The Terrible World-building Of Harry Potter Maps

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  • čas přidán 31. 01. 2023
  • Watch next: "Every Significant Mongol Successor State; How The Mongols Fell in 1857"
    • Every Significant Mong... -~-
    #possiblehistory #harrypotter #maps #badmaps #danielradcliffe #jkrowling
    But PH, why did you make a Harry Potter video? I... don't know...
    J.K. Rowling wrote a neat set of books during the early 2000s, called Harry Potter. These Harry Potter books were fun as they allowed you to emerse yourself in a fantastical world.
    But unlike a series like Lord of the Rings where J.R.R. Tolkien has so meticulously planned out the entire world most of the worldbuilding didn't even make it to the books, J.K. Rowling has a more "live and let live" attitude to the Harry Potter world, making it very difficult to find consistencies between the larger worldbuilding. Sometimes the Harry Potter universe has 500 million wizards, sometimes 260 thousand, depending on when you ask.
    So apparently, according to J.K. Rowling, the entire world of Harry Potter has a total of 11 wizarding schools to fit the entire world into, and attempting to divide the world into just 11 categories is a recipe for disaster. Yet we're still going to try today, so strap in!
    If you like the content please like, comment and subscribe, it helps smaller channels like mine to get noticed!
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Komentáře • 4,5K

  • @possiblehistory
    @possiblehistory  Před rokem +2215

    Why did I make a video about Harry Potter maps on my history channel? I don't know, but I hope you all still enjoyed it anyway as a fun extra release, don't worry, the regular alternate history video will still release on Saturday.
    As always, thank you for watching, and to support the content consider leaving a like and a comment to help against the algorithm, and subscribe for weekly history content!

    • @Dhaiky
      @Dhaiky Před rokem +9

      I liked it, normally I don't enjoy these type of videos but this was good.

    • @ETB3341
      @ETB3341 Před rokem +4

      It'd be interesting to see your thoughts on star wars worldbuilding if you're going to do more of this type of content

    • @Dhaiky
      @Dhaiky Před rokem +3

      @@ETB3341 Star Wars seems rather unrelated, as it doesn't even have an earth, so bit hard to do alt history for that.

    • @firelordmarklin6166
      @firelordmarklin6166 Před rokem +1

      Hey, it's always fun to explore fictional settings. History is "The story of us" after all, so a historian exploring such a fictional setting seems like a logical extension

    • @klevi.73
      @klevi.73 Před rokem +1

      I enjoyed the video, and might subscribe after wathcing a few of your other videos, because i just found you channel.
      But i found a (maybe) mistake, which is that equatorial guinea speaks spanish, and it could go to the spanish school.
      Other than that i really liked this video

  • @Marshmellow3971
    @Marshmellow3971 Před 8 měsíci +11147

    She honestly could have said most countries have their own school, named like 5 and left the rest up to the audience’s imagination and most people would have been cool with it.

    • @abiean222
      @abiean222 Před 8 měsíci +1313

      or even just said that these few schools are the elite schools that only the best of the best get into. hell, she could even say that england has other schools for students who aren't as good at magic and it would sense.

    • @liam6nugget
      @liam6nugget Před 8 měsíci +509

      Yeah, I always found the idea of trans-national, government-controlled schools weird

    • @auliamate
      @auliamate Před 8 měsíci +481

      Literally. Could have said “most nations have their own, some are just Hogwarts and Ilvermorny in the US. Kthxbye”
      Like the fanfic opportunities we could have had (not like I actually care much for Harry Potter’s universe) but JK ruined everything

    • @bluegold1026
      @bluegold1026 Před 8 měsíci +198

      My thoughts exactly. There have to be WAY more than 11 wizarding schools worldwide.

    • @ZiotGaming
      @ZiotGaming Před 8 měsíci +64

      @@abiean222 she did. it's canon that the vast majority of wizards are homeschooled.

  • @Frenchaboo
    @Frenchaboo Před 8 měsíci +5782

    I live in Eastern Europe and I was already questioning Rowling when I was maybe 12, feeling gaslit by the fact she kept describing BULGARIA as a cold decrepit country where people need to wear fur coats and hats, and for some damn reason the school has a super Germanic name. Bulgaria is literally the golden coast of Eastern Europe, peak summer destination for good weather and beach parties lmfao.

    • @l.n.3372
      @l.n.3372 Před 8 měsíci +770

      I never want to defend JKR cuz she sucks. But Krum wasn't calling Bulgaria cold and dismal. He was calling Durmstrang cold and dismal, saying he vastly prefers Hogwarts.
      Of course, that's just JKR being her typical Anglosphere bias above all else.

    • @apoorvam5385
      @apoorvam5385 Před 8 měsíci +445

      When I first read the books I always assumed that Durmstrang was never meant to be in Bulgaria. It’s described as being in the north so I always thought it was in Scandinavia instead

    • @l.n.3372
      @l.n.3372 Před 8 měsíci +160

      @@apoorvam5385
      I don't give much credit to interviews because I prefer to only view what's in the books as canon alone. But I'm fairly certain JKR once said that Durmstrang is in Scandinavia, which confused many fans who believed Durmstrang was in Germany.

    • @localabsurdist6661
      @localabsurdist6661 Před 8 měsíci +117

      @@apoorvam5385I thought it was supposed to be in Russia but the German sounding name didn’t make any sense

    • @Feuerhamster
      @Feuerhamster Před 8 měsíci +347

      All slavic countries have perpetual winter and gray color filter over them, obviously.
      Can confirm, am slavic.

  • @SickegalAlien
    @SickegalAlien Před 8 měsíci +1588

    What's most amazing to me, is that Rowling absolutely didn't have to do it.
    She looked at it, thought for a while, and specifically decided "yeah, I'm going to step on the rake."

    • @AedanTheGrey
      @AedanTheGrey Před 8 měsíci +124

      Seems to be a recurring habit of hers. Especially lately.

    • @christophercaldwell192
      @christophercaldwell192 Před 7 měsíci +64

      If I was in her position I would love to flesh out the wider wizarding world, but she takes the laziest approach to it instead of using it as an opportunity to be creative and think about how different cultures would relate to magic

    • @ellenkarlsson9490
      @ellenkarlsson9490 Před 5 měsíci +1

      She just hates leaving things up to imagination, doesn't she?

    • @jaymevosburgh3660
      @jaymevosburgh3660 Před 5 měsíci

      This is hilarious 😂

    • @jeanv8249
      @jeanv8249 Před 3 měsíci

      Even an average geography nerd would come up with better map and possibly names too than she initially did

  • @tuliofaustino783
    @tuliofaustino783 Před 8 měsíci +1246

    just to leave a note that in the portuguese sense, the translation "castelobruxo" means that the castle is the wizard

    • @BahamutEx
      @BahamutEx Před 7 měsíci +169

      wizard transformer

    • @repenexus518
      @repenexus518 Před 7 měsíci +151

      wizard turned themself into a castle

    • @MikaelaKMajorHistory
      @MikaelaKMajorHistory Před 7 měsíci +94

      The wizard’s face is probably plastered somewhere on the castle. Imagine Mother Willow from the Disney Pocahontas but it’s a giant old man on the side of a building.

    • @lucjanl1262
      @lucjanl1262 Před 7 měsíci +50

      ​@@repenexus518funniest crap i ever seen

    • @pardonmyreach
      @pardonmyreach Před 7 měsíci +17

      Probobly would have some sick legends to explain the the name lmao

  • @iansahleen1173
    @iansahleen1173 Před rokem +4269

    Imagine giving Indian and Chinese kids magical powers, making them go to the same school and not expecting nothing to go horrificly wrong

    • @baph0met
      @baph0met Před rokem +662

      Imagine the Tibetan kid

    • @nickyliu8762
      @nickyliu8762 Před rokem +288

      Put some Jews in there and this would be the most academically successful school on the planet, if it wasn't already

    • @danielsurvivor1372
      @danielsurvivor1372 Před rokem +73

      Kid Named Indian/Chinese: 😈

    • @PhoenixT70
      @PhoenixT70 Před rokem +492

      Imagine the absolute mess that the Middle Eastern school would be. Israeli Jews, both major sects of Islam, and the odd Christian for flavor, no way that isn’t a powder keg. There could even be a lore tie-in to real life that something to do with the school was what started the Six Day War or something.

    • @nickyliu8762
      @nickyliu8762 Před rokem

      @@PhoenixT70 all three religions denounce magic, especially Islam and Christendom strongly condemns witchcraft as Ifrit/Satan's work. So anyone who enrolls in those schools cannot be very strong believers anyway. This is why they hide from society in the first place.
      So, if there were any bad blood (whatever the term for that in the lore), it wouldn't be from religion, or at least our religions.

  • @hicetnunc1129
    @hicetnunc1129 Před rokem +3695

    There's a lot of sketchy worldbuilding going on in Rowling's work, but the "1 in 10 is a wizard" number has got to be the most ridiculous, if that's really from her. There's just no way the wizards would have to keep their world secret if every 10th person going around had magic powers.

    • @jaydenc367
      @jaydenc367 Před 9 měsíci +12

      nah 1 in 10 is pretty low tbh

    • @user-yw1nl6sk7y
      @user-yw1nl6sk7y Před 9 měsíci +734

      ​@@jaydenc367that means that 800.000.000 people have magical abilities and that is ignoring things like squib population. It's WAY too big to make it hidden.

    • @jaydenc367
      @jaydenc367 Před 9 měsíci +6

      @@user-yw1nl6sk7y Not really, it still can be hidden.

    • @user-yw1nl6sk7y
      @user-yw1nl6sk7y Před 9 měsíci

      @@jaydenc367 It CAN be hidden but they shouldn't, they are literally 1/10th of the population, moreover it isn't like we are in the dark ages .

    • @icantthinkofaname8139
      @icantthinkofaname8139 Před 9 měsíci +529

      @@jaydenc367how is 1 in 10 small by any stretch of the imagination!? Walking down the city street and you pass ten people, one of those is a wizard!

  • @baguettegott3409
    @baguettegott3409 Před 7 měsíci +749

    Rowlings Worldbuilding is so funny. It's so incredibly successful at creating a mood and an atmosphere (for some time there just about every human I knew felt at home in hogwarts), and so unfathomably horrible at LITERALLY everything else. Nothing makes sense, nothing is consistent, and most of the time it falls immediately apart when you try to extend it past the walls of Hogwarts (let alone the borders of the UK).

    • @_Just_Another_Guy
      @_Just_Another_Guy Před 7 měsíci +103

      Even within the borders of the UK, her fictional lore building falls apart terribly:
      1. If the Minister of Magic had contacts with UK's actual Prime Minister's office, where was the secret department of the British government that specialized in working with the Ministry of Magic? The PM can't handle all the required diplomatic notetaking and meetings by himself/herself
      2. You would think that the Royal Family of Britain would be quite involved since they will become one of the prime Muggle targets for wizard terrorists and must be protected (by wizard bodyguards) at all cost lest the magical world be exposed if the rest of the UK finds out their Queen (or King nowadays) was murdered by an evil wizard
      3. The annual thousands of groups of students all arriving at the real King's Cross station each year carrying large owl cages and long robes would've aroused suspicion a long time ago; not to mention King's Cross has since been renovated and remodelled so what happened to the magical wall there?

    • @PineappleLiar
      @PineappleLiar Před 6 měsíci +6

      It’s like a Potemkin Village of worldbuilding.

    • @panda4247
      @panda4247 Před 6 měsíci +12

      While I agree that JKR's consistency is questionable at best, The real question is, why does it matter?
      It's a fairt tale for children.
      You know the Red Riding Hood's grandma was eaten by the wolf, and then they cut his gut open and rescued her... why does nobody complain, that the wold must have chewed her to pieces, not swallow her in one piece... it does not make sense...
      It's better when people point out flaws in HP than if somebody actually started the conspiracy theory, that the schools are actually real

    • @PineappleLiar
      @PineappleLiar Před 6 měsíci +44

      @@panda4247 I suppose that goes into the question of how suspension of disbelief is a fundamental part of stories in general. Media criticism always stands the risk of falling to a hyper-critical cinema sins style analysis, where the audience is primed to nitpick literally everything that happens and refuse to engage with the story beyond that.
      In turn you have to ask the very subjective question of how critically should a given piece of media be analyzed? In my own opinion the answer is less about the given audience, and more about where the author fills in the details. Some stories refuse to elaborate on points other stories would commit time to, like a David Lynch movie or, like you said, children’s stories. The point gets glossed over because that’s not the important part of whatever the story wants to tell. You can dig into it, but odds are what you find will be nonsensical.
      On the other end you have narratives that love planting details to be paid off later on down the line, and encourage readers to speculate on the elements they are given. These are your murder mysteries, or dense fantasy stories with rich histories and interconnected lore.
      I think what bugs some people about Harry Potter is that its trying to be both vague and detailed at once. It will answer a question about history or the mechanics of magic, but usually the answer isn’t enough to be satisfying. My personal grievance is usually how the first Wizarding War was handled, where Rowling just copied and pasted the broadest strokes of WW2 directly on top of actual WW2, with zero consideration for the implications of that (tldr she had her Nazi parallels accidentally be the only ones who actually fought the Nazis, whoops!).
      So, in short, Harry Potter couldn’t pick a lane between hard worldbuilding and soft worldbuilding, and so achieved neither.

