon office? Did Salazar Slytherin build secret entrances and exits only he
knew of? Does Snape know about any of them? I wouldn’t be surprised if he did.
The grounds surrounding Hogwarts are
beautiful, vast and often very dangerous. Although the quaint village of
Hogsmeade is nestled snuggly on one side of the castle, lurking ominously on the
other side is the Forbidden Forest where ominous creatures reside. I think
mountains form the backdrop on Hogwart’s third side and the lake provides scenic
protection on the fourth.
Hagrid is not only gamekeeper and
the magical creatures instructor, he is perhaps most importantly, keeper of the
keys to Hogwarts. I’d like to know where he keeps those keys, wouldn’t you? I
doubt he carries them around in his moleskin coat pocket but is there a hidden
niche in his hut where he keeps them safe? Are they under a floorboard beneath
Fang’s bed? Are they even regular keys or are they chanted too?
There is a cemetery somewhere on the
Hogwarts grounds but where and does Hagrid have the key to it? You’d have
thought if it were in plain view Harry would have found it his first year, yet
even by the end of his fifth year he’s none the wiser that a cemetery even
exists. It is unplotable too? Or is Dumbledore secret keeper for those who are
supposed to eternally rest in peace there. I keep thinking it must be a pretty
big plot of ground because I figure its first occupants were the castle’s
founders… at least three of them if not all. Are all of the deceased
headmasters and mistresses buried there? That adds up to quite a few people
over the span of a thousand years, don't you agree? And what about the ghosts,
like Nearly Headless Nick and Moaning Myrtle? Were their bodies laid to rest
there too? Will Harry discover that his parents’ graves are indeed also in the
Hogwarts cemetery? I’m nodding my head emphatically “yes.”
BACK TO THE TOP
Knockturn Alley
Knockturn
Alley is the complete antithesis of the light, bright and merry Diagon Alley.
The whole dark, dank place is filled with hags and other scary characters.
Borgin and Burkes is the only shop in Knockturn Alley that we know by name and
have seen it’s gruesome interior through Harry’s eyes after he was catapulted
from its fireplace in CoS. Filled to the brim with sooty, cobwebby skulls,
skeletal hands and mummy sarcophagus it gives Madame Tussaud’s Chamber of
Horrors a run for the money. I may be looking through dust-coated glasses but I
have a feeling we might be visiting this shop again.
Who shops in
Knockturn Alley and what are they shopping for? I have a few ideas. We already
know that Hagrid shops there occasionally for stuff like Flesh-Eating Slug
Repellent. I’m sure he finds lots of weed, slug and otherwise nasty magical
pesticides in Knockturn Alley. What do you think… “Pesky Pests Poisons-R-Us”?
This offers
me a great segue to the next potential K.A. shopper on my list – Severus Snape.
Where else would our severe professor find hard-to-find herbs and other
questionable ingredients for his potions? I’m sure it’s possible that many of
his recipes call for easy and abundant items that can be bought in Diagon Ally
or Hogsmeade but I wouldn’t be surprised of there being a few “noir market”
things that only the most cunning and creative witches and wizards can find… and
even then these dark ingredients are probably not available over-the-counter.
Yet, I’m sure our greasy-haired Snape has many connections. He probably even
creates his own hair-care products… (but I don’t think Gilderoy Lockhart has
need to worry about the competition.) Will Harry accidentally run into his
least favorite teacher on a shopping spree at some time?
If anybody
knows the ins, outs, nooks, crannies and dark alleys of Knockturn Alley I’m sure
it must be Mundungus Fletcher. Where else would one buy, sell or steal
cauldrons and who knows what else? If I needed to dig up some dirt either
about someone or from the curbside, I’d call on Mundungus to take up the task.
I’ll bet he even knows what’s hidden in the dark corners of Borgin and Burkes…
probably because he put them himself there for safekeeping…
It’s no
secret that Lucius Malfoy is no stranger in Knockturn Alley and knows Mr. Borgin
very well. He sold several unsavory items to the shopkeeper in CoS. Will he
try to get any of them back? Or will he have more mysterious contraband to
sell?
I’m not
going to list the next group by name but I think we can all agree that any day
of the week it’s more than likely a Death Eater is either shopping, stealing or
taking part in a clandestine meeting in Knockturn Alley. I advise you all to
keep a closer eye on those hooded window shoppers because they might just turn
out to be Crabbe, Goyle, Avery, Nott, perhaps even Wormtail or… dare I say his
name? I dare… Lord Voldemort.
