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Kronoligen af Harry Potter er en tidslinje af fiktive begivenheder. Harry Potter er skrevet af J. K. Rowling, og der findes i alt syv romander. Tidslinjen er lavet udfra bøgerne og andre medier som filmne der er produceret af Warner Bros.

Fokus for historierne er det magiske samfund, som eksisterer sideløbende med den verdslige verden, mugglerne. Disse parallelle samfund deler samme geografi og kronologi,[1] men begivenhederne i den verdslige verden er kun præsenteres for så vidt de afviger fra den virkelige verden historie.

Tidslinjen indeholder fejl, som Rowling også har erkendt. Den modsiger sig selv, og stemmer heller ikke overens med den rigtige kalender, for dage og datoer, for begivenheder der er beskrevet.[2][3] Ikke desto mindre er den blevet en almindelig anerkendt tidslinje for begivenheder i romanerne. [3]


The dates provided in the timeline are derived from bits of information provided by Rowling, either directly in her books, on her website, during published interviews, or from other published materials. For example the Black Family Tree, first mentioned in the fifth book of the series The Order of the Phoenix was extended and donated for a charity auction.[4] That extended version included birthdates and death years for several key characters.[3]

Warner Bros. is the producer of the Harry Potter films, and holds the associated copyrights and trademarks related to Harry Potter media. DVD editions of the Harry Potter films Chamber of Secrets, Prisoner of Azkaban and Goblet of Fire, contain the timeline of events, which take place over the course of the films and in the narrative of the novels. Warner Bros. originally developed the timeline as part of the special features package for the Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (2002) DVD. Rowling reviewed the timelines and made several changes before approving them as "official".[3]

The timeline followed in the novels is not enforced in the films. In the film series, London and the suburbs of Surrey reflect an early 21st century setting. This is demonstrated by the inclusion of modern British cars and modern electronic equipment in the Dursley home. In addition, the use of Westminster Station in the fifth film is inconsistent, since it was completely changed for the Jubilee Line extension, which opened in 1998, three years after the event.

Timeline basis

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The official timeline is rooted in a date cited in Rowling’s second book, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, set in Harry’s second year at Hogwarts. During the Halloween celebrations at the school, a long dead ghost called Nearly Headless Nick celebrates the anniversary of his death, which took place on a long ago 31 October, with a "five hundredth deathday" party. A central feature of this party is an "enormous grey cake in the shape of a tombstone", stating "Sir Nicholas de Mimsy-Porpington (the real name of Nearly Headless Nick) died 31st October 1492". Thus, Rowling sets the date on which the event takes place in the book as 31 October 1992.[5] This means that Harry became a student at Hogwarts in 1991,[6] and so must have been born in 1980, since his 11th birthday occurs at the beginning of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone the summer before he becomes a Hogwarts student.[7][8]

In using the life and death of Nearly Headless Nick to express the chronology of her novels, Rowling initially contradicted herself. In the original printing of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, Nearly-Headless Nick claimed to Harry that "I haven't eaten for nearly four hundred years".[9] Had Rowling left this statement unchanged, it would have created an inconsistency in her timeline. However, she corrected the statement in later editions to read, "I haven't eaten for nearly five hundred years"—making it consistent with what she had disclosed in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets.[3]

Rowling later gave further confirmation of this original timeline anchor when in early 2006, she donated a hand-drawn copy of the Black family tree to a charity auction for Book Aid International.[4] In that document, she included the birth year of one of Harry's classmates, Draco Malfoy, as 1980.[10] She had previously, in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, revealed Draco's birthday to be (like that of Harry) late in the school year and past January.[11] By means of these two devices, she thus also clearly sets the birthdate of her main character as 31 July 1980, and thus, by extension, reinforced the original implication that the Sorting Ceremony that takes place on 1 September in her first book was envisioned by her as taking place in the chronological year 1991.[3]

Harry's 1980 birth-year is confirmed in Rowling's Wizard of the Month entry for Harry at her web site.[12]

Rowling's manuscript depiction of The Black Family Tree was shown as being similar to that which she had described in the form of a tapestry, appearing in Order of the Phoenix on the wall of the Black family home. In her manuscript copy, Rowling drew several lacunae (which had been explained by her in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix as burns in the Tapestry Tree featuring in the novel), which she noted as obscuring the names and birthdates of a number of disowned members of the Black family, including a major character of the novels, Sirius Black.[13][10]

Black, Harry's parents, Severus Snape, Remus Lupin, and Peter Pettigrew were all in the same Hogwarts school year (i.e. between September of one year and August of the next).[14] Prior to the publication of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, fans were able to use chronological references in the text to estimate that these characters were born between 1957 and 1960. Rowling reveals the exact birthdates of the Potters in Chapter 16 of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, "Godric's Hollow", when Harry visits his parents' grave. The marble headstone lists James Potter's date of birth as 27 March 1960, and Lily Potter's as 30 January 1960. They and the other students in their year at school attended Hogwarts from 1971 to 1978, and their classmates must have been born between September 1959 and August 1960.

The Harry Potter films have included dates extrapolated from this dating system, such as the years on the gravestone seen in the fourth film.

Contradictions

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There are several minor contradictions in the timeline, both internal and compared with the real-world timeline. For example, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone opens on Tuesday 1 November, despite 1 November 1981 having been a Sunday.[15][2] Rowling herself has admitted having difficulty with managing mathematics in the FAQ section of her website.[16] Also in Philosopher's Stone Hermione states that Nicolas Flamel "celebrated his six hundred and sixty-fifth birthday last year." The historic Flamel was born in 1330, placing the events of Philosopher's Stone during 1995/1996, while on the other hand, Nearly Headless Nick's Deathday Anniversary was celebrated in 1992 during Harry's second year, implying that his first year was in 1991. Nearly Headless Nick also said in the first book that he hadn't eaten for "nearly four hundred years", but in the next book he has been dead for 500 years. Later editions of Philosopher's Stone correct this to "nearly five hundred years".