    • @panda4247
      @panda4247 Před 6 měsíci +18

      @@PineappleLiar Thanks for the answer. It makes sense... you're right that JKR tries to give details to fans without considering their broader implications...
      (have you read Harry Potter and Method of Rationality? Without going into details about the plot, one of my favourite things that they pointed out was, that with the weird exchange rate between the galleons and sickles (and them being solid gold and silver) a person with access to both the wizarding world and muggle world could make infinite money (or make one of the markets collapse))
      Anyway, aside from trying to be both/neither of the two two world-building alternatives that you described, there is one more thing I'd consider:
      Especially with the fantasy genre, suspension of disbelief often works such that we can accept a completely strange thing (something that is completely out of this world), but we can't excuse a minor detail that is similar to our world, but a bit off.
      Like... we have no problem accepting a magic castle, but what the hell is the muggles' house on a small rock in the middle of they sea, and even if it existed, how did uncle Vernon get access to it (what are the chances he knew somebody who owned that?)

  • @michaelramon2411
    @michaelramon2411 Před 8 měsíci +363

    As a minor note, it is entirely possible that Hogwarts in Harry's day is somewhat underpopulated compared to historical trends. Harry was born at the end of several years of significant violence that shook the entire British magical community. It's not unreasonable to think that between people being killed by Death Eaters, fleeing the country or just otherwise putting off having children, the British wizard birthrate might have plunged for a few years, which would result in Harry's class being smaller than normal. So British wizarding populations extrapolated from his class size might be misleadingly small.

    • @jamesdinius7769
      @jamesdinius7769 Před 7 měsíci +84

      That's a good point. Great Britian's magical population is probably unusually small at this point. It would also explain why Hogwarts seems to have a lot of unused classrooms. I imagine there was a point where each major subjects (Poitions, Transfiguration, DoDA, etc.) had multiple professors, not just one. Yes, the Great Hall always seems at capacity in the films, but having it half empty would've been less cinematic so...

    • @godoflightning5030
      @godoflightning5030 Před 7 měsíci +9

      @@jamesdinius7769I think in the books they talk about that a bit but I don’t see peoples problems with the schools. You have to think of wizarding culture which they are forgetting. Over 10 percent of the magical population is pureblood according to Rowling and to keep that status they have to marry other pure-bloods. This makes it so marriages between different wizarding cultures and religions will happen so they won’t have the hate their countries have for each other. These schools have to be made by a group of magicals and they have to find a way to fund them as well as find the magical students which would be very hard to do so. Finding other magical was easy for the countries she pointed out for the schools because of their longer history as a civilization. Uncivilized people would not have a common language and were usually at war for resources or any other reason. This makes it so they have to have a long history or be in the civilizations starting point like the US. Africa would not have many because of how hard it would be to build them or combine cultures like he said. Any modern or already built country would have trouble starting one up with technology and more curious people. China and India as well as japan have faced countless wars through its time and schools would probably be destroyed in wars limiting the amount of schools and with how few wizards there are in the world a large enough school could fit the ones that are magical in that population. Because of the fact that purebloods are ten percent of the population even with families dying out and so this leads to the belief that purebloods are a lot more likely to give birth to magical children. If it was the same for the muggle borns there would be a lot more wizards and less percentage of purebloods. And with these familes ruling there magical side of their country the bigger colonial powers are more likely to have schools but Spain most likely would not because it was usually on good relation with either France or britian so I imagine it always had a choice between the two schools and in its infancy had to fight Muslims invading. France and britian need their own because they are rivals and very unlikely to have their children go to the same schools while they fight eachother. Scandinavia would be raiding britian and France and so on so would know about the schools from their magical sin the raids probably and would build their own school. The US had time after its independence where it was not being paid attention to to build its own school and with people from France and britian as well as Scandinavia joining the colonies. Brazil probably got one from Portugal because most of its population was in Brazil and would not want their children going to the same school as the Spanish so built their own. There is no actual reason for other countries to build their own when the children are 12 and can learn a new language at the school or if they are pureblood families would learn it growing up or a simple spell can take care of that.

    • @AlexisFloofer
      @AlexisFloofer Před 6 měsíci +26

      Saying Hogwarts has 1000 students is already massively inflated from what we see in the books. Harry's year has something like 40 students, Even if we assume his class is an aberration and is half the size of the other 6 year groups you still only get 40 + (80 * 6) = 40 + 480 = 520 students, even tripling his classes' size for the other 6 years still only gets you to 760 students.
      There needs to be ~142 students per year and 250 per house for Hogwarts to have 1000 students. That's 36 per house per year, which the common rooms we see really aren't capable of accommodating.
      It's honestly hard to make the numbers even get to 400 students at Hogwarts during the books.

    • @thelittleredhairedgirlfrom6527
      @thelittleredhairedgirlfrom6527 Před 6 měsíci +5

      @@AlexisFlooferJK only came up with 40 names but there could very well be more students

    • @stormpetrel5645
      @stormpetrel5645 Před 6 měsíci +10

      Not to mention the fact that a lot of witches and wizard are homeschooled - something which is easily forgotten due to the fact that the story revolves around Hogwarts

  • @lnt305
    @lnt305 Před rokem +6412

    Putting China, Korea and Japan into one school for historical reasons is absolute madness to me

    • @AnnaEReady
      @AnnaEReady Před rokem +698

      Ikr? These countries do not get along /because/ of their history it makes no sense

    • @cunxu2697
      @cunxu2697 Před rokem +59

      Ever heard of the sinosphere?

    • @shreyvaghela3963
      @shreyvaghela3963 Před rokem

      Sinosphere is not real. it only tells about cultural influence. japan and korea are american allies

    • @Phantom-bh5ru
      @Phantom-bh5ru Před rokem +713

      @@AnnaEReady mostly it would be every Asian country hating Japan and a bit of each other as well. Basically if you are Japanese in that school, good luck

    • @vikkran401
      @vikkran401 Před rokem +587

      And I thought putting Irish students in the same school as English and Scots was ridicules enough considering their cultural differences. Imagine entire East Asia in one school or having Isreali, Arab and Persians attending the same school. I'm surprised Rowling even passed first grade considering her knowledge

  • @biropgrules
    @biropgrules Před rokem +5849

    Frankly, the way the actual books implied every nation just had their own schools(With the three we knew by name being specifically referred to as the greatest in europe) made perfect sense.

    • @Kromiball
      @Kromiball Před rokem +450

      Every nation having their own schools would cause problems because some of them are way too small to keep a secret, can't build a secret wizarding school in say... Monaco or Liechtenstein. I also reckon that any countries that are (relatively) flat like Hungary or Poland wouldn't be able to make a wizarding school either.
      Added in after 11 Feb 2023:
      I wanna clarify that these 11 schools are not all of them, they are the oldest and most prestigious schools to go to. There are small schools but they're often short-lived. A change I would make is that most countries could probably have their own schools, let's say Spain; but richer wizards would look down upon it as a cheap wizarding school and would prefer to send their kids to one of the Prestigious 11.
      I also wanna say that just building a school and then using an invisibility spell is a Deus Ex Machina, that's not fun. If magic were real I'd imagine you'd need a lot of energy to maintain that invisibility spell but apparently the Magic System in Harry Potter can just do anything. So yes, you can just cast an invisibility spell; it's just lazy and not fun compared to selecting a good hidden place. I'd give underground schools a pass tho, sounds cool.

    • @MrDalek2150
      @MrDalek2150 Před rokem +771

      @@Kromiball I'd assume the smaller nations like Liechtenstein, Monaco, San Marino, and Luxembourg would be grouped into their neighbors (Liechtenstein probably being split between Austria and Switzerland magical side).

    • @poutsovgalthsxarilaos5663
      @poutsovgalthsxarilaos5663 Před rokem +20

      @@Kromiball austria and hungary could and in fact should have a joint school just for old times sake

    • @user-zz3sn8ky7z
      @user-zz3sn8ky7z Před rokem +338

      @@Kromiball I mean, they have literal magic so while i agree that places like Luxembourg shouldn't really have their own school it's not impossible. We already saw it on a small scale with 9 3/4

    • @kamo808
      @kamo808 Před rokem +101

      I think it would be grouped up by languages. Besides sub-saharan Africa as they would probably use some kind of tribal magic.

  • @Immortal-Daiki
    @Immortal-Daiki Před 8 měsíci +882

    As a Japanese, lemme just say. If JK Rowling knew some Japanese, she would've known that Mahoutokoro should've been pronounced as Mahōsho (魔法所), using the onyomi reading of 所 (dokoro). Alternatively, she could've named the Japanese school something like Mahō Gakuen (魔法学園), which translates to Magic Academy. The latter sounds much better in my opinion

    • @mirceazaharia2094
      @mirceazaharia2094 Před 8 měsíci +59

      The anime Mashle is a better Harry Potter story than the one JK Rowling wrote, anyway.

    • @shio_juniper
      @shio_juniper Před 8 měsíci +44

      I like your version!
      It seems that Rowling knows only English language AND English culture both. Well, I know that she knows French pretty well, but no one who read HP can say that. For example, Beauxbatons, which means "pretty wands". Ugh. Kinda stereotypical, I would say. As if she knows just a few French words.

    • @erizamisorafujoshi7002
      @erizamisorafujoshi7002 Před 8 měsíci +10

      Mahõ Gakuen sounds actually pretty cool

    • @ChibiRagdoll.
      @ChibiRagdoll. Před 8 měsíci +27

      Came immediately into the comments just for the Japanese school, as a casual student of the language, because just calling it "magic place" seemed insultingly uncreative. I didn't realize there was kanji for it, and she couldn't even be arsed to find the right way to say it 🙄 Even just Mahou Gakuen would still be pretty terrible, though, because "magic school" is still not a proper name like Hogwarts.

    • @nikki607
      @nikki607 Před 8 měsíci +14

      Lol, aren’t there multiple pieces of media made by Japanese people where the magic school is called “[something something] mahō gakuen”?

  • @audreyglass3125
    @audreyglass3125 Před 8 měsíci +415

    I never knew Rowling said there were only 11 schools. I just always assumed every country had their own wizarding school. I even thought large countries might have more than one. That would make the most sense to me.

    • @jamaluddinkhalifa8371
      @jamaluddinkhalifa8371 Před 8 měsíci +32

      she didn't say that there were only 11 schools, she said that there were 11 especially prestigious schools registered with an international wizarding organisation, many much smaller schools existed and most wizards were homeschooled

    • @audreyglass3125
      @audreyglass3125 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@jamaluddinkhalifa8371 oh ok cool. Thanks. 🙂

    • @danielcaputo90
      @danielcaputo90 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@jamaluddinkhalifa8371I might be wrong, but are you sure most wizards or witches are homeschooled? I remember when it is mentioned that only some (not most) wizards are homeschooled. If so, it is also a big problem in the worldbuilding, because appart from the Gaunts, if I remember well, all characters in the books went to a school. Where are the most wizards that were homeschooled?

    • @jamaluddinkhalifa8371
      @jamaluddinkhalifa8371 Před 7 měsíci +15

      @@danielcaputo90 Outside Britain. Britain is a small place and all the British wizards are packed into that small place. So even with just the one magic school in Britain, formal magic education is in the reach of all young British wizards. The case may be similar with Japan and other densely populated medium-sized islands and archepelagos. But with mainland Europe being way bigger than Britain, and Asia and Africa and the Americas being way bigger than Europe, and with wizards being scattered over these huge geographical areas, there will be very few areas where building a big magic school will be worth it as in most places there just won't be enough wizards living within the school's radius to warrant it's construction.

    • @kingofdemons948
      @kingofdemons948 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@jamaluddinkhalifa8371yeah this guy clearly didn’t read up on his wizarding world lore this is basic knowledge

  • @leaderunith4l324
    @leaderunith4l324 Před rokem +3002

    I’ve seen someone online argue just how much of a missed opportunity this was for worldbuilding. It seems to be a universal thing in the HP universe that wizard schools lag severely behind the muggle world. Imagine a school in Austria that only enrols wizards living in the 1541 borders of the HRE; or imagine wizarding schools acting as refuge for otherwise extinct peoples, a school in Greece that openly worships the Olympians, or one in Egypt that still venerates Amun-Ra.
    Instead of just 11 around the world, there could’ve been hundreds in just Europe or Africa alone, each of them a microcosm of millennia old traditions in their area. You could even have schools in places like Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley that are so old that no one really knows _when_ they were formed.