THE LEAKY CAULDRON – LONDON
This
pub and inn is also the magical doorway between the muggle community and the
wizarding world. Here are some interesting points to consider about the Leaky
Cauldron:
A unique
correlation has been created in GOF between the actual pub Leaky Cauldron and
the leaky cauldron bottom report that Percy so feverishly composes for his boss,
Barty Croutch. One, it suggests that shoddy cauldron construction has been
going on for perhaps centuries based on the idea that the ancient London
establishment of the same name has also been around for centuries.
Of
course, the other meaning is that a leaky cauldron is someone who gossips or
lets the cat out of the bag with all the skeletons in the closets, and is in
essence a “snitch”… the non-golden kind.
And that
leads to me ask is Percy a snitch or the wizard who exposes the snitch, or is he
the one who will seal up the leak? Hmmm. Tatty cauldron bottoms can be a messy
business and I think our displaced Weasley (which reminds of weasel, another
name for someone who rats on their family and friends) could find himself in a
smelly pot of fish. (Please forgive my over abundant use of metaphors… it was
just so much fun.)
Meanwhile, back at the Leaky Cauldron pub… Tom is the current owner/manager of
this popular wizards hangout. He seems innocent and trustworthy enough; perhaps
too innocent, etc., to see the dark goings-on right under his wrinkled nose. We
all know that all kinds of potions are brewed in cauldrons and there’s always
something brewing at the L.C. I think we need to keep a wary eye pealed on who
comes and goes here. Remember, even Voldemort snuck in under Quirrell’s turban
in PS/SS and nobody was the wiser at the time.’
And one
last thought… I wonder if muggles have ever accidentally stumbled through
Leaky’s front door? Probably not but not impossible I reckon. Well one thing’s
for sure, the Leaky Cauldron is the holds many more secrets and mysteries
waiting to be revealed and I’ll drink to that.
Ministry of Magic -
Department of Mysteries
The Department
of Mysteries conjures up all sorts of wild and eerie ideas. But lets start off
with the facts… It’s located on the ninth floor in the Ministry of Magic
building in London and the ministry employees who work in the Department of
Mysteries are call unspeakables because, according to Mr. Weasley, nobody
really knows what they do in there. Broderick Bode and Croaker, whose name
reminds me again of a frog or dying, both worked there. Bode was killed by
Devil’s Snare while recovering in St. Mungos. There’s at least one more
department employee… rather former employee; Rookwood, one of Voldemort’s Death
Eaters, also worked in the Department of Mysteries before being sent to Azkaban
for fourteen years.

The main door
to the Department of Mysteries that opens off the ninth floor hallway leads into
a room with twelve more unmarked doors. (Oooh, there’s that nasty number twelve
again.) When someone opens one of these doors the room whirls around so that
whichever door one tries remains a mystery. Remember, Hermione cleverly marked
each with a flaming X so that she, Harry, and the others would know which doors
they’d opened and closed?
Each of the
twelve doors leads into a different room where a different mystery is studied by
the unspeakables. So far, as of OotP, we know that there is:
v
A
room filled with clocks and timeturners where time is studied.
v A
room where octopus-like brains are kept. Thoughts are studied here. Just a
reminder: thoughts can leave life long scares. Don’t believe me? Ask Ron.
v
A
room there is the Prophecy room lined with shelves of glass orbs containing
prophecies that can only be touched by those directly concerned.
v
A
room death is studied in the room where the diocese and veiled archway is kept.
v
And a room where love is studied in the room behind the door that Harry’s knife
blade melted.
Ahh, but that’s
only five rooms. I wonder what is hidden behind the other seven doors?
I believe that
in HBP Harry will find a way into the sealed room filled with all the mysteries
of love are guarded. He may discover a way to contact Sirius in this room.
Whatever happens, we can assume that this room contains powerful magic, as
demonstrated by the effect of Lily Potter’s ancient spell of love that she used
to save baby Harry’s life. We also know this love, which Harry seems to be
filled to brimming, saved him again in OotP when Voldemort tried to possess him
but couldn’t; the pain was too great. The question is will Harry be able to
harness and control this powerful magic when the time comes that he must
vanquish Voldemort? Or will Voldemort figure out a way to utilize the
force generated therein to his own advantage? The power of love is the
most powerful magic there is… but then I believe that Harry was born to be the
most powerful wizard to ever live.