The birthdates of Harry's parents are also somewhat inconsistent with other chronological references in the text. James Potter in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix is referred to as being fifteen years old in the summer of his fifth year at Hogwarts. Yet, his birthdate in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows is shown to be March. Unless one literally translates "summer of his fifth year" as applying to the opening months of his first term, rather than the summer after the fifth year concluded, the Hogwarts admission cutoff date of 31 August for eleven year olds implies James would have turned sixteen before the summer of his fifth year.

At the beginning of the sixth book (set in 1996, but temporarily flashbacking to 1990/1991 to see the first 5-6 books from the "Muggle Prime Minister's" point of view), the Muggle prime minister is visited by Cornelius Fudge. During their first conversation, Fudge says of the previous prime minister, "He tried to throw me out of the window." In 1996, the prime minister was John Major, and his predecessor was a woman, Margaret Thatcher.

The sixth book has Dumbledore becoming Headmaster around 1956, but in the third book Remus Lupin (born 1960) says that he was bitten by a werewolf when he was a very small boy and that "It seemed impossible that I would be able to come to Hogwarts. [...] Other parents weren't likely to want their children exposed to me. But then Dumbledore became Headmaster, and he was sympathetic." This implies that Dumbledore became Headmaster much later, around 1970.

At the beginning of the fourth book, Harry writes to Sirius claiming that his cousin Dudley has thrown his PlayStation out of the window. However, Harry writes his letter during August, while the PlayStation was not released anywhere until December 1994 and not until September 1995 in Europe.

In book one to six (presumably book seven as well), 2 September (the first day of school) is a Monday, though this has only occurred in 1985, 1991, 1996 and 2002 in recent years.