    • @comradewindowsill4253
      @comradewindowsill4253 Před rokem +479

      imagine the purebloods of the middle east being zoroastrian, sumerian, ancient egyptian etc. and then imagine how much they must dislike the local muggleborns...

    • @miracledev2656
      @miracledev2656 Před rokem +282

      Someone needs to try and do this because Joanne is clearly not capable of writing something this interesting

    • @graynight3478
      @graynight3478 Před rokem +6

      Agree!

    • @adenkhan5071
      @adenkhan5071 Před rokem +249

      In addition to European-style schools like Hogwarts, Durmstang and such, there NEEDS to be a number of shamanism schools that have been hiding from both Muggles and Order of Merlin Wizards. They probably wouldn't be tied to a building, but would try to preserve their ancient and unique magic styles.
      In the USA there should be at least one of Native American Shamans and one of Voodoo Witchdoctors.
      There should also be two in Europe representing ancient Germanic and Celtic cultures respectively.

    • @baph0met
      @baph0met Před rokem +150

      This is why I hate the Harry Potter, look at Middle Earth, look at Star Wars, phenomenal world building with 1000s of years of history. Harry Potter is just such a waste. Sad.

  • @yrooxrksvi7142
    @yrooxrksvi7142 Před 9 měsíci +3572

    As a semi-retired Potterhead, I think Rowling should have taken a cue from Lucas and let other authors expand on her worldbuilding outside of Hogwarts instead of placing it all on herself.

    • @priya8855
      @priya8855 Před 8 měsíci +250

      At least she's destroying her own world building unlike Lucas' whose entire Star Wars universe is in shambles after the disastrous sequels

    • @yrooxrksvi7142
      @yrooxrksvi7142 Před 8 měsíci +30

      @@priya8855 Sad, but true.

    • @74810Eric
      @74810Eric Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@priya8855 Now that you mention it ...

    • @Gnome-kc7pr
      @Gnome-kc7pr Před 8 měsíci +39

      @@priya8855okay yeah but the prequels were almost the end too, lucas was drunk on money and added fuckin jar jar into the movie

    • @ramadansteve1715
      @ramadansteve1715 Před 8 měsíci +39

      Nah, opening up your universe to tons of authors is just asking for a laughable amount of inconsistencies. The star wars EU for example, has some gems but is overall a jumbled mess

  • @Missingno_Miner
    @Missingno_Miner Před 7 měsíci +597

    I mean, I'm not sure what anyone expected from the lady who gave us token characters with names like Cho Chang, but it's so incredibly baffling to me that Rowling unironically thought "yeah, eleven schools worldwide, and Europe gets three of them." was a good idea. It would have been so easy to just say that most countries have at least one major school and usually a few smaller ones, provide a few examples, and move on, but no, she went out of her way to set up a big ol' rake and then deliberately step on it.

    • @mechadeka
      @mechadeka Před 7 měsíci +8

      Cho Chang is a valid name that a significant number of actual, living people have.

    • @Missingno_Miner
      @Missingno_Miner Před 7 měsíci +87

      @@mechadeka Perhaps. You'll find people with unusual or just flat out weird names in every culture. Doesn't change the fact that it's a highly implausible name, and a terrible one for a white author to use for an already stereotypical token diversity character.
      And it's a recurring thing that happens with the majority of non-English or non-white character. Seamus Finnigan(naturally, an Irish character who blows sh*t up, a trait deliberately emphasized in the movies), Anthony Goldstein(because, you know, the goblins weren't enough of a red flag), Kingsley Shacklebolt(particularly concerning with the weird pro-slavery messaging surrounding the house elves), etc.
      Of course, names are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the ways Rowling's deeply problematic beliefs leak into her writing.

    • @CallMeAuranna
      @CallMeAuranna Před 6 měsíci +31

      And the European schools are all set up to be shared between countries that just DON’T GET ALONG AT ALL and have been in centuries long conflicts like- I’m sorry but why oh why would a 19th century spaniard want to share school with french ppl? And why would a 16th century french want to share school with a spaniard? Or why would a 17th century catholic austrian want to share school with someone from the Germanic protestant territory? Or how would have any of these two schools worked during the 30 Year War? Bcs I’m more than sure that the climate wasn’t pretty AT ALL.

    • @Missingno_Miner
      @Missingno_Miner Před 6 měsíci +28

      @@CallMeAuranna Ilvermorny is similarly weird. Supposedly founded in the early 1600s, but, even checking the wiki page for it, no mention of tension between people living in different parts of North America, even during the US War for independence. More concerningly, there's no mention of conflict between Indigenous wizards and those of European descent. Despite, you know, the whole attempted genocide thing with residential schools.
      Also, I really can't see there not being a separate French Canadian school given how Quebec tends to be very protective about their language, and would probably be deeply distrustful of the doubtlessly Anglophone-dominated Ilvermorny, while also not being entirely comfortable with sending their kids overseas to Beauxbatons. I get the feeling this sort of issue would be pretty widespread in the wizarding world, but, being a bilingual Canadian, Quebec is the most obvious example to me.
      Really, most of the schools are horrendous and there is absolutely no way in heck they wouldn't have splintered off into many smaller schools over the years even if they were once the only option. Most encompass speakers of several languages, countries that have been in historical conflict and/or actively oppressed one another, or simply make no sense to have only one major school covering such a wide region or such a heavily populated region.

    • @harryfeng4199
      @harryfeng4199 Před 6 měsíci +33

      @@mechadeka”Cho” is literally not a Chinese spelling (I’m Chinese). By that I mean it doesnt exist. No word in the Chinese language sounds like “Cho” and the spelling simply doesn’t make sense. The closest would be “Chou” or “Chao”

  • @JaylukKhan
    @JaylukKhan Před 8 měsíci +194

    She could have easily avoided this by just saying every country had their own wizard school.

    • @anvos658
      @anvos658 Před 7 měsíci +4

      That would be equally bad in the opposite way where you'd have way to many schools that don't have enough students.

    • @JaylukKhan
      @JaylukKhan Před 7 měsíci +2

      @anvos658 why???

    • @anvos658
      @anvos658 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@JaylukKhan Its rather self explanatory when way too many would be the equivalent to a 1 Room School House, at that size your less a school and more a group apprentice program. Then add in the big one that past around 1400-1500 your muggle nation only means something to the small portion of the wizarding community that tries to integrate with muggles in daily life.

    • @napoleonbuonaparte8975
      @napoleonbuonaparte8975 Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@anvos658She could've said there were tens of schools or at least there were schools in the most populated countries of their regions. Limiting the number to 11 is just not knowing how big the world is.

    • @commas1
      @commas1 Před 6 měsíci +3

      I think there are a lot of countries she doesn’t think are worthy lol

  • @jorikrouwenhorst7220
    @jorikrouwenhorst7220 Před rokem +6616

    Honestly seeing both maps makes me think most wizards and witches are probably home schooled.(seriously putting Dutch students going to the French one is just insulting)

    • @fusssel7178
      @fusssel7178 Před rokem +484

      considering the history of (for example) germany and italy, I don't thinkt either country would have its own school, maybe multiple smaller ones. There is also japan, while they were fighting during the sengoku jidai, they were still considered one country. That is different from italy and germany, they became one country each in the 1800s.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před rokem +237

      @@fusssel7178 And those are also countries where homeschooling isn't a thing. So unless wizards get a special exception, their children would have to go to a licensed/registered school like anybody else. Just that it is a wizard school.

    • @benismann
      @benismann Před rokem +190

      albanians, hungarians, swedes, poles, serbs and romanians are in one school

    • @fusssel7178
      @fusssel7178 Před rokem +76

      @@HappyBeezerStudios well, that only was a thing later, about the 1700s or so I think. So either the wizzard communities kept their children secret and out of muggle schools or sent them to the muggel schools while also teaching them magic at home after school.

    • @dblum
      @dblum Před rokem +121

      Imagine having to to your Fr*nce to go to school

  • @frankenstein6677
    @frankenstein6677 Před rokem +5710

    Rowling's attempts to expand Harry Potter to a worldwide scenario make me really question her geographic and cultural knowledge outside of Britain.

    • @cienkitv2854
      @cienkitv2854 Před rokem +469

      Don't look up what she called a Polish character in one of her books.

    • @ottovonbismarck7578
      @ottovonbismarck7578 Před rokem +142

      ​@@cienkitv2854 worst mistake of of my life

    • @charcoaleater343
      @charcoaleater343 Před rokem +73

      ​​@@cienkitv2854what did she call them? I don't really know what should i google specifically

    • @charcoaleater343
      @charcoaleater343 Před rokem +37

      ​@@cienkitv2854 nevermind 💀

    • @gambigambigambi
      @gambigambigambi Před rokem +98

      ​@@cienkitv2854 .....Pieroginski?

  • @m0thlegs938
    @m0thlegs938 Před 8 měsíci +221

    Idk if anyone’s said this yet, or if it’s an actual thing, but honestly, it would’ve been way better if she had like made it a fun challenge for the worldwide fans to make their own versions of their magical schools for their diff countries and cultures. Then, not only would it be a cool way to bring the global community together and for fans to contribute to the fiction they love in a creative way, but it would also be more culturally accurate and rich for the world building, since it’s coming directly from the people who live there. I’m not too familiar with the HP fandom but I feel like it could be a cool idea rather than just have every single witch or wizard crammed into 11 schools worldwide lol

    • @zoebrugg7594
      @zoebrugg7594 Před 8 měsíci +2

      That’s what I was thinking.

    • @kylenetherwood8734
      @kylenetherwood8734 Před 7 měsíci +9

      Haha I can just imagine the trolls now. Give Iceland 10 schools and everyone else goes to Hogwarts. I really hope she does this now.

  • @seprithlicastia463
    @seprithlicastia463 Před 7 měsíci +117

    I am pretty sure Rowling confirmed most wizards/witches just never attend school. The Weasley twins also confirm there a lot of demand for grown adults to have some way to use what are considered basic spells -- one of their biggest sellers during the war, they claim, was a hat that automatically cast the Shield Charm.
    The idea of formalized and mass mandatory education systems is a relatively modern one. It makes sense that a society, largely cut off from the modern culture since the late 1600s, would not have adopted it.

    • @wjzav1971
      @wjzav1971 Před 6 měsíci

      Sometimes I thought about that.
      Voldemort installed an openly bigotted racist puppet government after Scrimgor's death with relative ease and little resistance. Nobody put up any real resisntance on why Muggle Borns are suddenly persecuted and muggles are villified.
      The Persecution happens due to some report from the Mystery Department which nobody can check or falsify because it is stated in-universe that nobody really knows what the Mystery Department does or how they do it. So there is a government department that has no oversight and does not answer to any checks or balances, meaning when they claim shit, everybody has no choice but to believe it.
      Sirius Black was sent to Azkaban for life without a proper trial because Barty Crouch had the political weight to do that.
      Rubeus Hagrid was sent to Azkaban also without proper trial because the Ministry thought he MIGHT be behind the Chamber of Secrets Attacks without any proof whatsover.
      Azkaban, a prison that constantly mind-tortures its inmates, exists as a government sanctioned facilty.
      No mention of parties or voting whenever a new Minister of Magic steps up. They just do.
      Sending Eleven Year olds into a forest full of monsters to find a creature vile enough to kill unicorns while accompanied by a guy who cannot do magic is considered proper punishment for being out late at night.
      An official in the American Wirzarding Government can sentence two people (one of them being a government agent and one of them a foreigner) to death just like that. Again, without trail or without even needing to clear that with the Government Head. Execution carried out immediately after sentencing.
      It kind a seems as if the wizarding world is stuck in 1600s politics as well....

    • @simcoe4045
      @simcoe4045 Před 6 měsíci +10

      The problem with Rowling saying that, as with much that she’s just saying after the fact, is that there is no evidence for this in the books. Every character we meet has attended one of the magic schools.

    • @seprithlicastia463
      @seprithlicastia463 Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@simcoe4045 The writing is all very much post-facto world building; Rowling wrote a children's series, and when those children grew up they started asking questions. That said, I think this post-writing justification holds up. We know of very few characters' education background, and those we do are wealthier and/or influential people and families who could have certainly afforded to pay and send their kids to year-long boarding school. The Malfoys and Blacks, for example. Even the Wealeys, a canonically poor family, still have a middle-management government official for a patriarch -- they are only considered poor because of how many kids they have.

    • @kingofdemons948
      @kingofdemons948 Před 6 měsíci

      @@simcoe4045Harry Potter lore exists in other places. Rowling posted some world building on the wizarding world website

    • @alephnulI
      @alephnulI Před 6 měsíci +5

      I didn't really follow what Rowling would say out of the books, specially after she said wizards would just shit themselves then cast a cleaning spell, but the "Most wizards are homeschooled" doesn't make sense with the books.
      Children are forbidden casting spells out of Hogwarts, the way Neville makes it seem is that not being accepted into Hogwarts would be terrible for him, and people who are expelled from Hogwarts get their wands broken, with Newt being and exception and Hagrid being sneaky.
      So, how would they be homeschooled? And if they could be, why would Dumbledore Ever have taken Lupin in before the Wolfsbane Potion ensured he wouldn't bite other students, like he almost did with Snape. He could've been homeschooled all along...

