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Monday, January 21, 2008

family

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(thanks wikipedia.org)

Potter family

Geraldine Somerville as Lily Potter, Adrian Rawlins as James Potter, and one of the Saunders triplets as one-year-old Harry Potter in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone
Geraldine Somerville as Lily Potter, Adrian Rawlins as James Potter, and one of the Saunders triplets as one-year-old Harry Potter in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone

The following are fictional characters in the Harry Potter book series written by J. K. Rowling. They are all relatives of the main character, Harry Potter.


The Potters

James Potter

Harry Potter character
James Potter

Adrian Rawlins as James Potter
in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone.
House Gryffindor
Parentage Pure-blood
Actor Adrian Rawlins (adult), Robbie Jarvis (teenager)
First appearance Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone

The character of James Potter (27 March, 196031 October, 1981) is the father of Harry Potter. On the night he was murdered, James was the first to witness Lord Voldemort approaching. He is then said to have warned his wife with a cry to flee with Harry (then 1), meaning he was to sacrifice his life in the hope that Lily and Harry would be able to escape.

Rowling describes James and Harry to having similar attributes: the same thin face, same hands, and the same untidy black hair sticking up at the back, and (nearly) the same height as his son during their school days. However, Rowling also describes James Potter as having hazel eyes and a slightly longer nose than Harry does. He attended Hogwarts 1971 to 1978 where he was in Gryffindor. In Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban it is revealed that James's best friends were Sirius Black, Remus Lupin, and Peter Pettigrew, and that the four were known as The Marauders. They gave themselves nicknames: James was "Prongs", Remus was "Moony", Sirius was "Padfoot", and Peter was "Wormtail". They illegally became Animagi in order to keep Remus company when he involuntarily transformed into a werewolf in the Shrieking Shack. James became a stag, Sirius became a black dog, and Peter became a rat. Harry's Patronus takes the form of a stag, clearly a likeness of "Prongs", his father.

Characters in the books often comment on the personality of James. Severus Snape considers him "exceedingly arrogant" whereas Remus calls him "the height of cool", and Sirius describes him as "sometimes an arrogant little berk". Scenes from James's years at Hogwarts indicate that he did bully Snape. In Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, after seeing Snape's memories of James within a pensieve, Harry agrees with Snape's assessment of his father's arrogance; the revelation leaves Harry deeply depressed and disheartened. However, James did once save Snape's life after Sirius had attempted to goad Snape into the Shrieking Shack, where Lupin was transforming into a werewolf. James and Sirius were apparently popular students, ingenious pranksters, and very witty. Madam Rosmerta of the Three Broomsticks pub in Hogsmeade once talked fondly of how the two boys used to come into her bar, joke with her, and make her laugh. The two also proved intelligent enough to learn how to become Animagi.

In Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, via Snape's dying memory, Harry witnesses James meeting Snape, Lily, and Sirius for the first time when they board the Hogwarts Express. James, who despises the Dark Arts, displays clear hostility toward Snape and the latter's hope that he and Lily will both be sorted into Slytherin. Even so, James decides that Sirius is "all right", though he learns that the entire Black family has been in Slytherin. Snape, for his part, thinks that James is silly to want to be in Gryffindor, since he believes that students in that house are "brawny but not brainy". According to J.K. Rowling in a recent interview: "James always suspected Snape harboured deeper feelings for Lily, which was a factor in James’ behavior to Snape". [1]

At Hogwarts, James was a brilliant student, and in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, he is said to have become Head Boy, although in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix it is said that Remus was a prefect, not James. (He may have become Head Boy by his seventh year with maturity and the growth of responsibility and common sense.) He was also a player on the Gryffindor Quidditch team. In the film version of Philosopher's Stone, Harry and his friends find James' name listed on a plaque as a Seeker on his Quidditch team; however, J.K Rowling stated in an interview that he was in fact a Chaser.[2] He was shown playing with a Golden Snitch outside of games and practices[HP5], ostensibly to show off, and he apparently had a habit of rumpling up his hair to suggest that he had just stepped off a broomstick. James' wand was 11 inches long, made of mahogany, pliable and excellent for Transfiguration.