THE ROOM OF REQUIREMENT
On the magical 7th floor of Hogwarts there is a door to the room of
your dreams… more practically called the Room of Requirement. Perhaps it
could also be called the Room of Desire… or even Erised… because it is only with
your deepest, most desperate need or desire that the door to this special room
will reveal itself. The only problem with the room is finding its door.
Harry first heard about the room from Dumbledore in a seemingly throwaway
comment during a conversation the Headmaster was having with Harry and Karkarov
during the Yule Ball feast in GOF. Dumbledore confided with a wink to Harry
that once when he had a most powerful need to find a toilet in the wee hours of
the morning -- Taa-Daa -- the door to a very elegant room of chamber pots
appeared before him.
In his 5th year, Harry found himself particularly desirous for just
the right place to teach his fellow class mates defense against the Dark Arts,
since the old toad, Umbridge, refused to teach them anything worthwhile in the
real DADA class. To Harry’s delight, Harry’s DADA room had everything he and
the other members of Dumbledore’s Army needed to learn and practice their
defensive spells.
But Harry and the DA weren’t the only ones to make good use of the RoR in OotP.
Dobby confessed to Harry that he often had to take a tipsy Winky there to sleep
off the effects of her Butterbeer binges.
And speaking of being tipsy, Professor Trelawney has even discovered this
multipurpose room in the guise of her own private liquor store where she keeps
her coveted bottles of sherry. Well, it may not be as private as she would like
since others, like Draco Malfoy, having secrets to keep have found the
extraordinary key to this particular room of requirement door…
In HBP, Draco utilized the room as his ideal workshop where he could hide the
broken Vanishing Cabinet while he worked to repair it.
Which brings us back to Harry, who also during his 6th school year,
who couldn’t figure out how to get into Draco’s room until he frantically
needed to hide his old Potions book so that Snape wouldn’t take it. Needing a
special place to hide the book, Harry marveled that he entered the room of
requirement this time it had grown into an ancient and cavernous medieval space
crammed to the brim with an infinite number of things collected and hidden over
the last thousand years.
And finally, this brings my meandering mind to shrudely consider Harry’s
nemesis, Lord Voldemort aka Tom Riddle. If I were Tom Riddle and I needed a
place to hide something or some things of great value… a Horcrux, possibly… I
would head straight for the room of requirement. I have no doubt that Tom knew
all or nearly all of Hogwarts secret passages, tunnels, and rooms including the
RoR. I feel with 99.99999% confidence that this is where he hid Ravenclaw’s
tiara (or other personal affect) and/ or Hufflepuff’s mug. At the end of HBP
Harry says to Ron and Hermionie that he doesn’t plan on returning to Hogwarts to
finish his 7th year, but I feel he must return if for no other reason
than to search for hidden treasures lying in wait on the 7th floor of
Hogwarts Castle.
Shrieking Shack
spinner's end
Spinner’s End sounds
like it is the last stop on a spider’s web. Visitors and strangers beware, as I
don’t think anyone is really welcome and yet those who tarry too long will
surely become the prey of the one who lives there. No, it’s not a spider,
although he does associate with snakes and rats; and in his
bat-like way, Severus Snape using his radar-esk Legilimense undoubtedly will
know who is lurking at his door.
It isn’t until the
sixth Harry Potter book that we, the readers, learn where Snape lives when he
isn’t at Hogwarts… and I suspect he will be spending a lot more time at home
after HBP. It was probably his parent’s house and although it has that old and
lived-in look, it’s not a place I would call homey. In fact, it could
definitely use a little DIY TLC. It seems to have more than one level, and
maybe there are stairs that go both up and down from the main floor. I can only
imagine that it might also have secret passages leading deep down underground to
bat-laden catacombs.
All in all, it’s a
pretty dismal spot. In HBP, a few people besides Snape visit the last house on
Spinner’s End: Wormtail, Bellatrix Lestrange, and Narsissa Malfoy. Who else
might know of Snape’s family home? How long has Wormtail been there? And will
Harry go there in the future to confront his despised potions teacher?