  • @nikoliniminizoaki2542
    @nikoliniminizoaki2542 Před 8 měsíci +1627

    Personally the way I understand the whole "11 schools" is "the 11 schools the anglo-centric magical government recognises", because it feels really stupid that countries with different religion, language and traditions would hold the exact same magical standards as Hogwarts does, to me it makes more sense of the other 10 schools to be sister schools of sorts. There's many more schools, many are homeschooled, they just don't recognise the rest as of any significance.

    • @kaylaHat
      @kaylaHat Před 8 měsíci +279

      I think you put waaay more thoughts into this than JK ever did

    • @Nehu_22
      @Nehu_22 Před 8 měsíci +86

      I think I might have heard that those were the 11 most "important" ones.
      But I wouldn't put it past Joanne to not really think that in depth, with spells like "Petrificus Totalus" 😂

    • @ernie39
      @ernie39 Před 8 měsíci +35

      I like that interpretation! (and also kind of equate Rowling's own opinion/world-building with the recognition of the anglo-centric magic govt)

    • @minim-ms
      @minim-ms Před 8 měsíci +35

      Definitely agree, it really fits in with anglo-centric ideas that Rowling continues to espouse.

    • @jasperlawrenson
      @jasperlawrenson Před 8 měsíci +32

      right, kind of like ivy league schools - theres heaps of others but these are the most prestigious

  • @Xiuhtec
    @Xiuhtec Před rokem +919

    "I'd like to avoid cultural and language issues as much as possible." >shoves Japan and China in the same school< I laughed so hard at this part.

    • @cunxu2697
      @cunxu2697 Před rokem +118

      he just grouped the sinosphere together which isn't the craziest thing,
      all those countries at some point in their history used Chinese characters
      And if we consider that the school would probably be a few thousand years old then indeed it makes sense that China would house it for the rest of east Asia because of all the influence China had on east Asia

    • @Sockiblorp
      @Sockiblorp Před rokem +53

      @@cunxu2697 on top of this, if we use that same amount of "specificity" of languages that did form separately, that would mean that India would have 2 separate schools to account for the Dravidian/Sanskrit divide, meaning that JUST Sri Lanka and HALF of India would have their own school, despite Tamil being influenced by sanskrit words, and many Tamil speakers knowing hindi.
      And that's still better than grouping Urdu with its Arabic script, Hindi with a devenagari script, Bengali with its own(admittedly similar) script, burmese, AND chinese have just ONE school. Meanwhile, Japanese(which borrowed some characters from chinese), Korean(i think something similar happened), and chinese.
      11 schools, over 7,000 languages. Of course there's going to be mildly annoying grouping together like what you're laughing about.

    • @veryangryduckpl2122
      @veryangryduckpl2122 Před 8 měsíci +23

      And grouping Poland and Russia...

    • @larfee5191
      @larfee5191 Před 8 měsíci +10

      ​@@veryangryduckpl2122and how exactly grouping Poland and Russia is crazy ?

    • @veryangryduckpl2122
      @veryangryduckpl2122 Před 8 měsíci +28

      @@larfee5191 They are basically our nemesis. We wre at war with them for longer than we were at peace. We were constantly fighting their occupation, we were constantly getting attacked and needing to kick their butts out of our land

  • @rileyjackson1762
    @rileyjackson1762 Před 7 měsíci +72

    This tackles an interesting issue of Rowlings wizarding world, but I think the big thing everyone overlooks is how easy a statute of secrecy was imposed globally when many cultures likely would have been fine or integrated heavily with their local wizard cultures. Honestly it’s a great thought experiment to look at how dystopian the wizarding world is as what was essentially the magic British empire destroyed cultures in order to force their own politics on a global scale.

    • @LethargicScientist
      @LethargicScientist Před 6 měsíci

      Yeah, if Rowling was an even slightly smarter person instead of just stealing all her ideas from Neil Gaiman she could have seen all the implications there and maybe even written cool stories about them. That kind of insane level of cultural imperialism happened constantly in the 18th and 19th centuries. Road not travelled I guess.

    • @fruity4820
      @fruity4820 Před 6 měsíci

      Yeah, I thought of that too, anti-magic sentiments are a very euro-centric idea that is rooted in Christianity. How is it fair to assume that everywhere else in the world is like Europe where wizards have to hide?

    • @Illuminatorofshadow
      @Illuminatorofshadow Před 5 měsíci +1

      It seems Magical Europe colonized the rest of the world more than 200 years before Muggle Europe did. Hence relations of power between Magical Europe and Magical Global South is even more skewed than in the muggle world.

  • @NosebleeddeGroselha
    @NosebleeddeGroselha Před 6 měsíci +10

    Having 11 schools for the entire world and mixing up a bunch of people who shouldn’t be mixed up is the most “A British person organized it” thing in the world

  • @zbakanyaxolotl7986
    @zbakanyaxolotl7986 Před rokem +581

    even sticking to just Europe, not only did she put about 24 countries speaking 20 different languages from 4 different families together, she also put Poland and Germany AND THE ENTIRETY OF THE BALKANS TOGETHER?? Let's be real Drumstrang would be just a pile of rocks at the end of 1st month

    • @redshirt5126
      @redshirt5126 Před 8 měsíci +30

      I think in general you would have regions of the world that just couldn't have their own schools for either political reasons or safety reasons.
      Example: Korea. Kids from North Korea would have to go to a Chinese wizarding school while south Korean students would have to go to a Japanese school simply because asking a bunch of young wizards and witches to find some way to cross the demilitarized zone just sounds like a recipe for disaster.

    • @PaulFisher
      @PaulFisher Před 8 měsíci +18

      imagine cross-strait relations at the Chinese/Japanese/Korean school

    • @andreeacat7071
      @andreeacat7071 Před 8 měsíci

      @@redshirt5126I don’t doubt that (unless the Wizarding population opposed the dictatorship and this side along apparated their children out to be educated) North Korean would probably have its own school for propaganda reasons. Because if they were to go out of their country to learn they’d realize how much of a bad place it is, and that China and the rest of the world have it much better, and then try to rebel, or escape, etc. And then congrats NK, your entire population of magic users is gone!

    • @l.n.3372
      @l.n.3372 Před 8 měsíci +6

      ​@@redshirt5126
      Playing devil's advocate, I'd argue that maybe Korean wizards don't even acknowledge a demilitarized zone. After all, why would the Korean war have necessarily affected Korean wizards? It does not seem like the British wizards were all that affected by WW2, given by how little JKR ever mentioned the effects of WW2 on Hogwarts and it's students.
      It's probably likely that wizards don't recognize muggle wars or their "separations of land" after said wars. Thus Korean wizards wouldn't necessarily have any problems with attending the same school. Hell, they may not even care as much that it's North and South Korea; maybe they just see themselves as Korean?

    • @SpinDuality
      @SpinDuality Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@l.n.3372This only works if wizards are only pureblood wizards. There are halfbloods and muggleborns too. Someone who does live in the muggle world would bring issues in the wizarding world about it. This is why I hate HP worldbuilding, because even if you try to make it make sense, there's a plot in there to make another hole.
      Let's say, they don't care at all about muggles wars and separations of the country. We have to figure out how muggleborn thinking works exactly in this scenario. We also have to figure out the language system. The culture.

  • @lorddashdonalddappington2653

    Bruh really said that it pained him to put Spain and Portugal together but then mashed Russia, Ukraine, Poland, Yugoslavia and Greece into one school without a second thought.

    • @thiswillagenicely9702
      @thiswillagenicely9702 Před 8 měsíci +46

      I’m surprised she placed the entire Soviet Bloc in the same school despite it being made relatively recent compared to other history in HP universe and straight up added Scandinavia

    • @pizzasteve5825
      @pizzasteve5825 Před 8 měsíci +60

      That school is gonna be lookin like 1991 all over again

    • @zinijavor
      @zinijavor Před 8 měsíci +27

      And putting the WHOLE Bosnia and Herzegovina into the Islamic school... Feels like a mistake, doesn't it? 😂

    • @DawidKov
      @DawidKov Před 8 měsíci +15

      @@thiswillagenicely9702 Soviet Bloc was preceded by the Russian Imperial sphere, and it's largely Slavic nations anyway.
      Culturally though, Slavs used to be the main population all the way to the Elbe river, before the Germanization of Polabia in the early Crusades. If magical schools are generally as old as Hogwarts, then at the time of founding a Balto-Slavic school would cover all of the southern coast of the Baltic, and then go south to the Balkans.
      Can't justify Scandinavia though. And "Durgmstrang" is as German a name as you can get, so why Slavs are there at all is a mystery. Makes more sense for the Bulgarians like Krum to go to a pan-Slavic or better yet, Slavic Orthodox school instead. Use the Old Church Slavonic as the school's language.

    • @baileyyh72
      @baileyyh72 Před 8 měsíci +2

      i think his main issue was significant language barriers, which he did well in some parts, not so well in other parts ^

  • @killerkitten7534
    @killerkitten7534 Před 5 měsíci +12

    It’s crazy that she could have just said “yeah these are the most famous schools for certain regions, but there’s much more out there” but she just doubled down and went “NO THESE ARE THE ONLY ONES!”
    Like imagine if Harvard was the only school in the entirety of North America and Cambridge was the only one for the greater UK area

  • @razhelfombelle
    @razhelfombelle Před 7 měsíci +134

    About Uagadou, it may be even worse actually. It likely comes from Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso's Capital city. She just... cut the last syllabus off. She probably heard that name and decided to change it a bit and use it for her school. At least if Uagadou was in Burkina Faso, it could have been argued that it simply took the name of the city it's closest too (like some actual schools over the world do), but since she couldn't be bothered to do any research for her own world-building (and let's be clear, even she had chosen the example I gave, it'd still have been incredibly lazy), she managed to be even more ignorant and racist than your average british writers...

    • @markstein2845
      @markstein2845 Před 6 měsíci

      Wow wow, come down with the R word my fellow human.
      The fact that she took the name of one city and used as the name of the school in another country doesn’t mean she things there is a hierarchy of races, in which some races are better than others (the definition of racism).
      JoJo’ mangaka literally ran out of ideas of his enemies and just decided to call them with food name in Italian, nobody was calling him because of that, people just find basic words in other langusges sounding super appripiate in their own language.

    • @giratina6665
      @giratina6665 Před 6 měsíci +16

      ​@@markstein2845I don't want to come off as arrogant, but your definition of racism is pretty bad.
      For large scale social phenomenon to dumb it down that much, isn't gonna work out. This definition also doesn't take into account why racism came into being and how it thrives as a system and ideology.
      Going by your logic racism doesn't exist outside of settler colonialism and literal outspoken fascists, which I think is quite a useless term then.
      The fact that you don't seem to understand the difference between stereotyping Italians and stereotyping Africans shows that you are using quite the mechanical definition for what is a historical, social phenomenon. (yes, it does make a difference)

    • @Acro_YT
      @Acro_YT Před 6 měsíci +6

      @@markstein2845Don’t speak the name of Araki to try and meatride Rowling. Araki’s not an ignorant racist like Rowling, and he’s also not transphobic (eg. Dragona Joestar) unlike that woman.

    • @Acro_YT
      @Acro_YT Před 6 měsíci

      Is anyone honestly surprised that Rowling, an outspoken transphobe is also an ignorant racist? Because I ain’t.

    • @yuihidegigauchu0069
      @yuihidegigauchu0069 Před 6 měsíci +1

      do you know Ouagadou is a thing that exists

  • @cheesebiscuits6323
    @cheesebiscuits6323 Před rokem +2535

    According to each dormitory containing 5 pupils if I remember rightly, times 2 for both gendered dorms, times 7 for the 7 years, times 4 for the houses, brings the hogwarts student total to 280.
    J.K. Wasn’t kidding when she said she wasn’t good at maths.

    • @fionn_mac_ribs
      @fionn_mac_ribs Před rokem +437

      And if we assume each house has an equal population, there’s only 70 kids in each house. Meaning each year every house gets 10 new students. Times that for four houses, means Hogwarts gets 40 new students every year.

    • @sailiealquadacil1284
      @sailiealquadacil1284 Před rokem +186

      Is the number of students fixed per year and house? I'd always assumed that these numbers would vary, since you can't count on the students being split evenly between the houses every year. Also, the yearly intake should vary.

    • @comradewindowsill4253
      @comradewindowsill4253 Před rokem +171

      @@fionn_mac_ribs doing the sorting hat nonsense before dinner makes more sense now, at least.