It is revealed in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows that James was a descendant of Ignotus Peverell and thus inherited the Cloak of Invisibility. The epilogue mentions that Harry names his first son James.

Lily Evans

Harry Potter character
Lily Potter

Geraldine Somerville as Lily Potter,
in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's stone
House Gryffindor
Parentage Muggle-born
Actor Geraldine Somerville (adult)
Susie Shinner (teenager)
First appearance Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone

Lily Potter (née Evans) is the mother of Harry Potter, whom was murdered on the same night as her husband by Lord Voldemort.

While at Hogwarts, James met his future wife Lily Evans (30 January, 196031 October, 1981), who was also in her first year. Lily's wand was 10¼ inches, made of willow, swishy and excellent for Charms. She is described as having had startlingly green almond-shaped eyes and thick, shoulder-length dark red hair. According to Professor Slughorn, Lily had a natural and intuitive ability at Potions and was very brave, very funny and very charming; he could not imagine that anyone who had met her would not have liked her. She became a member of the Slug Club, which was run by Slughorn for promising students (and people with prestigious connections). Lily was also very pretty, and it is evident that James was very taken with her, at least since their fifth year.

Lily was Muggle-born, and at home, her sister Petunia despised her for being a witch and viewed her as a "freak." Petunia was, however, envious of her sister's abilities and of their parents’ enthusiasm and interest in the wizarding world. In Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone Petunia tells Harry that, "But for my mother and father, oh no, it was 'Lily this' and 'Lily that', they were proud of having a witch in the family!" The reader learns that Petunia resented the manner in which their parents favoured Lily and that she herself had wanted to attend Hogwarts, an ambition gently turned away by Albus Dumbledore. Rowling stated on her site that Lily did receive warning letters for testing the limits of the statute of secrecy [3]. Lily's patronus is a doe, presumably to pair with James' animagus shape of a stag. Severus Snape also has the doe as his Patronus, to match Lily's.

The old, pre-Hogwarts friendship between Lily and Snape is fully revealed in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, along with the fact that Snape harboured unrequited romantic feelings for Lily from their first childhood meeting. Rowling makes it clear that Lily might have returned these feelings if Snape had not become so seriously involved in the Dark Arts. During their early years at Hogwarts, Lily expressed her concerns about Snape's attraction to these arts and about his choice of friends. Already strained, their relationship ended in their fifth year at Hogwarts, when Snape, in a moment of humiliation, unthinkingly called Lily a Mudblood after she had defended him against James and Sirius. Afterwards, Lily, pointing out that Snape's other friends felt similarly about her parentage, ended their friendship, despite Snape's desperate attempts to apologise for the incident. Subsequently, Snape refuses to utter the word Mudblood and hates hearing it used, as shown in Book 7, when Phineas Nigellus Black refers to Hermione Granger as a "Mudblood". In the wake of the breach with Lily, Snape becomes a Death Eater and informs Lord Voldemort of an overheard prophecy, which Voldemort takes to refer to Lily and her son, Harry. Fearing for Lily's life, Snape joins the Order of the Phoenix, as a spy for Albus Dumbledore, in exchange for what he hopes will be Dumbledore's protection of Lily and her family. This hope fails when, despite Snape's pleas that she should be spared, Voldemort kills Lily because she refuses to step aside so that he can murder Harry. After Lily's death, Snape is persuaded by Dumbledore to devote his life to protecting Harry in order to honour the sacrifice of the woman he never ceased to love.

