Harry Potter (character)

This article is about the fictional character Harry Potter. For information about the Harry Potter book series, see Harry Potter.

Template:HP character Harry James Potter (born July 31, 1980)[1] (http://www.mugglenet.com/jkrcom/birthdayarchive.shtml), the only son of James Potter and Lily Potter, is a fictional character and the protagonist of the Harry Potter series.

Harry Potter is portrayed by Daniel Radcliffe in four films based on the book series, the most recent of which is Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, which is scheduled for U.S. cinematic release on November 18th, 2005. Further installments in the movie series are expected, however Radcliffe's appearance in these has not yet been confirmed.

Contents

Biography

Harry Potter is famous in the wizarding world for his encounter with the evil Lord Voldemort, the primary villain in the series, when he was just a year old, an encounter which lost Voldemort, one of the most powerful sorcerers of all time, his powers.

Harry's mother, Lily, was killed while attempting to protect Harry from Voldemort, and her dying act placed Harry under a spell of protection. Voldemort attempted to kill Harry with the Avada Kedavra curse, which he had used to kill Harry's parents, but the spell rebounded due to her mother's protection, striking Voldemort instead. Voldemort, who had spent several years using powerful dark magic in an ongoing attempt to achieve immortality, was able to survive the spell, but only as a pale shadow of his former self. Beaten and powerless, Voldemort went into hiding, and Harry became a celebrity in the wizarding world as "The Boy Who Lived", especially famous for the lightning-shaped scar Voldemort's cuse left on his forehead.

Missing image
The_potters_hp.JPG
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 Sorcerer's Stone

This protection helped Harry again, ten years later, when Lord Voldemort returned searching for the philosopher's stone. Using Hogwarts instructor Professor Quirrell as a vessel, Voldemort returned to Hogwarts to find the stone. Voldemort attempted to kill Harry again, but Lily Potter's protection lingered in his veins, and Voldemort was unable to touch Harry. He was forced to flee again, leaving Quirrel to die.

Harry was raised by Petunia and Vernon Dursley, who neglected him in favour of their own son Dudley and in their attempt to remove all traces of his magical self to make him "normal", kept him fully isolated from the wizarding world. Harry did not even know that he was a wizard until his eleventh birthday, when Rubeus Hagrid, Hogwarts gamekeeper and friend of Dumbledore, explained it to him and also told him about the fame he had in the magical world.

Surprisingly perhaps, Harry has not let his fame go to his head, and he has remained humble, despite the fact that people like Gilderoy Lockhart and Colin Creevey keep reminding him how famous he is. In fact, Harry is annoyed by his fame, as it has caused many people to either fawn all over him or hate him for it.

Harry's greatest desire is to be normal, and for all whom he cares about to be safe and happy. Harry often puts himself at risk for other people, and often tries to convince others not to put themselves in danger. For example, in the first book, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, he does not want Ron and Hermione to attempt to locate the philosopher's stone with him. This occurs in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix when Ginny, Neville and Luna wish to join Harry, Ron, and Hermione on a rescue mission.

However, Harry is depicted with many flaws. He can be angered easily when his parents or others whom he cares about are offended, or when people do not believe him. Like Ron, he is not very diligent with his studies. In Order of the Phoenix, Harry appears more disturbed and troubled, and is extremely temperamental, as he has to endure the entire wizarding world believing him to be an attention-seeking liar, along with the normal difficulties in being a teenager. Sometimes, Harry even gets angry at Ron and Hermione, especially when they argue with each other.

Harry tends to feel very passionately about who is trustworthy and who is not. For example, Harry is reluctant to trust Severus Snape, the Potions Master, despite Hogwarts Headmaster Albus Dumbledore's faith in Snape. Since Harry has been raised by the Dursleys, and has experienced nightmarish events, including the death of Cedric Diggory in Goblet of Fire, and Sirius Black in Order of the Phoenix, Harry seems to feel rather misunderstood. Harry's feelings of isolation increase, when, at the end of "Order of the Phoenix, he learns that he alone must battle Voldemort to the death.

Ginny Weasley was the first person to take a romantic interest in Harry, having a crush on him in Chamber of Secrets, though she was too tongue-tied to even speak to him. In Goblet of Fire, Harry develops a crush on Cho Chang, and in his fifth year, he kisses her under the mistletoe. She and Harry split up at the end of the year, due to Harry's navet, Cho's jealousy, and Marietta Edgecombe's betrayal of Dumbledore's Army.

Harry greatly resembles his father, but he is frequently told that he has his mother's eyes. Harry shares his dormitory at Hogwarts with Ron Weasley, Neville Longbottom, Seamus Finnigan and Dean Thomas.

Family tree of Harry Potter

See also

References

ja:ハリー・ポッター_(人名) hu:Harry Potter

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