    • @robbiesmith8055
      @robbiesmith8055 Před rokem +172

      ​@@sailiealquadacil1284 You would assume it'd vary, but I gather Jo wrote a list of the 40 students in Harry's year at Hogwarts (mostly so she could pluck names from it at random to be hanging out in the background of scenes). Harry's is the only dormitory we learn the entire population of (we literally only ever meet 3 Gryffindor girls in his year, who tf are the other 2), but the 40 student list seems to indicate that his entire year maps onto a 10 per house/5 per sex split. So while she doesn't state that this maps onto the rest of the school, that gives me the impression that it's supposed to. Either that or Harry's year is Comically small, since if there's 1000 students like she claims, each year group would have around 140 students.

    • @nick3805
      @nick3805 Před rokem +99

      @@robbiesmith8055 The years from ca. 1970-1981 being smaller than usual would make sense through, considering there was Voldemorts war. Usually birth rates and the number of young adults crumble in times of war.

  • @adrianguevara2319
    @adrianguevara2319 Před rokem +1517

    I just hate that in the cauldron of fire we're exposed to much more about the wizarding schools with the tri-wizard tournament and mentions of a brazilian school, because everything pointed to roughly every country having a school and then she comes up with this random idea of only 11 schools in the whole world

    • @WasatchWind
      @WasatchWind Před rokem +308

      As an author, all I can say is dropping random numbers like that, rather than leaving some things unsaid, is a terrible idea.

    • @NotAnEvilMastermind
      @NotAnEvilMastermind Před rokem +226

      @@WasatchWind As someone who does a bit of worldbuilding in my free time, absolutely.
      One time i was doodling around, and wrote down that there are 3 factions somewhere.
      The next day i added a bit, changing it to "3 factions we will be focusing on for this story" or something along those lines, then immediately sketching out ideas for at least 4 or 5 other factions i had though of that day at work.
      Specific numbers in fiction are a tricky beast, because unless you're extremely careful, someone is gonna show up, do math, and say "this doesn't make sense."

    • @WasatchWind
      @WasatchWind Před rokem +90

      @@NotAnEvilMastermind And in general I'd say, avoid piling on a ton of stuff in worldbuilding. A couple things explored at a great depth is far more interesting than a dozen things explored at surface level.

    • @kjn3350
      @kjn3350 Před rokem +46

      @@WasatchWind Just as a human being I find it terrible writing. There just doesn't need to be mention of other schools - if there is, then mention those necessary. There's no need to make up numbers that simply don't make any sense just for the sake of information - if you're gonna do that, then plot it out properly. 11 schools for all the wizards in the world? Assuming many thousands of wizards in Britain (65,000 for simplicity, though it could well be much smaller), you'd have around 0.1% of the globe being wizards - that's 8 million people. Even if it's 6,500 wizards in Britain, that's 800,000 people. It just doesn't work and shows shoddy worldbuilding.

    • @WasatchWind
      @WasatchWind Před rokem +31

      @@kjn3350? I don't think there's any problem with mentioning things about your wider world. As a writer, you are constructing an iceberg so to speak, trying to give the illusion that there is a much larger world beyond that which we see in the story. It is why people get into these worlds in the first place.
      And even then in the fourth book, showing us other wizarding schools is an important part of the story, adding depth and interesting flavor to the story.
      As for laying out really detailed stuff like how many schools there are, that you do not need to mention in book - and she should have taken the time to figure out, or simply said "there are a number of schools throughout the world."
      Brandon Sanderson, I'd say, is the perfect example of how to slowly leak out your worldbuilding. Everyone is chomping at the bit to find out more about his literary universe, the Cosmere, but he does his worldbuilding very carefully, and consults with experts in different fields to give him more accurate details.

  • @aspacelex
    @aspacelex Před 7 měsíci +5

    If the schools are supposed to be ancient, the Slavic school should be in Kyiv. Maybe in Novgorod, but it's at the edge of the Slavic world and also the city is tiny now so no one would choose to do that in a book.

    • @budakbaongsiah
      @budakbaongsiah Před 7 měsíci +2

      Yeah, it should be based on historical significance of older times. Like how I feel like there should be a magic school in Greece (Greco-Roman magic), Benin (Voodoo magic), Mexico (blood sacrifice magic), and China (transmutation alchemy)

    • @aspacelex
      @aspacelex Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@budakbaongsiah This is a frustrating exercise because while any curious person can come up with a plethora of ideas for that world, in reality it's run by someone who names Black people like Slaveman Chainguy.

  • @Mari8i
    @Mari8i Před 8 měsíci +27

    I always headcannoned that every country had at least one boarding school like hogwarts and that there were other non boarding schools for magic learning in countries where one school was not enough(aka most countries). I also liked to think that while hogwarts choose it’s students with a magic pen and book dumstrang(and maybe some other schools) had an enterance exam which would explain why it was considered so prestigious and that the reason no muggle-borns attended was because they never knew about magic until it was too late so they never took the exam and ended up going to a different school for people who were muggle-born or didn’t pass the exam.

  • @Joka191095
    @Joka191095 Před 8 měsíci +1058

    I love these books, but it's impossible to defend the lack of appropriate worldbuilding in them. Also, Malfoy mentions in book 4 that his parents almost sent him to Durmstrang, so the entry qualifications aren't exclusively geographical. Durmstrang's location is secret but it's believed to be somewhere up in the Urals

    • @michaelramon2411
      @michaelramon2411 Před 8 měsíci +50

      This is a good point. Plenty of people go to colleges far away from their hometown rather than something closer, so a lot of school choices would probably be based on school culture, reputation and philosophy rather than geography.

    • @adonisjunior3197
      @adonisjunior3197 Před 8 měsíci +50

      Yeah i was always bugged as to why Durmstrang location is secret, they are part of the triwizard tournment, supposedly they house some of them.... how do the other schools get there? teleport? what if something happens i would definetly not send my students to a secret location in onother state in a school that practices necromancy.

    • @jamaluddinkhalifa8371
      @jamaluddinkhalifa8371 Před 8 měsíci +32

      according to Wizarding World currently, Durmstrang is "believed to be situated in the far north of Europe", not up in the Urals. so it would appear to be intended to be a Nordic institution. after all the actual Russian school was Koldovstoretz.

    • @andrasszabo1570
      @andrasszabo1570 Před 7 měsíci +32

      @@michaelramon2411 These wizarding schools are not colleges for adults, but high schools for teenagers.
      Sending 11 year old kids to live-in high schools far away from their parents is much less common than 18 year olds moving away.
      But since Rowling lives in the one country where this is prominent, she thinks British boarding schools are the peak of education, so the whole world should copy this system.

    • @jamesdinius7769
      @jamesdinius7769 Před 7 měsíci +6

      Malfoy potentially going to Drumstrang doesn't really mean much for their entrance requirements. It was because Lucius and Kakaroff knew each other as Death Eaters. Most families wouldn't have those connections.

  • @georgeiii2998
    @georgeiii2998 Před rokem +2680

    Imagine the language barriers in the schools in Africa, SA, Oceania, Asia, and Western Europe. Also, whilst schoolchildren in Britain have to take an 8hr train trip to get to Hogwarts (something that already doesn't make sense because it relies on all wizards living in London), kids in Africa or South America have to travel across a continent.

    • @TankEngine75
      @TankEngine75 Před rokem +121

      I'm from the SE Asia region, if all of SE Asia and Oceania share a school then that would cause a Major Langauge Barrier, I've read somewhere that Singapore, Malaysia and The Phillpines all are the most English Proficient countries in Asia but not alot of Thais, Vietnamese, etc speak good English, atleast just have The English Speaking Parts of Oceania + The Three SE Asian Countries I've mentioned share a school, that would make a little bit more sense

    • @andrejs4984
      @andrejs4984 Před rokem +58

      @@TankEngine75 it would actually make more sense for at least some Filipino students to attend Ilvemorny, or maybe the japanese school when it comes to language, and also history. I also don't understand how strict this might be. Do you have to attend the school assigned to your country by Rowling? In real world, lots of indian/chinese students are sent to the UK or the US to study, especially if they are talented and/or have money to study abroad. Even in the pre-modern times, like middle ages, people that did study, would often attend school in a different country, at least in Europe. Draco Malfoy was once shitting on Hogwarts (I think in the sixth book) how pathethic the school is and that his dad considered sending him to Durmstrang instead since they teach dark magic there as well. So it is hinted it is possible, or was malfoy just making this up? Why don't we see kids from all around the world in Hogwarts the same way muggle british universities have tons of foreign students. A Pinoy with good english skills would be much better off attending american/british schools than having to attend the asian school where chinese and hindu students would probably be the largest groups and thus the language of teaching might not be english (or tagalog :D )

    • @99batran
      @99batran Před rokem +10

      They probably used teleportation stations as we have seen before

    • @simnm8057
      @simnm8057 Před rokem +4

      I mean boarding schools exists

    • @BigGreekCock
      @BigGreekCock Před rokem +6

      Bro, they got Magic for that, the school can just cast a spell so everyone understands their language

  • @princevesperal
    @princevesperal Před 8 měsíci +14

    Careful when applying muggle numbers to extrapolate wizarding demography: the age pyramid seems completely different for magical individuals, who can live well past 100 years old and still be active members of society. Magic also allows them to not have to worry about infant mortality (which stopped being an issue in the developed world only about a century ago) and to essentially live in a quasi post-scarcity world. We mostly meet children and their parents in the book, but I reckon that wizarding society is very old on average.

  • @Tomasrrb
    @Tomasrrb Před 8 měsíci +12

    The Harry Potter Universe can only be enjoyed if you don’t ask questions and just be happy about magic. As soon as you start asking questions, everything comes crashing down.

    • @starrynight6268
      @starrynight6268 Před 2 měsíci

      But questions are expected to be asked the bigger the franchise goes.

  • @Padubiaso
    @Padubiaso Před rokem +1592

    As someone who is a native brazillian portuguese speaker, if it is really a magical world, I think the south america- Portugal - Spain and italy schools should revive the latin writing and speaking since latin is often associated with magic (and sounds really cool)

    • @akeel_1701
      @akeel_1701 Před 8 měsíci +63

      Verum est

    • @tuamigalafurraconvozdeloli3690
      @tuamigalafurraconvozdeloli3690 Před 8 měsíci +10

      I wish i can speak latín

    • @lucciqs
      @lucciqs Před 8 měsíci +36

      Agreed!!! it should be a compulsory subject across all 7 years of school

    • @Ben-yg2wj
      @Ben-yg2wj Před 8 měsíci +29

      Also, as a Brazilian, I think if this was really a real thing, we’d have a school for our own. I will not speak to Iberians, because I couldn’t if I tried

    • @rodrigoblancogalvao8268
      @rodrigoblancogalvao8268 Před 8 měsíci +19

      But that way you'd ignored the amerindians culture intirely

  • @DisneyDahling
    @DisneyDahling Před rokem +1002

    Fun fact: The official Japanese Harry Potter merch store uses the Japanese school name but it's changed to "Mahou Dokoro" instead of "Mahou Tokoro" because it is gramatically very weird, and also I think most Japanese people don't know it's supposed to be a school name because it sounds incredibly stupid. The pronunciation that JK wrote is also wrong.

    • @docbraun9458
      @docbraun9458 Před rokem +162

      So as Koldovstvoretz sounds very weird for russians. I’ll never believe, someone from Russia may invent such a name of school. Grammatically this name sounds ridiculous.

    • @Azurethewolf168
      @Azurethewolf168 Před 8 měsíci +31

      @@docbraun9458it sounds nothing like Russian

    • @uriel9777
      @uriel9777 Před 8 měsíci +29

      The Brazilian school naming also makes no sense.

    • @LoisoPondohva
      @LoisoPondohva Před 8 měsíci +33

      ​@@docbraun9458 she obviously just used Google Translate or an equivalent.
      In English "magic" is the same as noun and adjective, but not in Russian.
      Also Russian doesn't use grammatical suffixes as roots for portmanteaus, obviously.
      It's like using "magiced" as a word and saying "Ed" stands for "unleashed" or something. Obviously you wouldn't use an ambiguous grammatical suffix to represent a word, you would use a root or part of it.

    • @ErikaCartet
      @ErikaCartet Před 8 měsíci

      @@LoisoPondohvayeah, it’s like… mind numbing how poorly the other school names are put together. she really should have had someone help workshop the names instead of going with the first half-baked word combo she thought to run through google translate

  • @ChaffyExpert
    @ChaffyExpert Před 8 měsíci +3

    Meanwhile in that middle eastern magic school:
    *Literally on fire, plus several explosions.*

  • @nilavanathi7336
    @nilavanathi7336 Před 6 měsíci +12

    My personal favourite way to sort this is to imagine that the Stature of Secrecy was a very Western European thing, so most other wizards either have their own schools that haven't been registered since they're not properly hodden from muggles, or go to blended schools and unis (or even other styles of learning, like at temples or madrasas). The "Schools" on Rowling's map are there for registration purposes, and if you plan to go to western europe you owl them and they send you a shiny graduation certificate and you're free to make up whatever stories you like about the school. (And maybe they have a standing Quidditch team, who knows)

    • @Illuminatorofshadow
      @Illuminatorofshadow Před 5 měsíci +1

      By canon the Statute of Secrecy is global, thus Magical Europe had already colonized the rest of the world by the 1680s.