Timeline of the Harry Potter series

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  • 382 BC
According to the entrance sign described in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, Ollivander's – a family of magic wand producers – has been in business since this date.[17]
  • AD 962
Rowling dated the first use of broomsticks for transport very precisely, dating it "as early as AD 962".[18]
  • 9th/10th century
Although the precise date is unknown to those within the novels, Rowling envisioned (in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, set in 1992–1993) Hogwarts, the magical centrepiece of her novels, as having been built "over a thousand years ago" by the four 'Founders', two witches and two wizards (named Godric Gryffindor, Helga Hufflepuff, Rowena Ravenclaw, and Salazar Slytherin) whom she portrays as revered figures through the novels. According to Rowling, the education of magical children began at the school at the same time; although, following the standard pattern of creation myths, she depicts this endeavour as becoming lessened due to internal dissent: two of the founders, Slytherin and Gryffindor, quarrel over their creation (Slytherin demanding that they not teach magical students whose families are not magical), resulting in Slytherin rebelling and abandoning the endeavour. At the same time, before leaving, he builds the Chamber of Secrets, a hidden chamber containing a deadly basilisk.[19]The Chamber can only be opened, and the basilisk controlled, by the 'heir' or descendants of Slytherin.
  • 1163
Puddlemere United, a Quidditch Team, is founded. [20]
  • 1203
The all-female Quidditch team the Holyhead Harpies is organized.
  • 1296
A Manticore savages a human and gets away with it, as everyone is too scared to approach the dangerous monster.
  • c. 1300
The Triwizard Tournament, a competition Rowling uses as a major feature in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, is dated by her in that book (taking place in the year 1994–1995) as having been established "some seven hundred years ago". Rowling writes that, although a friendly competition, it was ended at an unknown point due to the mounting death toll. She noted, however, that there were several intervening centuries between the cancellation and the novel in which it becomes relevant, since "there have been several attempts over the centuries to reinstate the tournament."[21]
  • 1362
The Wizarding Council bans playing Quidditch within 50 miles of Muggle towns.
  • 1368
The ban is extended to 100 miles.
  • 1422
Lisette de Lapin is sentenced to death for witchcraft in Paris. She escapes by transforming into a rabbit and fleeing to England, where she becomes an advisor to Henry VI. [22]
  • 15th century
Beedle the Bard writes his highly popular children's stories.
  • 1473
Rowling considered this a particularly important date in the history of the major sport of her novels, Quidditch: not only does she envision it as the year of the first Quidditch World Cup (a major sporting event in her novels, as seen in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire), but she also humorously stated in Quidditch Through the Ages that, of the 700 fouls she writes of as existing in the game, "all of them are known to have occurred during the final of the first ever World Cup" in this year.[23]
  • 1492
Nearly Headless Nick dies on October 31st
  • 1689
The International Statute of Secrecy is signed. This was a year after the Glorious Revolution in Britain.
  • 1692
The International Confederation of Wizards meets in this year, and makes a number of important decisions, including establishing the right for wizards to carry wands at all times and deciding to begin hiding magical creatures from Muggles. This year, as confirmed in the seventh book, was the year when the wizarding world entirely split from the Muggle world. This is also the same year that the Salem witch trials took place.
  • 1717
The Ministry of Magic decrees that Avada Kedavra, Cruciatus and Imperius are Unforgivable Curses, and attaches the strictest penalties to their use. [24]
  • 1749
The Statute of Secrecy is breached. [25]
  • 1762
The very dangerous, often fatal, game of Creaothceann is banned by the Wizarding Council.
  • 1792
A Hippogriff is executed for attacking a human. A rampaging Cockatrice injures the heads of the schools Hogwarts, Beauxbatons and Durmstrang, during yet another failed attempt to reinstate the Triwizard Tournament.
  • 1881
Albus Percival Wolfric Brian Dumbledore is born.
  • 1918
Rowling cites this year as that in which Newt Scamander (who, within the context of her novels, is the "real" author of her book Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them) is asked to write a compendium of magical beasts – which, she explains, eventually became the book she herself wrote for Comic Relief.[26]
  • Late 1925
Marvolo and son Morfin Gaunt attack Tom Riddle Sr. (Voldemort's eventual father) leading to both being arrested and imprisoned. Daughter Merope reacts to her family's imprisonment by enchanting Riddle (with whom she has fallen in love) into loving her, and the two are married roughly a year before the birth of their child.[27]
  • 1927
The fictional publication year of Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them – which, in reality, was written and published by Rowling herself in 2001.[26]
  • 1935
Jocunda Sykes flies over the Atlantic Ocean on her broom - the first such transoceanic crossing by magical means.
  • September 1937
Minerva McGonagall begins studying at Hogwarts.
  • summer 1938
Albus Dumbledore visits Tom Riddle in a London orphanage and tells him he is a wizard.
  • September 1938
Tom Riddle begins studying at Hogwarts.[27][28]
  • September 1940
Rubeus Hagrid begins studying at Hogwarts.[29][30]
  • July-August 1942
Tom Riddle, age 15, visits his estranged uncle Morfin who has returned from Azkaban and now lives alone following the deaths of his sister and father. Riddle seeks out and murders his father and paternal grandparents, then frames his uncle Morfin Gaunt for the crimes by implanting false memories into his mind.[31]
  • 1943
As Rowling relates in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, precisely 50 years before the events of that book, Riddle secretly opens the Chamber of Secrets (introduced by Rowling in this book, a legendary hidden chamber under the castle, built by the rebellious founder Slytherin), and releases the monstrous serpent (a basilisk) hidden within. As a result, a young student, Myrtle, was killed. Riddle – who, like Harry, is depicted as hating his home in the mundane world, and enjoying life in the school – being shown by Rowling to fear that the school will be closed because of his actions, is then shown to frame Rubeus Hagrid for the crime. As a result, Hagrid is expelled, and Riddle – whose culpability in the matter is unknown – is rewarded; however, Rowling also ensures that the matter is reversed by the end of the same novel.[29][30][32]
  • 1944
Minerva McGonagall finishes her studies at Hogwarts.
  • 1945
Albus Dumbledore defeats the notorious Dark Wizard Grindelwald in this year, at the age of 64 and takes the Elder Wand from him.[33] Historically, it was the year in which the Second World War ended, with the defeat of Nazi Germany in May, and the dropping of the atomic bombs on Japan in August. These two facts, according to Rowling, are not a coincidence.[34]
The same year has also been shown by Rowling as being Tom Riddle's final year at Hogwarts. As she revealed in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, he requests of the headmaster, Armando Dippet, that he be employed by the school as a teacher; significantly to the plot of the novels, this request is refused on the basis that Tom was too young to teach yet. Then Rowling notes that Riddle instead found work in Borgin and Burkes, shown in the novels to be a purveyor of cursed and Dark objects.[35][36]
  • c.1945-1947