Lily was Head Girl in her final year at Hogwarts. For most of the time they were students, Lily regarded James as an "arrogant toerag", and she and James addressed each other only by their surnames. However, James was shown doodling Lily's initials during an examination in their fifth year, and Sirius recalled that he could not resist showing off (and making a fool of himself) whenever she was around. Lily herself expressed contempt for his behaviour, looking at him with "great dislike" and calling him "an arrogant bullying toerag". After he asked her out in their fifth year, she replied that she wouldn't go out with him if it was a choice between him and the giant squid and remarked that, "I'm surprised your broomstick can get off the ground with that fat head on it. You make me SICK!" From this, Harry gathered the impression that Lily hated James, but Sirius and Lupin assured him that she did not hate her future husband; they "simply got off on the wrong foot". Lupin told Harry that after James matured and changed his attitude, Lily started dating him in their seventh year. They married soon after leaving Hogwarts with Sirius acting as best man at their wedding. It is not known what careers, if any, they pursued after leaving school. Rowling said in an interview, "James inherited plenty of money, so he didn't need a well-paid profession".

Though Harry bears a great resemblance to his father, it is often noted that he has Lily's eyes. In a 1999 interview, Rowling stated that, "Harry has his father and mother's good looks. But he has his mother's eyes and that's very important in a future book". [4] That "future book" was Deathly Hallows. In Snape's death scene in that novel, after having passed his memories to Harry, he whispers to Harry: "Look... at... me..." In one of Snape's memories, it is revealed that Dumbledore convinces Snape to protect Harry after Lily's death by mentioning the fact that he has "precisely" the same eyes as his mother.

In the epilogue of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Harry's three children appear: a son named James Sirius Potter, a daughter who is named after Lily and a son named Albus Severus. Albus is named for Dumbledore, but his middle name honours the man who loved Lily Evans so much that he dedicated his life to protecting her son and ultimately lost his life in the attempt. It is also mentioned that Albus is the only one of Harry's three children to have inherited Lily's green eyes.

James, Lily, and Harry

James and Lily had a son, Harry James Potter, born on 31 July, 1980. James and Lily belonged to the Order of the Phoenix, which was an organisation created for wizards and witches who wanted to battle Lord Voldemort and his followers, the Death Eaters.

This organization was created and led by Albus Dumbledore. Dumbledore was given a prophecy by Sybill Trelawney that someone who could defeat the Dark Lord would be born to parents who had already defied him three times. Voldemort was told part of the prophecy by Severus Snape, who had been caught outside the door after hearing the first half of the prophecy.

Although both Harry and Neville Longbottom matched the description, Voldemort went after Harry, resolving to kill him. The Potters were deep in hiding through the Fidelius Charm, but on 31 October, 1981, the Potters' whereabouts were betrayed by their friend Peter Pettigrew, and they were attacked without warning at their home in Godric's Hollow. James told his wife to run and take Harry while he held Voldemort off. He was killed soon afterwards.

Lily could have saved herself when Voldemort attacked her family, since he offered her the chance to step aside while he killed Harry. This was shown in a flashback sequence during Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone. Voldemort's single motive for offering to spare Lily's life at the request of Snape is revealed in the seventh book, but Lily refused and Voldemort killed her. The result of her selfless act of love was to invoke an ancient magic that gave Harry an innate defence against Voldemort (Rowling has stated that Lily did not know that this would happen because "it never happened before"). This magic manifested itself two ways: First, when Voldemort attempted to kill Harry with the Killing Curse, Avada Kedavra (which had never before been survived), the spell backfired, rendering Voldemort non-corporeal. Asked whether there was anyone else present in Godric's Hollow on the night the Potters died, Rowling replied, "No comment". [5] However, Voldemort did consider killing a Muggle boy who believed his appearance to be due to a Halloween costume.

The lingering protection afforded to Harry by Lily's sacrifice rendered Voldemort unable to physically touch him. In Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, Professor Quirrell, acting as host to Voldemort, attempted to attack Harry to gain the Philosopher's Stone. He was prevented from stealing the Stone because encountering Harry's skin severely burned him, causing great pain. Harry realised this and used it to his advantage until Dumbledore arrived. Quirrell died soon afterwards, leaving Voldemort forced to return to his non-corporeal state. Voldemort has since overcome this inability to touch Harry by using Harry's blood to regenerate his own body. However, when Harry tells Dumbledore this, he thinks he sees, for a fleeting instant, something like "a gleam of triumph" in Dumbledore's eyes. Harry thinks he must have imagined it though, for Dumbledore merely says, "Very well, Voldemort has overcome that particular barrier" When asked about the gleam of triumph, J. K. Rowling says, "That's still enormously significant. And let's face it, I haven't told you that much is enormously significant, so you can let your imaginations run free there". [6] In Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, after Voldemort uses the Killing Curse on Harry, Albus Dumbledore tells him that as long as his blood, with Lily's protection in it, still lives in Voldemort, Harry's life is protected by it.

