Who Wrote Advanced Defense Against Dark Arts?

2025-09-10 09:18:30 309

4 Answers

Emma
Emma
2025-09-11 09:01:33
Merrythought! Her name popped up in Pottermore years ago. That textbook’s practical focus—how to turn everyday objects into defenses—still feels innovative compared to later Ministry-approved stuff. Imagine using a teapot to deflect hexes!
Isaac
Isaac
2025-09-14 15:17:13
As a library volunteer who organizes fantasy sections, I’ve handled enough wizarding world lore to confirm: Merrythought authored that book. It’s fascinating how J.K. Rowling sprinkled background details like this through interviews and supplementary texts rather than the main series. The textbook’s tone is surprisingly witty—full of sarcastic footnotes about incompetent dark wizards. Makes you wish we’d seen more of her in the actual story!
Xanthe
Xanthe
2025-09-14 23:56:10
Funny story—I first learned about Merrythought from a trivia night at my local café. Her book’s mentioned in 'Hogwarts: A History' (the in-universe one, not Rowling’s companion guide). What intrigued me was how her career overlaced with Grindelwald’s rise; she retired right before Dumbledore became Transfiguration teacher. Makes you wonder if her departure was political. Her writing’s got this no-nonsense vibe, like when she calls out 'flashy but useless' shielding charms in Chapter 5.
Harper
Harper
2025-09-15 02:05:51
Man, I was just rereading my old 'Harry Potter' books last night and stumbled upon this detail! 'Advanced Defense Against the Dark Arts' was actually written by Galatea Merrythought, a witch who taught at Hogwarts in the early 20th century. She was known for her eccentric but effective teaching methods—like using live pixies to demonstrate counterjinxes.

What’s wild is how her textbook contrasts with later ones like 'The Dark Forces: A Guide to Self-Protection.' Merrythought’s approach was more hands-on, almost playful, while others leaned into theory. I always wondered if her style influenced Lupin’s teaching decades later. The way she framed dark arts as a puzzle to solve rather than just 'evil' stuff really stuck with me.
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