Around these years, Rowling notes in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, Tom Riddle – having discovered in the course of his work at Borgin and Burkes two treasures, formerly the property of Salazar Slytherin and Helga Hufflepuff (that of Slytherin, Rowling is careful to note, was a hereditary possession of Riddle's maternal family) – facilitates the murder of the objects' legal owner Hepzibah Smith and disappears. This marks the final chronological stage in the novels when he appears as Tom Riddle; when he next appears, he has become in appearance and nature "Lord Voldemort".[35]
  • c. 1948
Harry Potter's used copy of Advanced Potion-Making, marked with This Book is the Property of the Half-Blood Prince, is dated as published in this time frame - being "nearly fifty years old" during Harry's sixth year at Hogwarts.[37] The textbook previously belonged to Severus Snape, and his mother Eileen Prince before him.[38]
  • 1953
The Holyhead Harpies, led by Gwendolyn Morgan, defeat the Heidelberg Harriers, led by Rudolf Brand, in a seven-day epic Quidditch match. Rudolf proposes marriage to Gwendolyn. She gives him a concussion with her broom. [39]
  • 1956
Rowling revealed in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix that Minerva McGonagall, the firm but fair Deputy Headmistress who plays a major role in the novels, had in the autumn term of that novel (and thus the chronological year of 1995) been teaching "Thirty-nine years this December": thus, since the December of 1956.[40] She probably replaces Dumbledore as the school's Transfiguration professor.
The year in which Albus Dumbledore became Headmaster is not certain. However, Rowling's plot exposition in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince made it clear that he became Headmaster around 10 years after Rowling implies Riddle disappeared - and thus, somewhere between 1955 and 1957.[35][41] But this appears to be contradicting Remus Lupin's statements in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban which imply Dumbledore didn't become Headmaster until much later, around 1970. (see "Contradictions" above)
It is also implied in the same novel that, shortly after Dumbledore became Headmaster, Riddle returned to Britain – fully in the name and disguise now of "Lord Voldemort" – and requested the Defence Against the Dark Arts teaching position. When refused this by Dumbledore, Rowling explains, Voldemort – who had already recruited followers, including Rosier, Nott, Mulciber, and Dolohov, 'jinxed' the post he had requested – an explanation given by Rowling for the regular change on the school staff to that position each year in the novels.[35] It is also said in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows that Voldemort hid the Diadem of Rowena Ravenclaw in the Room of Requirement on the night that he asked for the position, before meeting Dumbledore.
  • c. 1966
As noted by Rowling, through a comment of the 'Minister for Magic' in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (in the chronological year 1996), Voldemort, becoming more powerful, is supposed to have begun his campaign of fear against the Wizarding World around this time.[42]
  • 1967
The Nimbus Racing Broom Company is formed. [43]
  • c. 1970
Albus Dumbledore becomes Headmaster of Hogwarts. (based on a statement given by Remus Lupin in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban; see "Contradictions" above)
  • c. 1968-1970
Arthur Weasley and Molly Prewett, the parents of Ron Weasley (the best friend of Harry Potter), who are known to have eloped, are presumed to have done so around this period.[44]
  • 1970
Beginning of the first war against Lord Voldemort and his followers. As stated by Albus Dumbledore in the first chapter of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone - "We have had precious little to celebrate for eleven years."
  • Autumn, 1971
As noted above, the six notable characters (James Potter, Lily Evans, Sirius Black, Remus Lupin, Peter Pettigrew, and Severus Snape) of the generation prior to that of the children who feature in Rowling's novels begin school at Hogwarts at this time. (See above).[45][46]
  • June, 1976
Severus Snape is tormented and humiliated by James Potter and Sirius Black, and Lily Evans saves Snape (both currently best friends), but this infuriates Snape once everyone starts taunting him about Lily saving him. Snape says he does not need help from a Mudblood. This ends Lily and Snape's friendship, and it devastates Snape. Snape looks at this moment as one of the worst in his life.[14]
  • 1978
Universal Brooms goes out of business. [47]
  • c. 1978-1979
Rowling has not made clear when James Potter and Lily Evans – the parents of the main character – were married. Accordingly, no firm date exists; since it is known, through various pieces of information given by Rowling, that they were married by the time Harry was conceived, the range of marriage possibilities is thus from around 1978 to Autumn 1979, when Rowling has made clear Harry was conceived.[48]
  • 1979
The year in which Regulus Black, the brother of Sirius Black, is shown as having died on the Black Family Tree. In Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, it is discovered that he was, in fact, surrendering himself to the Inferi guarding Slytherin's locket. Before he dies, however, he entrusts the locket to his house-elf, Kreacher. He gives final orders to the elf to destroy the locket by any means and not to tell his family how he died.
  • c. late 1979 - early 1980
Rowling explained in first Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix and then Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince that Sybill Trelawney, the semi-competent Seer of the novels, makes her first real Prophecy at some point in the year before the birth of Neville Longbottom and Harry in late July 1980 (the 30th and 31st, respectively). Both Potter and Longbottom are referenced by the Prophecy in relating a substantial issue of the novels, the issue of who is 'destined' to destroy Lord Voldemort. This successful prophecy earns Trelawney a position at Hogwarts, teaching Divination, which allows Rowling to use her in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban to make another real Prophecy.[49][50][51]. Hermione Granger is born on September 19, 1979.
  • 1980
Severus Snape comes to Dumbledore and warns him that Voldemort is hunting Lily Potter and her son in order to make sure the prophecy does not come to pass. Snape vows to Dumbledore that he will do anything he asks if he would take measures to protect her.
  • 1981
In Rowling's novels, the period from September-November 1981 is very important. The September sees Severus Snape – Harry's classroom enemy – hired as Potions teacher at Hogwarts.[40] Shortly after this, on 31 October 1981, comes the beginning of the first novel, and a seminal moment in Rowling's work: Voldemort, the enemy of Harry Potter, kills Lily and James Potter, but when attempting to kill the young Harry, is prevented from doing so by Lily, whose sacrifice to save Harry instills an inborn protection in her son. Voldemort's curse therefore backfires onto him and he is reduced to a terrible state of existence. However the general public considers him dead. Harry, left with the scar he is distinctive for throughout the novels, is then sent to live with his maternal relatives, the Dursleys.[15][52]
Rowling allocates to the next day, 1 November, the back story of Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban: Sirius Black, the misjudged villain of that novel, is arrested for the murder of Peter Pettigrew; Pettigrew, in fact, is not dead, but has fled into hiding, while framing Sirius for various murders, as will prove significant in Prisoner of Azkaban.[53][54]
Snape vows to Dumbledore to always protect Harry and swears his loyalty to Dumbledore, both almost solely because that is what Lily died for.
  • 1990
Cornelius Fudge becomes Minister of Magic, replacing Millicent Bagnold.
  • 1991
The chronological year in which most of the first novel, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, takes place. Rowling writes July as being the month in which Harry Potter receives his invitation to attend Hogwarts. He, and the two characters whom Rowling places constantly at his side throughout the novels (Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger), begin attending the school in what Rowling demonstrates to be the September of that year.[8][33]
  • 1992