  • @BeautifulMutant
    @BeautifulMutant Před rokem +754

    One more thing to remember: Durumstrang doesn't take muggle-born kids, so if there isn't an option for kids in Scandinavia, Germany, and the rest of Eastern Europe to apply to Beauxbatons or Hogwarts, then there'll be some problems. Obscuruses will be appearing, and magical mishaps will be occurring all over the place!

    • @Eddies_Bra-att-ha-grejer
      @Eddies_Bra-att-ha-grejer Před rokem +206

      Durmstrang is a huge mess in general. It has a German-sounding name, founded by a Hungarian, most students have Slavic names, and it's supposedly located somewhere in Scandinavia.

    • @chimera9818
      @chimera9818 Před rokem +41

      @@Eddies_Bra-att-ha-grejer I heard wakanda is similar mess for African to watch

    • @battlesheep2552
      @battlesheep2552 Před 9 měsíci +56

      ​@@Eddies_Bra-att-ha-grejerit probably would have been cool if they left out the Scandinavian parts and just have it be a school founded during the Holy Roman Empire. After all, i think there is a case for modern political and cultural divides in the muggle world not mattering as much for the wizard community.

    • @GalliadII
      @GalliadII Před 8 měsíci +12

      I bet Grindelwald was looking into some sort of final solution to that problem...

    • @samlewis6487
      @samlewis6487 Před 8 měsíci +21

      Lol like she knew obscurials existed when she wrote Goblet of Fire

  • @TheRetroShepherd
    @TheRetroShepherd Před 8 měsíci +2309

    -Puts entirety of Sub-Saharan Africa into one school
    -Puts entirety of the Middle East and North Africa into one school
    -Both Koreas in the same school as Japan, that's a certified historical oh no moment (also now I'm curious as to how North Korean wizard stuff works out)
    -Puts India, Pakistan, Taiwan AND China into one school (Aside from obvious demographic tensions, that school is either fucking gigantic or laid out like Kowloon Walled City to fit all those students in)
    Yeah that sounds like a British author wrote it, alright
    (Bonus: I know this map was made long before tensions broke out but having Ukraine in the same school as Russia is a big bruh moment as of right now)

    • @MerkhVision
      @MerkhVision Před 8 měsíci +159

      Good points but you overlook the fact that wizards have entirely different cultures and concerns than muggles and may not even identify with or know about any of the issues you mentioned lol.

    • @only_fair23
      @only_fair23 Před 8 měsíci +30

      ​@@MerkhVisionmost of these schools wouldn't be separated then

    • @dinosaurpower3862
      @dinosaurpower3862 Před 8 měsíci +164

      Ngl there was tension between Ukraine and Russia since 1658

    • @judynyairo9791
      @judynyairo9791 Před 8 měsíci +133

      @@MerkhVisionThis could be true, but tbf i feel like even pureblooded wizards would notice if their country went into war or something, and those can definitely start stereotypes. not to mention that, at least in the uk, purebloods are a minority so the majority of wizards have at least some connections to muggles.

    • @hastur-thekinginyellow8115
      @hastur-thekinginyellow8115 Před 8 měsíci +99

      @@dinosaurpower3862 Exactly. People acting like Crimean geo-politics only started existing as of 2014 are ridiculous lol.

  • @lourdesastudillo7532
    @lourdesastudillo7532 Před 6 měsíci +9

    You know, I've always assume that these schools were like the most famous school, not the ONLY wizardings schools in the world. Like, I thought that every country had its own schools but, for example, going to Dumstrang it was like going to Harvard, like hoing to a top magic school.

  • @Jestokost
    @Jestokost Před 8 měsíci +30

    Your map is great for if you were to try to establish the schools today, but it leads to some historical issues. There’s no way in hell Taiwan and China could have shared a school until very recently (same with the Koreas), for instance, and Mongolia would feed into the Russian school due to it having been part of the USSR. Also, Israel would probably send their kids to the American school.
    Edit: also-also, francophone Africa should feed into the French school.

    • @lonewolfM16
      @lonewolfM16 Před 7 měsíci

      That seems to assume that wizards are effectively following muggle politics and adapting themselves to them which I'm not sure is true. Just because the USSR was formed out of the Russian Empire doesn't mean their ministry of magic equivalent needs to start putting up portraits of Lenin. Similarly, Mongolia might well have continued the Yuan dynasty of China for all we know. I also disagree with the idea that nations being in conflict means they can't share a school. The fact that there are so few schools seems to indicate these are not national institutions. My university has students from Taiwan, mainland China, India, Pakistan, Japan, etc and I live in the US. So far no one has murdered each other because their countries are in conflict.

    • @crazydragy4233
      @crazydragy4233 Před 6 měsíci

      Exactly, I was really confused why he treated those with today's sensibilities... given that they're all hundreds of years old.

    • @sevenseas2673
      @sevenseas2673 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Considering most of Taiwan's population is of Chinese descent, if we assumed the school was founded hundreds if not thousands of years ago, then it absolutely makes sense for Taiwanese to attend to same school as Chinese, as Chinese descended Taiwanese Wizards would come from families who attended the Chinese magic school, theres of course the matter of Taiwanese Aboriginal population who would indeed have no historical reason to attend a Chinese magic school.
      Like your comment assumes things should be related to 20th century history instead of modern one, when the schools are supposed to be way older in general, Mongolia if we go further back could have an old-school from the time of the Mongolian empires, it could have links with Iran, Russia, India and China, why would it have to be related to the URSS in particular?
      With Israel it's hard to say what should be, are we assuming Jewish American wizards are emigrating to Israel since it's formation and that most Israeli wizards are of American/European descent? Did Jewish wizards get persecuted by Nazzi Germany too and feel a need to join a muggle Jewish nation? Or are Israeli jew wizards from the local Jewish populations from before the formation of Israel? If so they'd have no reason to go to the American school, and might be relatively well integrated with the Arab Wizarding world outside of muggle politics.
      It's the big contradiction with the Harry potter universe, wizards are supposed to be super isolated from the muggle world and at the same time are so inexplicably linked to muggle politics, colonization and immigration trends, JKR wants her cake and eat it too.

    • @Jestokost
      @Jestokost Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@sevenseas2673 the assumption I was working off of is that the wizarding powers-that-be will generally mirror the muggle administration of the territory, but slightly behind. So the schools will *eventually* reflect geopolitical trends, if the trends last long enough. I also assume that the school distributions would react quickly, if there was a likelihood of political or ethnic violence. So the Taiwan/China split would have caused a shift in schools almost immediately, whereas decolonization probably would not have fully caught up yet.
      My way of thinking of it is almost certainly still flawed, but I would like to believe it’s *less* flawed than assigning school distributions based off the 21st-century status quo.

  • @TheAustralianMapper5378
    @TheAustralianMapper5378 Před rokem +1024

    Oh, yeah. Ima make a alternate version of this with like over 30 schools.

    • @kringle7804
      @kringle7804 Před rokem +125

      You're gonna need 100 for just Africa with the amount of cultures and languages there

    • @venmis137
      @venmis137 Před rokem +95

      @@kringle7804 Just group them together. Small enough cultures and languages probably won't have that many wizards, if those cultures start communicating and the wizards find each other, start to set up wizarding schools, then you can easily get multinational schools there.

    • @Chosen_Ash
      @Chosen_Ash Před rokem +3

      @@kringle7804 no

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před rokem +21

      @@venmis137 Considering that basically all the schools would speak english, french, spanish, arabic or mandarin, just to get communication across. How well are the second language skills of 11 year olds? I didn't saw english before the age of 9 and had no contact with any other language (in that point the options tended to be french, spanish, and latin) before the age of 13, one could assume that at least the first two years of wizarding school would either have to be taught multilingual or they need some sort of babelfish to be even able to teach the majority of students.

    • @kringle7804
      @kringle7804 Před rokem +18

      @HappyBeezerStudios - by Lord_Mogul African children are built different they know one of these as a base
      English,French,Belgium,Portuguese German,Spanish
      Then they know there native tongue and then possibly 2 other languages of the tribes in the area that'd how many cultures there are

  • @RadenWA
    @RadenWA Před rokem +527

    I remember Tibet playing such a big role in the Fantastic Beast serie. Very funny that suddenly that area became almost central to the wizarding world and yet it doesn’t have a named school.

    • @vinnie-chan
      @vinnie-chan Před rokem

      Well Tibet is occupied by China

    • @PahadiSher
      @PahadiSher Před 8 měsíci +16

      If the Tibetans had a school, it would be in India because their current culture is amalgamation on traditional shamanism & East Indian Buddhism.

    • @priya8855
      @priya8855 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Tbf,Tibet is kinda not in a good place. Even the Dalai Lama fled to India for refuge

    • @elizabethcallan10
      @elizabethcallan10 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Nope instead Tibet goes to… CHINA !!! I’m African European living in America, and even I know that’s ludicrous!! PS i stand with Tibet.

    • @michaelramon2411
      @michaelramon2411 Před 8 měsíci

      I think that was Bhutan, not Tibet (though they are next to each other). And it's not wholly unreasonable to center your election on what is essentially "neutral" ground, where no polity has enormous control. The capital of the United States, for example, is not in any one of the 50 states, but was specifically put in its own district (Washington D.C.) so that no state would have control of it.
      As a side note, it appears that the original plan for Fantastic Beasts 3 was to have the finale in Brazil, but COVID filming made that too difficult, so they moved it to Bhutan.

  • @llanorick
    @llanorick Před 8 měsíci +4

    You overlook the fact that, according to canon, Ilvermorny is the Wizarding school for EASTERN North America. This implies at least one other school, One for Western North America, or a Mexican Wizarding school, which could also serve Central America. No matter how you look at it, the entire world just cannot be served by just 11 schools.

  • @arx3516
    @arx3516 Před 7 měsíci +4

    Most likely some places don't have any magic school at all. In Italy and Spain wizards have all been slaughtered by the Inquisition,while in Africa they have shamans, who practice a different kind of magic and pass on their knowledge directly from master to pupil.

    • @moon4236
      @moon4236 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Britain also had witch trials but they have a school. Also I doubt witches would be that affected by the inquisition they were not that affected and we know actual wizards could survive an execution, it's in the books.

  • @alej2297
    @alej2297 Před rokem +711

    An extra layer of funny is that by Rowling’s own rules, a map of all the wizarding schools is impossible because all the schools are supposed to be “unplottable” on a map.

    • @josefmuller86
      @josefmuller86 Před rokem +48

      I think that "different schools, different flavors of magic" was the original intention. Like where do French guy wizards go to school if the French-named school is nearly all-female? Maybe it is just that this magic is more appealing to girls... But it kinda devolved into this

    • @alej2297
      @alej2297 Před rokem +108

      @@josefmuller86 Except Beauxbatons is not an all-girls school. That was only a movie design decision. There are male students in the book. She just wanted to break it down by nationality but didn’t think through the logic that came with it.

    • @Roxor128
      @Roxor128 Před rokem +15

      I find the idea unplottability to be ill-thought-out.
      How is it supposed to stop you from plotting on a map? Freeze your hand when you try to put down a dot in the right location so you can't make the mark? Let that hand freeze, then make other marks with the other hand some distance away and just say it's in the centre of those marks. Force your hand away when you try to make a mark where it should be? Make multiple attempts and get a ring of dots around the actual location. Or is it supposed to mess with your memory, so you can't remember where it is precisely enough to plot it? If so, why doesn't that prevent the staff from apparating to the gates? Or the house elves? Can it stop you just saying the latitude and longitude if you were able to figure it out? What's the range on the effect? Surely you could only force the effect out so far before the spell runs out of power? And then there's the matter of photographs. Take a camera up on a broom and do some landscape photography and tape the photos together. The resulting panorama is as good as a map. Possibly better, depending on what you need.
      Seems to me that it's either impossible or would have a heap of workarounds that'd just prove an annoyance to anyone serious about the matter. Personally, given the existence of the Marauders' Map, I think impossibility seems more likely, and it's just said to be unplottable as a ruse.

    • @ayathados6629
      @ayathados6629 Před 9 měsíci +9

      ​@@Roxor128 unplottability makes a tonne of sense if you actually read the books. Complex wards against muggles that make it impossible to go to (without forgetting and randomly turning around), or even view without their eyes slipping off and focusing on something else (like how the leaky cauldron functions) as well as designated squads to make people forget magical occurances or atleast blending them into somewhat more plausible experiences (a dragon sighting replaced by seeing a fighter jet and letting their mind do the rest. Obliviation)
      The thing is, these locations aren't on any maps that are allowed to circulate with muggles; meaning that you can't mark them because inherently the maps are *wrong* and wizards are keen on making sure they're never right.