Robbie Jarvis as a young James Potter, Susie Shinner as a young Lily Evans, and Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter in a deleted scene from Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
Robbie Jarvis as a young James Potter, Susie Shinner as a young Lily Evans, and Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter in a deleted scene from Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix

The second way in which Harry is protected by Lily's sacrifice occurs at the Dursley residence in Little Whinging. Harry was taken in by Lily's sister, Petunia, who is married to Vernon Dursley. Dumbledore told Harry that he had extended Lily's protection to the home where Lily's sister Petunia lived. This was possible because Lily and Petunia are related by blood. As long as it continues to be Harry's home, Voldemort cannot harm Harry there. This protection ends when Harry comes of age at 17.

In the graveyard at the end of the American edition of book 4, James comes out of Voldemort's wand first when the wands connect. On her website[7], J.K. Rowling addresses this issue: "Lily first, then James. That’s how it appears in my original manuscript but we were under enormous pressure to edit it very fast and my American editor thought that was the wrong way around, and he is so good at catching small errors I changed it without thinking, then realised it had been right in the first place. We were all very sleep-deprived at the time".

In Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, when Harry goes off to die at Voldemort's hands, he uses the Resurrection Stone to summon the spirits of Lily, James, Sirius and Lupin. They come back as "more than ghost but less than flesh" and tell him that they are proud of him. The four of them escort him to Voldemort, and when he drops the Resurrection Stone, they disappear. Their presence gives him the courage to do what he needs to do.

Also in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Harry visits their tomb in the graveyard in Godric's Hollow where the phrase "The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death" is engraved upon the tombstone. This phrase is from the Bible, 1 Corinthians 15:26.

The Dursleys

The Dursley family are Harry Potter's last living relatives. In order to ensure his safety, Albus Dumbledore placed Harry under their care as a baby. The Dursleys live at Number 4, Privet Drive, Little Whinging in Surrey, England.

The name "Dursley" derives from the small town in Gloucestershire, near to the birthplace of J. K. Rowling.

[edit] Vernon Dursley

Harry Potter character
Vernon Dursley

Richard Griffiths as Vernon Dursley
in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.
Parentage Muggle
Actor Richard Griffiths
First appearance Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone

Vernon Dursley is the first character introduced in the Harry Potter series. He is Harry Potter's uncle—he is married to Petunia, Lily Potter's sister, and they have a son named Dudley. Vernon is described as a big, beefy man, with hardly any neck, and a large moustache. He is very much the head of his household, laying down most of the rules for Harry and doing most of the threatening while his wife turns a deaf ear, as well as spoiling his own son. He is also the director of a drill-making company, Grunnings, and seems to be quite successful in his career.

Vernon is a Muggle, and despises all magical things, especially his nephew (by marriage, not blood). He and his wife have grudgingly raised Harry from an early age, denying him any information about the magical world, including how his parents died. Unlike Petunia, who seems to have the slightest feeling of familial loyalty to Harry, Vernon seems to hate his nephew so much that in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, he was willing to throw him out of the house, knowing that doing so would put him in grave danger. He does, however, show affection (possibly too much and over-the-top) to Dudley. At one point when Vernon thought his family was being threatened by Harry's visiting wizard friends, he stepped in front of Petunia to "save" her, rather like how Lily Potter defended her son on the night when Voldemort attacked.