In the course of the first novel, June of this year sees Harry defeat Lord Voldemort for a second time (although the first time shown to the readers by Rowling).[8][55]
The same chronological year, although the second novel, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, is also set up by Rowling as seeing the beginning of the main plot of the second novel, when the Chamber of Secrets is reopened.[5]
  • 1993
The ending of the second novel and the beginning of the third: Rowling places the climax of Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets – in which Harry destroys an incarnate memory of Tom Riddle (a.k.a. Lord Voldemort), rescues Ginny Weasley (who, it emerges, was indirectly responsible for the previous events) and, crucially to the plot of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, destroys a Horcrux of Lord Voldemort – in June of 1993. The event which begins the next novel, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, comes shortly after, when the major character of that novel – Sirius Black – escapes from Azkaban.[32][56]
  • 1994
Professor Trelawney gives her second prophecy to Harry Potter, regarding the return of the Dark Lord to power.[51]
6 June - Harry learns of Sirius' innocence regarding the betrayal of his parents. Peter Pettigrew, guilt now established, flees and rejoins Voldemort.[57]
Lord Voldemort murders Bertha Jorkins.[58]
Voldemort murders Frank Bryce.[58]
Spring or Summer. Gorodok Gargoyles, Lithuanian Quidditch team, defeats Toyohashi Tengu, Japanese Quidditch team. [59]
Summer - Ireland wins the 422nd Quidditch World Cup (but Viktor Krum, the Bulgarian Seeker, gets the Snitch).[60]
Autumn - Hogwarts hosts the Triwizard Tournament for the first time in over a century[21]
Saturday 31 October - The names of the champions for the Triwizard Tournament are revealed to the students. (This is controversial because 31 October is on a Monday in 1994)[61]
24 November - The first task of the Triwizard Tournament - Viktor Krum and Harry Potter tie for the lead with 40 points each.[62]
  • 1995
24 February - The second task of the Triwizard Tournament is held - Harry and Cedric Diggory end up tied for the lead with 85 points each.[63]
24 June - The third task of the Triwizard Tournament is held.[64]
24 June - Peter Pettigrew murders Cedric Diggory in Harry's presence, on Lord Voldemort's orders, and using the Dark Lord's wand. Voldemort is restored to full power.[65]
24 June - The Order of the Phoenix is re-established by Albus Dumbledore.[66][67]
2 August - Harry saves his cousin Dudley from two Dementors sent by Dolores Umbridge in Little Whinging.[68][69] (Dudley was aware that Harry had saved him, but this fact is only revealed much later).
12 August - Harry is put on trial for breaching the "Decree for Reasonable Restriction of Underage Sorcery" and the "International Statue of Secrecy," but, following effective testimony from Albus Dumbledore, he is cleared of all charges by the Wizengamot and allowed to go back to study at Hogwarts.
5 October - In Hogsmeade, at the Hog's Head, Dumbledore's Army is created by Hermione Granger and Harry Potter.[70]
  • 1996
There is a mass breakout of ten Death Eaters from Azkaban. Ministry officials continue denying Voldemort's return and instead pin the blame on Sirius Black, claiming he helped the prisoners escape.
Voldemort does not recover the Prophecy from the Department of Mysteries, due to the efforts of Harry and company. Harry learns of Professor Trelawney's first prediction and the wizarding world is finally alerted to Voldemort's return. Sirius Black dies in The Death Chamber of the Department of Mysteries. Lucius Malfoy and other Death Eaters are arrested and taken to Azkaban.[71][49][72]
After leaving Hogwarts, Fred and George Weasley open in Diagon Alley Weasley's Wizard Wheezes, a popular and successful joke and gag shop. [73][74]
Rufus Scrimgeour replaces Cornelius Fudge as Minister for Magic.[42]
Albus Dumbledore destroys another of Voldemort's Horcruxes, formerly encased in Marvolo Gaunt's ring.[75] Albus Dumbledore is cursed in the process. With the help of Severus Snape, this curse is trapped in his right hand. He is told by Snape he has around a year to live. It is also at this time he asks Snape to kill him within the year before Draco Malfoy or any Death Eaters get the opportunity. Albus wishes for Draco's soul to remain whole and for Draco to be spared from torture under the Death Eaters.[76]
Harry, Ron, and Hermione start their sixth year at Hogwarts. Draco Malfoy sneaks off to Knockturn Alley to go to Borgin and Burkes to reserve a vanishing cabinet to get the Death Eaters into Hogwarts.[74][77]
  • 1997
June - Albus Dumbledore is killed by Severus Snape. Harry Potter decides upon his quest to destroy the remaining four (actually five) Horcruxes in which Lord Voldemort has sealed fragments of his soul.[78][38]
27 July - Harry Potter leaves Privet Drive for the last time, accompanied by six fake Harry Potters and a crew of Order of the Phoenix members; group narrowly escapes the Death Eaters. Alastor Moody and Harry's pet owl Hedwig are killed during this flight. [79][80]George Weasley has his ear cursed by Snape; this, however, turns out to be an accident following the revelations of the seventh book.
31 July - Harry turns 17 and becomes of age in the wizarding world.
1 August - The wedding of Bill Weasley and Fleur Delacour.[81][82]
1 August - Voldemort seizes power in the ministry, kills Rufus Scrimgeour and places a henchman as New Minister for Magic, starting a regime of masked terror. [82]
31 August - Severus Snape appointed Headmaster of Hogwarts under Voldemort's orders, replacing Minerva McGonagall[83]
2 September - Hermione Granger obtains Slytherin's locket, a Horcrux, from Dolores Umbridge.[84]
24 December - Harry Potter and Hermione Granger visit James and Lily Potter's grave at Godric's Hollow. There, they meet Bathilda Bagshot, who is in fact possessed by Voldemort's snake. Hermione accidentally breaks Harry's wand as they are escaping.[85]
26 December - Ron Weasley destroys Slytherin's locket with Gryffindor's sword. [86]
28 December - Harry Potter, Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger visit Xenophilius Lovegood and learn about the Deathly Hallows.
  • 1998
March/April - Harry, Ron, and Hermione are captured and taken to Malfoy Manor, but they are saved by Dobby who dies in the fray via Bellatrix Lestrange's knife.
1 May - Harry, Ron, Hermione and Griphook (a goblin) break into Gringotts Wizarding Bank and steal Hufflepuff's cup, then escape with the aid of the dragon that guarded some of the vaults.
2 & 3 May - the Battle of Hogwarts, at which the four remaining Horcruxes (Ravenclaw's diadem, Hufflepuff's cup, the snake Nagini and Harry Potter) are destroyed. Professor Minerva McGonagall ousts Severus Snape and leads Hogwarts and Order of the Phoenix forces against Voldemort and the Death Eaters; however, Harry discovers Snape's true allegiance shortly after Snape's death, with the help of his memories. Many people on both sides die in this battle, including Lupin, Tonks, Colin Creevey, Fred Weasley, and Bellatrix Lestrange. After the Horcrux inside him is destroyed, Harry returns to the living world through his own free will after being presented with a choice by Dumbledore, who appears before him. Voldemort is finally killed by a backfiring curse cast with the Elder wand, which refuses to kill Harry because Harry is its true master.
Kingsley Shacklebolt is appointed temporary Minister of Magic.
Sometime before his eighteenth birthday, Harry joins the Auror Department.
  • 2007
Harry is appointed Head of the Auror Department at the Ministry of Magic.
  • 2017
September - Neville Longbottom is the Herbology professor at Hogwarts; Ginny and Harry drop off their two sons, James and Albus, at the Hogwarts Express while their daughter, Lily, watches; Hermione and Ron drop off one of their children, Rose, while their son Hugo watches; Draco and his wife drop off their son, named Scorpius. Remus and Tonks' son Teddy goes to see Fleur and Bill's daughter, Victoire, off to Hogwarts, the two having just been caught kissing by James. [87]
The Defence Against the Dark Arts position is no longer jinxed, due to Voldemort's death. Kingsley Shacklebolt is the Minister of Magic. [88]