    • @Roxor128
      @Roxor128 Před 9 měsíci +7

      @@ayathados6629 I'm not talking about muggles. Their maps being edited is a given. I'm talking about a wizard making one, so you're off in the woods.

  • @mistertwister2000
    @mistertwister2000 Před rokem +417

    Countries like India, China, United States, etc are not only geographically huge but have massive populations, they each should have multiple wizarding schools for sure, not to mention *every other country*

    • @airistal
      @airistal Před rokem +4

      Also consider apprenticeships.

    • @Phantom-bh5ru
      @Phantom-bh5ru Před rokem +28

      America would likely have just one school. Since they are so new and were never really divided for long. China had many divisions throughout history but they did have long stable times so while China would likely have multiple schools it likely would have 1 main school. India has basically always stayed divided so it would likely have multiple schools too

    • @mimorisenpai8540
      @mimorisenpai8540 Před rokem +2

      More make sense if Tibet have their own school separate one from china proper

    • @PahadiSher
      @PahadiSher Před 8 měsíci +5

      @Phantom-bh5ru lol, as if China or the US had the exact same borders as today, even 100 years back. By that logic, Hogwarts should cater to US because it is basically an oversea colony.

    • @imaginekudryavka9485
      @imaginekudryavka9485 Před 8 měsíci +8

      @@PahadiSherWhat? I don’t think that’s what they’re saying. Just that if you have a long enough history (hundreds if not thousands of years) with certain divisions between peoples, it would make sense that they would have had schools of their own which carries on to the current day. It’s much more like saying that the Native American wizards would have a separate school (or schools), since would have their own culture apart from the wizard colonists, and for good reasons would want to hold on to whatever is left of their land and their traditions. Even if that wizarding school would be pretty small in the current era.

  • @ijj2286
    @ijj2286 Před 5 měsíci +7

    She had not thought this through. Her world building was limited to her own country and a few outside its borders. The rest was just fan fiction she thought was a good idea to be canon.

  • @kuroanimates
    @kuroanimates Před 8 měsíci +3

    My personal headcanon is that the 11 mentioned schools are just the most prestigious or globally active ones, with dozens if not hundreds of smaller schools all throughout the world.

  • @Marconius6
    @Marconius6 Před 8 měsíci +353

    Putting Spain, France and ALL of Latin-America into one school seems like a stretch historically, even if it works out by population numbers. More realistically I would imagine a variety of European cultural centers would each have their own schools, and then Latin America would have a separate one, just like the US does.
    Although it would be interesting if Canadian and Aussie kids still went to Hogwarts...

    • @hopejohnson6347
      @hopejohnson6347 Před 8 měsíci +33

      I'd also like to think that there would be at least one separate school for the francophone world - like divide Canada up and give the french speaking african nations as well as the francophone oceanic nations' wizards to that school, have two english speaking schools - one being Hogwarts and one in the US... and consider the kid's native languages a bit more since... while kids in that age group can absolutely learn another language and start getting language lessons in school around that age, it would be really difficult to get them to a level of proficiency to have all their lessons in another language just like that when they get the letter of "hey, you're a wizard. Time to learn swedish, spanish, russian or arab now, you're gonna need it, soon!"

    • @l.n.3372
      @l.n.3372 Před 8 měsíci +28

      Not gonna lie, if canon was different and Hogwarts was always meant to be the school for the English speaking world of wizards, then it could have been really cool to see the existing characters broken down into different nationalities. Because in this version, Canada, America, Australia, New Zealand would need to be included along with UK and Ireland. Maybe some of the students could have been like:
      Harry is English
      Ron is Irish
      Neville is Canadian
      Hermione is American
      Just to name some examples. The adults would be different nationalities too, so maybe Voldemort and Dumbledore wouldn't necessarily both be British in this hypothetical version anymore.

    • @fawkewe
      @fawkewe Před 8 měsíci +3

      Spain and italy make sense. Italy was controlled by spain for most of the last 1000 years.

    • @Marconius6
      @Marconius6 Před 8 měsíci +17

      @@fawkewe No it wasn't? The southern half was for some time, but not even close to 1000 years.

    • @irfanadhin5918
      @irfanadhin5918 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@hopejohnson6347 its a magic world. There is probably a translation spell or something lol.

  • @nickstoneham5629
    @nickstoneham5629 Před rokem +857

    Admittedly, the Japanese school does make sense being on its own, since historically, Japan was a very isolated nation with little to no outside interaction. So its wizards would likely need to make their own school which I imagine would still be run today. Like Hogwarts, it would just be another small school compared to the rest. But that doesn't bode well for the rest of the world if we limit it to only 11 schools. So I do believe there is either many more schools that are equally small, or most of the world is home schooled or it is based on just local schools for Wizards in the immediate area.

    • @Scourgeoftengri
      @Scourgeoftengri Před rokem +74

      she didn't think of that probably

    • @HackerArmy03
      @HackerArmy03 Před rokem +20

      @@Scourgeoftengri Probably since she wrote a book made for kids whose story is centered around a kid named HARRY POTTER. So obviously she really wouldn't polish the world that much, as there is literally nothing to do or a way for them to be all involved in some way or another where a detailed background is needed.

    • @kjn3350
      @kjn3350 Před rokem +103

      You make perfect sense, but the problem the Japanese school produces is that if the Japanese have their own since it was isolated, then so should the Koreans, because they were similar, the Chinese because they did everything on their own, the Indians, because they were completely separate from the Chinese, the Greeks/Romans, the Mayans/Incans/Aztecs just to name a few who would surely have developed their own schools. The history of ancient nations is essentially the history of self-sufficiency and creating the idea that these are truly ancient institutions ruins each possible argument.

    • @nickstoneham5629
      @nickstoneham5629 Před rokem +25

      @@kjn3350 Thus, why I argue there are plenty more schools for this to be at all a functioning society with the knowledge we are given. Alternatively, there is the argument that it is useless to speculate about what the world is like outside of Hogwarts since it is just an isolated story about one young boy in the events of only one school, but I don't like that argument as it sounds far more fun to speculate lol.

    • @kjn3350
      @kjn3350 Před rokem +7

      @@nickstoneham5629 Yeah, I completely agree with you, I'm just saying I'm far more inclined to ignore what JK Rowling is saying than to try to say that there are other, smaller schools. It's a case where it's better off to overrule the author because it makes too little sense.

  • @michaelstowe2167
    @michaelstowe2167 Před 7 měsíci +34

    Harry Potter is an anomaly. It was the first novel that Rowling ever published, and it absolutely exploded. That never happens. J.K. Rowling was an amateur writer that got astronomically lucky. So yes, there's a lot of mistakes and inconsistencies. I try not to dwell too much on it and just enjoy it for what it is.

    • @zimniok7602
      @zimniok7602 Před 5 měsíci +8

      It's even weirder when you realise that book sucks

    • @killerkitten7534
      @killerkitten7534 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Tbh if JK just went on Twitter and said “yeah, the books have a lot of inaccuracies. That’s just what’s going to happen when you’re making a world this big, did my best but yeah certainly some errors here and there” most people wouldn’t have an issue.
      But it’s like she’s just incapable of admitting she isn’t perfect

  • @Dangthisdoinnumbers
    @Dangthisdoinnumbers Před 6 měsíci +11

    Can’t believe a Key and Peele skit put more thought into wizarding schools than Rowling.

  • @cynic2201
    @cynic2201 Před rokem +1628

    The one issue I take with this is that it assumes an identical wizard/general population ratio across the world.

    • @possiblehistory
      @possiblehistory  Před rokem +621

      Absolutely fair and totally agree, but there is no real way of verifying something like that so I had to go with my standardized version.
      I could/should have also been more precise in population calculations and have made many assumptions/estimates, but I didn't want to do hours of research for this extra video, as it would have taken the fun out of it for me and made it into a chore.

    • @ummdustry5718
      @ummdustry5718 Před rokem +406

      I mean, it is a bad assumption, but the alternative is saying "yeah australians just aren't very magical, sucks to be you" which I get the feeling wouldn't go down well.

    • @conansglasses2645
      @conansglasses2645 Před rokem +180

      Pretty sure it was confirmed somewhere that the muggle-wizard ratio IS actually consistent around the world in order to keep a semblance of balance ( which explains how some wizards pop up from non magical muggle families , while some other pure blood wizard families give birth to non magical squibs )

    • @myrddinemrys1332
      @myrddinemrys1332 Před rokem

      @@conansglasses2645 no, it's not. The US has less wizards than their European counterparts due to overly suspicious muggles and wizard criminals who hunted other wizards to give to muggles known as Scourers.

    • @josephleebob3828
      @josephleebob3828 Před rokem +6

      the hell does that mean does it mean like magic people and no magic people have too similliar ratio

  • @BoredChild5823
    @BoredChild5823 Před rokem +1248

    The name for the Russian wizard ing school actually comes from a movie made in USSR which is about a University called Koldovstvoretz, where they study magic. It’s actually shown to be more open to “muggles” (they’re not called that there), the movie is set during winter, before New Year, and ends during the night of New Year. It also has many iconic songs....
    long story short, Rowling just took an already “existing” “school” of magic in Russia that has alike laws of magic.

    • @TheDanishGuyReviews
      @TheDanishGuyReviews Před 8 měsíci +33

      What's the movie's name?

    • @user-sj5wz7tt9u
      @user-sj5wz7tt9u Před 8 měsíci +88

      I hope you're not talking about "Чародеи" because there is no mention of Koldovstvoretz. It's about a research institute called "НУИНУ" (a joke abbreviation) in a fictional town called Kitezhgrad. There were no other toponyms

    • @ribozyme2899
      @ribozyme2899 Před 8 měsíci +16

      ​@@user-sj5wz7tt9u If that's the case, why would you even suggest they're talking about that movie?

    • @LoisoPondohva
      @LoisoPondohva Před 8 měsíci +108

      ​@@ribozyme2899 because that's the movie the original commenter is remembering. There's a movie loosely based on novels by Strugatski's that is made in USSR, takes place on new year's Eve in a university of magic called NUINU.
      There isn't such a movie using the name Koldovstvorets.
      The word doesn't even make sense in Russian.

    • @ribozyme2899
      @ribozyme2899 Před 8 měsíci +24

      @@LoisoPondohva Hm, you are right, I've looked it up too now and I agree there are quite the similarities.
      Then yeah, I also think that OP probably just misremembered.

  • @Ulti47
    @Ulti47 Před měsícem +1

    I’m ngl, I love this video so much this is the fourth time I’ve come back to watch it since release. Please make similar to this in the future! Thanks!

  • @veejayroth
    @veejayroth Před 7 měsíci +6

    For historical reasons, the Czechs and the Poles would 100% be part of the Germanic school, despite the language difference.

  • @sanguinetales
    @sanguinetales Před rokem +164

    in my headcanon, the schools listed are only "Ministry approved" schools. Which means there could be dozens of unsanctioned secret society type schools. Also the percentage of wizards to humans is small enough that they really don't need 100s of schools per continent.

  • @arthurbriand2175
    @arthurbriand2175 Před rokem +723

    Don't forget for the Middle East that the schools must have been instituted in historically great civilisations as there is often a symbiosis with the muggles. So the two middle Eastern schools should be in Persia and Egypt. And the Latin school probably in the mediterranean to link with the great cities of the Mare Nostrum.

    • @iandavidvillaloboswong5180
      @iandavidvillaloboswong5180 Před rokem +11

      The elephant in the room should go to the U.S one

    • @dontreadmyprofilepic2124
      @dontreadmyprofilepic2124 Před rokem +3

      @@iandavidvillaloboswong5180 WDYM?

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před rokem +65

      @@iandavidvillaloboswong5180 I feel like a US school would be on the east coast, most likely split off from one of the european schools. So a british fork in Massachusetts or a French fork in Lousiana or Quebec. Maybe even a mesoamerican School that goes from Chile all the way up the coast to California.

    • @pelinalwhitestrake3367
      @pelinalwhitestrake3367 Před rokem +14

      Latin school might me in Rome.

    • @peterwindhorst5775
      @peterwindhorst5775 Před rokem

      @@pelinalwhitestrake3367 bet that is going to be a problem with the Vatican there and the fact that the inquisition was in full force up until 1811.

  • @noemiac
    @noemiac Před 8 měsíci +1

    Wow! The effort you put, the calculations you made and the research you did is incredible! I take my hat off!

  • @ID-107
    @ID-107 Před 8 měsíci +24

    I think historically it makes more sense to put the spanish school in the South America because of the spanish inquisition (didn't expect this one, did you?)

    • @chimeremnmaozioko17
      @chimeremnmaozioko17 Před 7 měsíci +1

      My thought exactly. Not because of the Spanish inquisition though. But when he added other Latin countries, i think it's best to remain in Europe.