Vernon also has an aversion to imagination, or to any references to magic, or anything even slightly out of the ordinary—such as in the first book, when Harry mentions dreaming about a flying motorcycle, Uncle Vernon responds by angrily bellowing that motorcycles don't fly, despite Harry's protests that it was only a dream. By the end of Deathly Hallows, he is granduncle to Harry's children James, Albus Severus and Lily by marriage. When the family leaves Privet Drive for the last time in Deathly Hallows, he nearly shakes Harry's hand good-bye, however due to his dislike of both Harry and magic overall, refrains from doing so at the last second. It is implied that after their separation in the beginning of the seventh book, Uncle Vernon and Harry would never see each other again.

Petunia Dursley

Harry Potter character
Petunia Dursley

Fiona Shaw as Petunia Dursley
in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.
Parentage Muggle
Actor Fiona Shaw
First appearance Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone

Petunia Dursley (née Evans), is Harry Potter’s aunt. She is described as being a blonde, bony woman with a "rather horsey" face and a very long neck, which she uses to spy on her neighbours. Her eyes are large and pale, quite unlike her sister's. Petunia obsessively follows news about divorced movie stars while sniffing, "as if we're interested in their sordid affairs."[HP5] Her whole family was made up of Muggles, except for her sister Lily who was a Muggle-born witch. According to Petunia, her parents were proud of having a witch in the family, but Petunia saw her sister as a freak, due to jealousy of her magical abilities.[8]

In the seventh book, it is revealed that the Evans girls lived near Spinner's End, the residence of Tobias and Eileen Snape. Their son, Severus, seems to have observed Lily's magical talents from a young age, and took a strong liking to her (despite her status as a Muggle-born). Petunia on the other hand, seems to have been envious of her sister's abilities. She went so far as to write to Dumbledore pleading to be allowed to enter Hogwarts. Petunia was gently denied enrollment at Hogwarts; she has since been terribly cold towards the school, and by extension, her sister and the magical community as a whole. In a letter that Lily Potter wrote to Sirius Black (which Harry read in the Blacks' house), she makes reference to Harry nearly smashing "that horrible vase that Petunia sent" with his toy broomstick and adds "no complaints there". This indicates that the sisters were still in touch at the time, and at least enough for Petunia to send her sister holiday gifts. This also echoes Harry's Christmas presents from the Dursley family (old pair of Vernon's socks, a coat hanger, etc.) which are never pretty or welcome, but do show a grudging sign of attachment from the family.

At some point, she met Vernon Dursley and married him. On 22 June 1980 they had a son named Dudley. Petunia had not seen her sister for years and usually pretended she did not have one at all. However, one morning Petunia discovered her infant nephew, Harry Potter, on her doorstep as she put out the milk bottles.

There was a note left with baby Harry by Albus Dumbledore, which explained that his parents Lily and James had been killed by Lord Voldemort, how Lily had sacrificed herself to save her son's life and how living with his only other relatives would protect him from Lord Voldemort until he comes of age at 17. (When the charm his mother left breaks). Petunia and Vernon grudgingly agreed to raise Harry, but they kept him as downtrodden as possible in an attempt to squash the magic out of him; they never told him how his parents died, instead telling him they had been killed in a car crash and not to ask questions (about that or anything else).

When Vernon attempts to throw Harry out of their house at the beginning of Order of the Phoenix, Petunia receives a Howler from Dumbledore—"Remember my last, Petunia", which Rowling has confirmed is referring to the note he left with one-year-old Harry on their doorstep. This prompts Petunia to override Vernon's decision and allow Harry to stay. Aunt Petunia has, therefore, more knowledge about the wizarding world than she will admit. At the very least, Petunia has proved she knows what Dementors and Azkaban are. In Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, Petunia hears her husband ask what a Dementor is, to which she responds, "They guard the wizard prison, Azkaban." When Harry and the rest of her family look at her strangely for knowing this magical information, she responds that she heard "that awful boy" telling Lily about them years ago. Harry angrily retorts that if she is going to talk about his parents, she could at least use their names, but she does not respond to his retort. It is revealed in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, after Severus Snape has died and passed his memories to Harry, that Petunia was in fact referring to Snape, who had a long friendship with Lily and used exactly the same words, "They guard the wizard prison, Azkaban," to describe Dementors to her. Petunia overheard the exchange and remembered Snape's explanation. While she resents Lily for being able to do magic and go on to Hogwarts while she is left behind in the Muggle world, Petunia retains knowledge of the magical world and has a bit of an idea of the dangers that Harry faces (mainly from information that she had gleaned from eavesdropping on conversations between Snape and Lily).