(Note: Many of the approximate dates in the twentieth century are because Hogwarts accepts students aged eleven as of August 31, so it is possible for any of the students whose birth-month is not given to have been born sometime in the last third of the previous year.)

  • 1325
Nicolas Flamel[89]
  • 1332
Perenelle Flamel[89]
  • 1847
Phineas Nigellus Black
  • c. 1881
Albus Percival Wulfric Brian Dumbledore to Percival and Kendra Dumbledore[90]
  • c.1884
Aberforth Dumbledore to Percival and Kendra Dumbledore.
  • c.1885
Ariana Dumbledore to Percival and Kendra Dumbledore.
  • c. 1890
Auntie Muriel to the Prewett Family (possibly Molly Weasley's father's sister)
  • c. 1907
Merope Gaunt to Marvolo Gaunt and an unnamed witch.[27]
  • c. 1925
4 October - Minerva McGonagall.[90]
  • 1925
Lucretia Black to Arcturus Black and Melania Macmillan
Walburga Black to Pollux Black and Irma Crabbe
  • 1926
31 December - Tom Marvolo Riddle (Lord Voldemort) to Muggle Tom Riddle Sr. and witch Merope Gaunt[27][28]
  • 1928
6 December - Rubeus Hagrid to the giantess Fridwulfa and Mr. Hagrid (first name unknown)[91]
  • 1929
Orion Black to Arcturus Black and Melania Macmillan
Cygnus Black to Pollux Black and Irma Crabbe
  • 1949
30 October - Molly Prewett
  • 1950
6 February- Arthur Weasley
  • 1951
Rita Skeeter[92]
Bellatrix Black to Cygnus Black and Druella Rosier
  • c. 1953
Andromeda Black to Cygnus Black and Druella Rosier
  • c. 1954
Lucius Malfoy to Abraxas Malfoy and an unknown witch
  • 1955
Narcissa Black to Cygnus Black and Druella Rosier
  • c.1954-56
Bertha Jorkins[93]
  • 1960
9 January - Severus Snape to Tobias Snape and Eileen Prince[46]
30 January - Lily Evans[94]
10 March - Remus Lupin[95]
27 March - James Potter[48]
Sirius Black to second cousins Orion Black and Walburga Black[96]
Peter Pettigrew[97]
  • 1961
Regulus Arcturus Black to second cousins Orion Black and Walburga Black
  • 1962
Bartemius Crouch Jr to Bartemius Crouch Sr and his wife[98]
  • 1970
29 November - Bill Weasley to Arthur Weasley and Molly Prewett[99]
  • 1972
12 December - Charlie Weasley to Arthur Weasley and Molly Prewett[100]
  • c. 1972/3
Nymphadora Tonks to Ted Tonks and Andromeda Black[101]
  • c. 1975
Stan Shunpike[102]
  • 1976
22 August - Percy Ignatius Weasley to Arthur Weasley and Molly Prewett[103]
  • c. 1976
c. - Viktor Krum[104]
Oliver Wood [105]
  • 1977
Cedric Diggory to Amos Diggory and his wife[106]
c. - Fleur Delacour to Monsieur Delacour and Apolline Delacour (a half-Veela)[107][108]
  • 1978
1 April - Fred and George Weasley to Arthur Weasley and Molly Prewett[109]
c. - Katie Bell[110]
  • 1979
c. - Cho Chang[111]
19 September - Hermione Jean Granger to Mr. and Mrs. Granger, Muggle dentists[112]
  • 1980
1 March - Ronald Bilius Weasley to Arthur Weasley and Molly Prewett[113]
5 June - Draco Malfoy to Lucius Malfoy and Narcissa Black
22 June - Dudley Dursley to Vernon Dursley and Petunia Evans[114]
30 July - Neville Longbottom to Frank and Alice Longbottom[115]
31 July - Harry James Potter to James Potter and Lily Evans[116]
  • 1981
c. - Colin Creevey[117]
c. - Luna Lovegood to Xenophilius Lovegood, editor of The Quibbler and his wife[118]
11 August - Ginevra Molly Weasley to Arthur Weasley and Molly Prewett[119]
  • c. 1983
Dennis Creevey[117]
  • c. 1986
Gabrielle Delacour to Monsieur Delacour and Apolline Delacour (a half-Veela)[63][108]
  • 1998
April - Ted Remus Lupin to Remus Lupin and Nymphadora Tonks. [120]
  • 2000
2 May - Victoire Weasley to Bill Weasley and Fleur Delacour
  • c. 2005
James Sirius Potter to Harry Potter and Ginny Weasley
  • c. 2006
Albus Severus Potter to Harry Potter and Ginny Weasley
Rose Weasley to Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger
Scorpius Hyperion Malfoy to Draco Malfoy and Astoria Greengrass
  • c. 2008
Lily Luna Potter to Harry Potter and Ginny Weasley
Hugo Weasley to Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger
  • After c. 2008 (exact time unknown)
Lorcan and Lysander Scamander to Rolf Scamander and Luna Lovegood
  • c. 1000
Helena Ravenclaw (the Grey Lady), murdered by the Bloody Baron.
The Bloody Baron, commits suicide by stabbing, in remorse for murdering Helena, accounting for the silver blood in which he is covered.
Godric Gryffindor
Helga Hufflepuff
Rowena Ravenclaw of a terminal illness.
Salazar Slytherin
  • 1492
31 October - Nearly Headless Nick, by being partially decapitated.[5]
  • Summer 1899
Kendra Dumbledore, dies in the summer because of a magical accident caused by her daughter Ariana.
Ariana Dumbledore, accidentally killed in a three way fight between Albus Dumbledore, Aberforth Dumbledore, and Gellert Grindelwald, shortly before the beginning of the fall term, two months after the death of her mother.
  • 1925
Phineas Nigellus Black
Marvolo Gaunt
  • 1926
31 December - Merope Gaunt, shortly after childbirth; possibly by loss of the will to live.[28]
  • 1942
Summer - Tom Riddle Sr., father of Tom Marvolo Riddle, and his paternal grandparents, murdered by Lord Voldemort/Tom Marvolo Riddle.
  • 1943
13 June - Myrtle (surname unknown), a female Hogwarts student, who will become known as Moaning Myrtle, is killed by the Basilisk from the Chamber of Secrets under the influence of Tom Riddle.[30]
  • 1945
Morfin Gaunt
  • 1946
Hepzibah Smith, poisoned by her own house elf under the influence of Tom Riddle.
A Muggle tramp
  • 1949
An Albanian peasant
  • 1979
Regulus Black, dragged by Inferi into the cave lake after stealing the locket Horcrux and giving it to Kreacher.
Orion Black
  • 1981
31 October - James and Lily Potter, from an attack by Lord Voldemort.[15]
1 November - Several innocent Muggles murdered by Peter Pettigrew to frame Sirius Black and cover his own flight.
  • c. 1982
Barty Crouch Junior's mother, in Azkaban, transformed by the Polyjuice Potion into the physical form of her son.[121]
  • 1985
Walburga Black
  • c. 1990
Luna Lovegood's mother, in an accident when her experimental spell backfires.[72]
  • 1991
Cuthbert Binns, died in his sleep, then got up the next morning to teach, leaving his body behind.
Arcturus Black
  • 1992
4 June - Quirinus Quirrell (as a result of Lord Voldemort abandoning him).[52]
Nicolas Flamel and Perenelle, die of old age after the Philosopher's Stone is destroyed.[52]
Lucretia Black
Cygnus Black
  • 1993
29 May - The Basilisk, slain with the sword of Godric Gryffindor, wielded by Harry Potter.
  • 1994
Summer - Bertha Jorkins, murdered by Voldemort after he extracted information on the approaching Triwizard Tournament from her.[58]
August - Frank Bryce, Muggle, murdered by Voldemort for overhearing Voldemort and Pettigrew's plot to kill Harry Potter.[58]
  • 1995
May - Barty Crouch Senior, by his son posing as Mad-Eye Moody after his attempt to inform Dumbledore of his son's escape.[64]
24 June - Cedric Diggory, murdered by Peter Pettigrew on Voldemort's orders.[65]
  • 1996
January - Broderick Bode, strangled by Devil's Snare in St Mungo's Hospital of Magical Maladies and Injuries.
June - Sirius Black, falls through the veil in the Death Chamber in the Department of Mysteries.[122]
Summer - Amelia Bones, murdered in the first days of the Second War, probably by Lord Voldemort himself.[42]
Summer - Emmeline Vance, murdered by Death Eaters in the first days of the war, on information from Snape, in the vicinity of 10 Downing Street.[42]
Summer - Igor Karkaroff, murdered by Death Eaters because he abandoned them[74]
After Summer - Hannah Abbott's mother[102]
  • 1997
20 April - Aragog, due to old age after Hagrid makes a valiant attempt to preserve his life.[11]
9 June - Albus Dumbledore, killed by Snape's Killing Curse on top of the Astronomy Tower after being previously weakened in an attempt to seize a Horcrux.[78]
9 June - Gibbon the Death Eater, hit accidentally with an Avada Kedavra curse by one of his own allies, in the corridor leading up to the astronomy tower.[123]
26 July - Charity Burbage, Professor of Muggle Studies at Hogwarts, killed by Voldemort at Malfoy Manor, after which her body is fed to Nagini.[124]
27 July- Hedwig, hit by a stray Killing Curse as Harry and Hagrid escape Privet Drive.[79]
27 July - Alastor 'Mad-Eye' Moody, killed by Voldemort himself, after Mundungus Fletcher disapparates away.[80]
1 August - Rufus Scrimgeour, killed to complete the fall of the Ministry into Voldemort's hands, possibly after being tortured to where Harry was, which he did not reveal.[82]
2 September - Gregorovitch the wandmaker, killed by Voldemort in his quest to locate the Elder Wand.[83]
Winter - Bathilda Bagshot, murdered (presumably by Voldemort).
  • 1998
5 March - Dirk Cresswell and Ted Tonks, captured on the run from the ministry and killed by Death Eaters.[125]
5 March - Gornuk, killed by Death Eaters on the run from the ministry.[125]
7 March - Peter Pettigrew, strangled to death by the silver hand Voldemort had given him, after showing Harry a brief second of remorse.[126]
7 March - Gellert Grindelwald, murdered by Voldemort in his quest to locate the Elder Wand.[83]
7 March - Dobby, killed by a knife thrown by Bellatrix Lestrange.[126]
2 May - Vincent Crabbe, consumed by the fiendfyre he conjured in the Room of Requirement, while in its "hidden objects" state.[127]
2 May - Fred Weasley, killed during the battle of Hogwarts.
2 May - Remus Lupin, killed during the battle by Antonin Dolohov.[128][76]
2 May - Nymphadora Tonks, killed during the battle by Bellatrix Lestrange.[129][76]
2 May - Colin Creevey, killed during the battle, unknown cause.[76]
2 May - Severus Snape, bitten by the snake Nagini in the Shrieking Shack at the command of Voldemort, in the belief that it would transfer the power of the Elder Wand to him.[130]
2 May - Fifty unnamed dead out of those who fought at Hogwarts.
2 May - Nagini, decapitated with the sword of Godric Gryffindor, wielded by Neville Longbottom.
2 May - Bellatrix Lestrange, killed by Molly Weasley.
2 May - Lord Voldemort, killed by his own Avada Kedavra curse.[131]
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  2. ^ a b Redhen on Chronology
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  7. ^ JK Rowling Website Statement
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  41. ^ Albus Dumbledore Timeline at Harry Potter Lexicon