When Harry leaves the Dursleys at the beginning of the seventh book, it is implied that he never sees Petunia again. Before the Dursleys leave, she almost wishes him good luck, showing that she does feel a tiny amount of attachment to her nephew, however her enforced dislike of Harry and magic prevent her from doing so and she leaves without a word.

Dudley Dursley

Harry Potter character
Dudley Dursley

Harry Melling as Dudley Dursley
in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.
Parentage Muggle
Actor Harry Melling
First appearance Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone

Dudley Dursley was born on 22 June 1980. He is the only child of Vernon and Petunia Dursley, a nephew to Marjorie Dursley (his father's sister) and the late James and Lily Potter (Lily being his mother's sister). He is Harry Potter's only cousin.

Described as a very large, blonde (although his hair is black in the films) boy, Dudley has been thoroughly spoiled since birth—he gets mountains of birthday and Christmas presents and then throws a tantrum because he wants even more. He also seems not to care for Harry and is mean to him. He was given two bedrooms in the house, one of which he never uses (it is filled with books and broken toys), but he throws a screaming fit when it is given to Harry.[HP1] Dudley is generally given his way in almost everything. He shows the symptoms of a spoiled brat, as demonstrated when a disgusted Minerva McGonagall tells Albus Dumbledore in the first chapter of the first book, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, how she saw the toddler Dudley kicking his mother and screaming for sweets.

An enormous, rude, belligerent and selfish boy, Dudley is quite an unlikable character, although he knows how to be polite when he wants to make an impression (notably when his father's business associate came for dinner one evening).[HP2] It can be inferred that he and Harry went to a school in Surrey together, where Dudley and his gang of bullies ruled the school, with their favourite pastime being "Harry hunting". The rest of the students at school shunned Harry, as they knew Dudley hated him, and they did not want to get on Dudley's bad side. With each passing year Dudley was overindulged in every way by his parents, which eventually made him morbidly obese and a careless student.[HP4] In Philosopher's Stone, Harry described him as "a pig in a wig" (alternatively, his mother thought him a "baby angel") and by the fourth book, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, he notes that Dudley "had reached the height and weight of a young killer whale". The same year Harry started at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, Dudley was enrolled at his father's old boarding school, Smeltings. Smeltings is described as a snobbish public school with absurd traditions. (The use of the term "public school" in England is generally interchangeable with the North American and Scottish use of the term "private school".)

By age fifteen, Dudley has become physically strong (Harry describes him as being vast as ever), and he has taken an interest in boxing and seems skilled in it. A great bully, he leads a gang of thugs (Piers Polkiss, Dennis, Gordon and Malcolm) with whom he regularly beats up younger children such as Mark Evans on the flimsiest of excuses ("He was asking for it ... he cheeked me"). Dudley also starts smoking on street corners and throwing rocks at passing cars and children with his gang, and he continues to be spoiled by his parents.

Dudley has had incredibly bad luck during the books and is therefore a rather ineffective person. In Philosopher's Stone, Dudley knocks Harry down to get in front of the glass case of a python at the zoo and Harry inadvertently vanishes the glass. Though the snake slithered out to freedom and gave passersby a few playful nips at the heel, Dudley declares that the snake nearly took a chunk out of his leg. In the same year, he is given a pig's tail by Rubeus Hagrid, for stealing and eating the birthday cake Hagrid gave Potter. This tail had to be removed at a private hospital in London.