  42. ^ a b c d Rowling, J. K. (2005). "The Other Minister". Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. Bloomsbury. ISBN 0747581088.
  43. ^ Quidditch Through the Ages, page 36.
  44. ^ Molly Weasley at Harry Potter Lexicon
  45. ^ The Ages of Snape and the Marauders at Harry Potter Lexicon
  46. ^ a b Severus Snape at Harry Potter Lexicon
  47. ^ Quidditch Through the Ages, page 36.
  48. ^ a b James Potter at Harry Potter Lexicon
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  57. ^ Rowling, J. K. (1999). "The Dementor's Kiss". Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. Bloomsbury. ISBN 0747542155.
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  59. ^ Quidditch through the Ages, page 46.
  60. ^ Rowling, J. K. (2000). "The Quidditch World Cup". Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. Bloomsbury. ISBN 074754624X.
  61. ^ Rowling, J. K. (2000). "The Goblet of Fire". Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. Bloomsbury. ISBN 074754624X.
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  77. ^ Rowling, J. K. (2005). "Snape Victorious". Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. Bloomsbury. ISBN 0747581088.
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  81. ^ Rowling, J. K. (2007). "The Will of Albus Dumbledore". Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Bloomsbury. ISBN 1551929767.
  82. ^ a b c Rowling, J. K. (2007). "The Wedding". Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Bloomsbury. ISBN 1551929767.
  83. ^ a b c Rowling, J. K. (2007). "Magic is Might". Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Bloomsbury. ISBN 1551929767.
  84. ^ Rowling, J. K. (2007). "The Muggle-Born Registration Commission". Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Bloomsbury. ISBN 1551929767.
  85. ^ Rowling, J. K. (2007). "Godric's Hollow". Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Bloomsbury. ISBN 1551929767.
  86. ^ Rowling, J. K. (2007). "The Silver Doe". Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Bloomsbury. ISBN 1551929767.
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  90. ^ a b Scholastic Chat
  91. ^ Rubeus Hagrid at Harry Potter Lexicon
  92. ^ Rita Skeeter at Harry Potter Lexicon
  93. ^ Bertha Jorkins at Harry Potter Lexicon
  94. ^ Lily Potter at Harry Potter Lexicon
  95. ^ Remus Lupin at Harry Potter Lexicon
  96. ^ Sirius Black at Harry Potter Lexicon
  97. ^ Peter Pettigrew at Harry Potter Lexicon
  98. ^ Rowling, J. K. (2000). "Padfoot Returns". Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. Bloomsbury. ISBN 074754624X.
  99. ^ Bill Weasley at Harry Potter Lexicon
  100. ^ Charlie Weasley at Harry Potter Lexicon
  101. ^ Nymphadora Tonks at Harry Potter Lexicon
  102. ^ a b Rowling, J. K. (2005). "Hermione's Helping Hand". Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. Bloomsbury. ISBN 0747581088.
  103. ^ Percy Weasley at Harry Potter Lexicon
  104. ^ 'K' at Harry Potter Lexicon
  105. ^ Oliver Wood at Harry Potter Lexicon
  106. ^ Cedric Diggory at Harry Potter Lexicon
  107. ^ Fleur Delacour at Harry Potter Lexicon
  108. ^ a b Rowling, J. K. (2007). "The Ghoul in Pyjamas". Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Bloomsbury. ISBN 1551929767.
  109. ^ Fred and George Weasley at Harry Potter Lexicon
  110. ^ 'B' at Harry Potter Lexicon
  111. ^ Cho Chang at Harry Potter Lexicon
  112. ^ Hermione Granger at Harry Potter Lexicon
  113. ^ Ron Weasley at Harry Potter Lexicon
  114. ^ Dudley Dursley at Harry Potter Lexicon
  115. ^ Neville Longbottom at Harry Potter Lexicon
  116. ^ Harry Potter at Harry Potter Lexicon
  117. ^ a b 'C' at Harry Potter Lexicon
  118. ^ Luna Lovegood at Harry Potter Lexicon
  119. ^ Ginny Weasley at Harry Potter Lexicon
  120. ^ Rowling, J. K. (2007). "Shell Cottage". Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Bloomsbury. ISBN 1551929767.
  121. ^ Rowling, J. K. (2000). "Veritaserum". Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. Bloomsbury. ISBN 074754624X.
  122. ^ Rowling, J. K. (2003). "Beyond the Veil". Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. Bloomsbury. ISBN 0747551006.
  123. ^ Rowling, J. K. (2005). "The Phoenix Lament". Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. Bloomsbury. ISBN 0747581088.
  124. ^ Rowling, J. K. (2007). "The Dark Lord Ascending". Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Bloomsbury. ISBN 1551929767.
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  127. ^ Rowling, J. K. (2007). "The Battle of Hogwarts". Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Bloomsbury. ISBN 1551929767.
  128. ^ Transcript of live web chat from Bloomsbury
  129. ^ Transcript of live web chat from Bloomsbury
  130. ^ Rowling, J. K. (2007). "The Elder Wand". Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Bloomsbury. ISBN 1551929767.
  131. ^ Rowling, J. K. (2007). "The Flaw in the Plan". Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Bloomsbury. ISBN 1551929767.
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[[Category:Harry Potter univers]]