In Goblet of Fire, he becomes wider than he is tall, and the school outfitters tell the Dursleys that they do not stock school uniforms that can accommodate Dudley's size; the Smeltings school nurse advises the Dursleys to put Dudley on a strict diet, and sends a list of recommended foods—fruits and vegetables ("rabbit food", according to Uncle Vernon). During the summer when this diet is enforced, the Weasley family comes to pick Harry up for the Quidditch World Cup. Dudley is afraid of them and attempts to protect his buttocks from magical abuse by keeping his hands clamped on it and shuffling along the wall. Fred and George Weasley "accidentally" drop a magical Ton-Tongue Toffee which enlarges Dudley's tongue to four feet before a hysterical Petunia Dursley (who initially tries to pull it out, causing Dudley immense pain) reluctantly allows Mr. Weasley to shrink it.

One evening during the summer holidays of the fifth book, when both boys are fifteen and walking home, arguing, two Dementors (sent by Dolores Umbridge) attack. Dudley collapses, and Harry uses the Patronus Charm to drive the Dementors away from himself and his cousin. He half carries the shaken Dudley home, while Dudley is convinced that Harry used magic to draw the Dementors (though, as a Muggle, he could only feel them and not see them) to them. After the confrontation, Harry wonders what sort of bad memories the pampered, spoiled Dudley could have relived, as Dementors force you to relive your worst experiences. Rowling later revealed, in an online chat, that Dudley's worst fear was seeing himself for who he really was, and that this was what the Dementors inflicted on him.[9] The experience did, in fact, give Dudley a more favourable impression of Harry, although this new impression did not by any means extend to Dudley's parents. Even so, Harry would remain unaware of Dudley's changed viewpoint until the final book.

In Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, the Dursleys are visited by Albus Dumbledore, who pities Dudley and blames Vernon and Petunia for their "appalling damage" on him and how he has turned out.

In Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Dudley is the only member of the Dursley family to accept Harry: he shakes his hand and thanks him for saving his soul from the Dementor attack in the events of Order of the Phoenix. Harry, as well as Petunia and Vernon, are surprised by Dudley's reaction. It is thought that he may have wished to make amends with Harry over the summer, as he left a cup of tea outside Harry's door and showed some concern for him when the Dursleys left to go into hiding. In his appreciation of his cousin's belated gratitude, Harry says good-bye to him using Dudley's former gang name, "Big D" (before that he had called him "Dudders", just as his parents had, much to Dudley's chagrin). It is implied that Harry and Dudley might meet again. Dudley is described as muscular rather than obese, indicating that he has kept his interest in boxing, and it has paid off.

J.K. Rowling has confirmed that Harry and Dudley have indeed kept in touch, in a "Christmas card sort of way," the latter had children, and Dudley's kids and Harry's didn't like each other very much, but occasionally would "get together while the adults sat in awkward silence". [10]

Rowling restated this on her website on December 7th in the year of 2007, adding that many people have asked her to include an adult Dudley with a Wizarding child in the epilogue of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, and that she herself considered it, but decided upon reflection that any "latent wizarding genes would never survive contact with Uncle Vernon's DNA" and thus she did not do so. Rowling says that Harry and Dudley would stay on "Christmas Card" terms for the rest of their lives, and that Harry would take his family to visit Dudley's when they were in the neighbourhood, but it was something that James, Albus and Lily "would dread", implying that Dudley's children, despite their father's change, were intimidating and unfriendly. [11]

Marge Dursley

Harry Potter character
Marjorie "Marge" Dursley
Aunt Marge
Pam Ferris as Aunt Marge
in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.
Parentage Muggle
Actor Pam Ferris
First appearance Harry Potter and the
Prisoner of Azkaban

Marjorie "Marge" Dursley is Vernon Dursley's sister and is described as being just like him, a large woman with hardly any neck and even a bit of a moustache. Though she is not a blood relative of Harry, he has been forced to call her "Aunt Marge" throughout his whole life with the Dursleys. Marge lives in the country, where she breeds bulldogs. Due to this, she rarely visits Privet Drive, to Harry's great delight. However, each of her visits stands out in Harry's mind for her cruelty to him. Owing to Vernon and Petunia's beliefs, Aunt Marge believes that Harry is a horrible boy, and delights in insulting both him and his dead parents. Her most recent known visit was in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, when, after she insulted Harry's mother and father, an enraged Harry accidentally inflated her, causing her to thus resemble a floating balloon--a possible metaphor towards her being high on her own 'hot air'. She was later rescued, changed back to normal, and the Ministry of Magic modified her memory. She also appeared in a memory in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix—Harry being chased up a tree by one of Marge's bulldogs at age ten while the Dursleys laugh at him from the ground and Marge refuses to call the dog off.

Aunt Marge usually brings her dog Ripper with her when she visits Privet Drive and she treats him better than she treats most humans. While Aunt Marge is gone, Colonel Fubster takes care of her other dogs.

Marge is neither mentioned nor seen in the last two books of the series.

Family tree



(for a full view, here)















Peverell Family






Salazar Slytherin















































Antioch Peverell

Cadmus Peverell









Ignotus Peverell
































Many Generations





Many Generations









Many Generations











Marvolo Gaunt





































Black family






















Morfin Gaunt

Merope Gaunt

Tom Riddle Sr.





















































































Tom Marvolo Riddle

Septimus Weasley

Cedrella Black

Mr and Mrs Dursley





Mr and Mrs Evans



Mr and Mrs Potter


























































Apolline Delacour

Monsieur Delacour

Molly Prewett

Arthur Weasley

Marjorie Dursley

Vernon Dursley

Petunia Evans

Lily Evans

James Potter






































































Gabrielle Delacour


Charles Weasley


Fred Weasley










Dudley Dursley






































































Fleur Delacour

William Weasley


Percy Weasley

George Weasley

Hermione Granger

Ronald Weasley

Ginevra Weasley

Harry Potter










































































Victoire Weasley

Other Children






Fred Weasley

Rose Weasley

Hugo Weasley

James Potter

Albus Potter

Lily Potter


Mr and Mrs Potter

Harry's paternal grandparents are rarely mentioned in the books. However, while looking at a family tapestry in Order of the Phoenix, Sirius states that he stayed with the Potters after running away from home at 16, and they treated him as a second son. According to J. K. Rowling, James was a pampered, only son, probably because his parents were older when he was born. This may also explain why they only had one child. Both were old when they died, succumbing to a wizarding illness.[12] Their deaths occurred sometime before Voldemort killed James and Lily - 31 October 1981 - as Rowling stated that Harry had no living close relatives, apart from the Dursleys, but she also stated that all wizards are inter-related to some degree as they naturally bred together through the centuries. Rowling has also said that Harry's considerable inherited fortune came to him via the Potters. The Potter family members were pure-blooded wizards up until Harry, who is a "half-blood" since Lily was Muggle-born. Before having children of his own with Ginny Weasley, Harry was the last of the line.

Mr and Mrs Evans

Harry's maternal grandparents were Muggles, as was their daughter, Petunia. Their other daughter Lily turned out to be a witch. They were said to be "proud to have a witch in the family", which caused Petunia to become bitter and jealous. Mr and Mrs Evans made their first and only appearance in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, in one of Snape's memories, looking in astonishment and excitement at Platform 9¾. J.K. Rowling has also said that Mr and Mrs Evans died "ordinary Muggle deaths".

Gaunt-Potter relationship

As seen in the Family Tree, The Gaunt family and the Potter family share a Peverell family ancestry. The Potters are shown as descended from the youngest brother, Ignotus Peverell, as evidenced by their possession by inheritance of the Invisibility Cloak, while the Gaunts are shown descended from the middle brother Cadmus, from the passing-down of the Resurrection Stone. Harry Potter and Lord Voldemort, who descended from the Gaunt family, are thus distantly related.

Harry's children

In the epilogue of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Harry is married to Ginny Weasley and together they have three children: James Sirius, Albus Severus, and Lily Luna. It also states in the epilogue that though the children resemble Harry and Ginny, only Albus inherits Harry and Lily's eyes.

References

External links


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