    • @anvos658
      @anvos658 Před 7 měsíci

      Not really as Inquisition could do nothing when they go to some random place they thought a castle of heretic magic users was, but then they see nothing, since they have no way of seeing through illusion magic, and similar to Hogwarts they'd start remembering other things they forgot to do.

    • @trashAndNoStar
      @trashAndNoStar Před 6 měsíci

      _Nobody expects…_

    • @erwannthietart3602
      @erwannthietart3602 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Its largely possible that schools also moved like, Hogwart prides itself on its history but its entirely possible that there was a School in Rome then Paris then the New World depanding on where was the biggest concentration of population of the time (i say Paris because France historically had a much larger population density than the rest of Europe and it took a while for all of Spanish new world to be truly latinised)

  • @concept5631
    @concept5631 Před rokem +4499

    Considering Rowling named her only Asian character "Cho Chang," its not surprising she's this creatively bankrupt.
    Edit: Bigots are malding and seething.

    • @danitron4096
      @danitron4096 Před rokem +162

      You’re seriously calling th creator of Harry Potter creatively bankrupt? The entire wizarding world is irrelevant for the books

    • @iandavidvillaloboswong5180
      @iandavidvillaloboswong5180 Před rokem +923

      @@danitron4096 It is a creative world sure. But you have to abandon all logic to really be immersed in it, thats why its popular for children and loses its charm for adults that tend to analyze movies

    • @HappyBazinga
      @HappyBazinga Před rokem +43

      @@iandavidvillaloboswong5180 well you have to abbandon our worlds logic for a made up one, dont hate to hate. Yes she has dumb politics but you are just insulting her just cus its cool

    • @iandavidvillaloboswong5180
      @iandavidvillaloboswong5180 Před rokem +593

      @@HappyBazinga Dude children try to knock each other off from brooms 30 m in the air, a student unalived a teacher in his first year and a time travelling device is given to whoever has the best grades. Even fictional logic has its limits

    • @HappyBazinga
      @HappyBazinga Před rokem +64

      @@iandavidvillaloboswong5180 we have a sport where we punch each other til one passes out and the teacher was the reincarnation of basically hitler. If you have trouble with suspension of disbelief you should try watching onyl documentaries cus you must believe those.
      What fictional story do you like?

  • @IronAidan260
    @IronAidan260 Před rokem +345

    A good explanation I heard for this was that there were 11 Major schools around the world, kinda like the Russel Group of wizarding schools, then there are a bunch of smaller wizarding schools which allow smaller cultural groups to have their own wizarding school and for populations to kinda make sense. So for instance, Castelobruxo is the largest wizarding school in the South American continent, but places like Mexico and Central America have their own school, but with the option of sending their children to either ilvermorny or castelobruxo if they want their children to have a better education, or something

    • @KillerOrca
      @KillerOrca Před rokem +16

      Wizarding community colleges too o? Like, the University of Washington isn’t the only college in Washington for example but it’s the one people know of

    • @MrMysterio1302
      @MrMysterio1302 Před rokem +15

      That is the correct answer lorewise, she stated in this same article that the map was in that there are thousands of small schools, but the major ones are the 11 she named, not every kid gets to go to a major school in our world, actually, most do not, and I think it is just like that for the wizards in her world

  • @KatMBurkett
    @KatMBurkett Před 8 měsíci +3

    I think what's most plausible is that for many communities there is probably a master/apprenticeships or something like small trade schools/community college schools and the 11 mentioned are only the equivalent of Ivy league universities with a classist attitude toward the smaller learning institutions. Also some magic user communities might exist outside of the Wizarding world and have their own worlds/governments/education/economy systems outside of the one established in the books. I think the larger problem is the creator of the story has proven time and time again to have a surprisingly small imagination with out room for growth.

  • @SuperTrainStationH
    @SuperTrainStationH Před 6 měsíci +9

    I've been saying this for YEARS before it became "fashionable" to criticize Rowling's world, but I ALWAYS felt like her Wizarding World was like a water balloon, it holds water PERFECTLY, as long as you don't poke or prod at it even the slightest bit. It hold together precisely enough to tell the actual story she wanted to tell, its a masterfully assembled castle of cards, but its not designed to stand in the wind or have cards pulled from it.

    • @orirune3079
      @orirune3079 Před 6 měsíci +3

      I think it's one of those cases where she started writing a story without really thinking about the wider world too much, and then it became popular beyond anything she expected. And people started asking about the "wider world" of HP, and she didn't have good answers. She also has a tendency to just make stuff up that doesn't really make a lot of sense, which doesn't help her case.
      I remember reading the series as a kid and having the sense that the HP world was one in a long, slow decline, where Wizard numbers are decreasing each generation, their culture is stagnant, their government is bloated and overbearing, and the greatest wizards are all long in the past.

  • @Alexeiyeah
    @Alexeiyeah Před rokem +185

    Considering that Witchcastle (Castelobruxo translated) has a mayan temple design while in the middle of brazilian Amazonas, I would say that Europe having 3 to 4 schools on it's own while the rest almost nothing is pretty fitting.

    • @ThePaulodash
      @ThePaulodash Před rokem +89

      Every thing in castelobruxo feels wrong to me, first is a portuguese name, but it exist before the colonization, it has a mayan temple design but the mayan empire was further more to noth closer to mexico, i think it will be more fitting if it was an inca structure like the city of machu picchu and having a tupi guarani name.

    • @BarbbiiLucchii
      @BarbbiiLucchii Před rokem +16

      @@ThePaulodash oh i love this! i’m argentine and i was thinking about how i’d ‘fix’ the SA school situation - and your idea totally makes sense. to build off it more: maybe the original SA school was and still is in modern day perú (love the inca ruin idea), and teaches magic and spells based on a mixture of guaraní and some spanish (like, classes are in spanish, i mean the magic language itself). maybe there’s also another school that was opened by the spanish coloniser wizards (?) in monte video or buenos aires that was seen as a place to teach “civilised” latin-based magic. as far as modern day brazil and other countries go, though - the ‘inca’ school makes sense because it was an empire that stretched over multiple modern day countries, while idk if the native peoples of brazil, patagonia, and northern south america would have gathered together to learn magic in one school 🧐 so i could see a modern day brazilian school, while maybe also places in northern brazil keep the tradition of smaller, independent schools or apprenticeships. that would leave three main schools in SA: inca/spanish + guaraní/pre colonial school in perú, ‘civilised’/spanish + latin/colonial school in arg/uruguay, colonial/portuguese school in brazil, with the existence of smaller, native based ‘schools’ from before the colonial times scattered around.
      as far as central america goes, idk enough about their history and culture to say, past the fact that there would definitely have been some form of magical education within the mayan and aztec empires

    • @guigazalu
      @guigazalu Před rokem +9

      @@BarbbiiLucchii The Brazilian school could even have some floating buildings, to fit the aesthetic of modernism seen in our capital!

    • @KasumiRINA
      @KasumiRINA Před rokem +1

      Still better than the "fixed" neocolonial map where they arbitrarily had Yalta 2 and gave half of Europe to be enslaved by moscow, and either China or Japan puts the other into concentration camps. The original with russia in Ukraine together is horribly offensive (BTW, boycott Atomic Heart, all profits from it will bomb my house) but westerners thinking they can improve someone drawing lines on a map with a ruler by doing the same again is too realistic to be funny.

    • @gordogunso
      @gordogunso Před rokem

      Might I suggest looking up the real life stories of the Warlocks of Chiloé. They’re supposedly a mafia esque group of wizards who came into being after a legendary interaction with Basque navigator José de Moraleda y Montero and Huilliche machi Chillpila.
      The lore podcast episode 25 elaborates on the history of these wizards. Check it out!

  • @captainH023
    @captainH023 Před rokem +88

    Japan getting it's own school kinda make sense when you know that it's historically one of Harry Potter's biggest market and one of the few countries where the Fantastic Beasts movies hadn't completely crapped the bed commercially yet lol

    • @ChesireWaltz
      @ChesireWaltz Před rokem +27

      Fantastic Beasts imploding the way it did is depressing. I thought Newt was a BRILLIANT and fresh lead character, I wish it just followed him instead of all the drama shoe horned in. Given his job it could have taken us on adventures all over the magical world and instead we got dragged into bullshit that had already been touched on by the main series again -_-

    • @alexanderackerman3807
      @alexanderackerman3807 Před 9 měsíci +2

      I feel fantastic Beasts was a pretty good stand alone movie. It's the sequels that try and tie it into the larger world that ruin it for me

  • @harrissyed1603
    @harrissyed1603 Před 7 měsíci +3

    one of the headcanons that i find the most believable were that 1-10 number reflected muggle-born wizards and withces but since the last war the lack of children born to prior wizarding families and living muggle-borns decreased immensely and most kids don't actually go to a school and are taught by family.

  • @LoyalSage
    @LoyalSage Před 6 měsíci +4

    I could see all of the Romance language countries sharing a school if it had been around for a long time and used Latin as its language as a holdover from those days.
    Given how separate wizard culture is in Britain from muggle culture, it seems plausible they could continue using Latin as a second language, even when muggles around them stopped.
    It would also explain why so many spells are Latin-based, if Hogwarts was added to allow British wizards to avoid traveling to the Latin-speaking school, and the teachers there had been students of the other school (and thus new Latin spells).
    I could even sort of see non-Romance countries maybe sending kids off there anyway if they couldn’t afford to or didn’t feel the need to have a separate school.

  • @darken2417
    @darken2417 Před rokem +158

    Old Harry Potter lore was pretty straight forward but then changed over time.
    Originally it was fairly clear that the reason Wizards left the normal world is because of Witch hunts which were successful.
    So essentially that normal technology had outpaced the potency of magic.
    The Wizarding world was thus like a sanctuary for magic users and magical creatures and the reason why revealing its existence is forbidden is because it would threaten all of their lives.
    Voldemort being a magic supremacist and having followers makes more sense in this context, resentment toward normal humans for past grievances and for taking the world.
    But of course now magic has been buffed far too much that it makes little sense for why Wizards are hiding away although we could always just forget that the Fantastic Beasts series exists.

    • @akiraraiku
      @akiraraiku Před rokem +11

      Buffed in what way ? I'm still of the opinion that most long range fire arms and artillery are nigh uncounterable with magic.

    • @MementoMoriGrizzly
      @MementoMoriGrizzly Před rokem +9

      @@akiraraiku Imperio on important people is really powerful.

    • @baph0met
      @baph0met Před rokem +6

      @@MementoMoriGrizzly Well I guess we know why the world wars happened now

    • @Jotari
      @Jotari Před rokem +1

      @@akiraraiku That suitcase from the first movie is bonkers. And Newt, a highschool drop out, did that himself!? What's the point in having St Mungos and Under Ground ministries? The wizards can manipulate spacetime so effectively they can create their own planet!

  • @levongevorgyan6789
    @levongevorgyan6789 Před rokem +684

    If she ever gets to the Middle East School, I really think she should focus it in Iran. For one reason: the word Magic. It comes directly from the ancient Iranian Magi, the Zoroastrian Priests of the Medians and Persians. So Iran, being the source of the word magic and mages, the concept inspired by their priesthood, should have the oldest magic school in the world, formed by the ancient Median Empire to train its magically gifted children.
    And for a name: Atash Mazda, the Fire of Wisdom.

  • @matheusmartins2067
    @matheusmartins2067 Před 7 měsíci +7

    Fantastic video! Great analysis here, well done. By the way, the 'X' in Castelobruxo is pronounced as 'sh' (as in the word 'show', for example). Also, I would love to see how you would separate the world if you had more schools to place, like 15 or even 20

  • @charlietennent9794
    @charlietennent9794 Před 8 měsíci +5

    another possible population metric to consider is that in each year of Hogwarts, there are roughly 32-40 students. (Harry, Ron, Neville, Seamus, and Dean being the only *Named* Gryffindor boys and Hermione, Lavender, and Parvati being the only *Named* Gryffindor girls) multiply those numbers by 7 and you get 224-280 total students at Hogwarts. Do the same math in the video and you get roughly 2,723-3,349 Wizards educated at Hogwarts.

  • @litl1922
    @litl1922 Před rokem +220

    As a Korean I would not be happy going to a Japanese magic school, or even a regular Japanese school for that matter, and I can't think of any Korean parent(s) living in Korea who would happily send their child to Japan without any worries or concerns at all.

    • @MetalBansheeX
      @MetalBansheeX Před 8 měsíci +1

      Is that because of facing discrimination for being Korean? :o

    • @DropingOut
      @DropingOut Před 8 měsíci +68

      @@MetalBansheeX I think it chalks up to how Japan and Korea are notorious for not having good relation with each other due to their history, specifically 1910 to 1945 as Korea was ruled as part of Japan (forcibly).

    • @mirceazaharia2094
      @mirceazaharia2094 Před 8 měsíci +25

      >angry Japanese noises
      >angry Korean noises
      And that's how it would be year round. Maybe a few duels and prank wars going too far, and the occasional Romeo and Juliet thing.
      But yeah, as a Romanian, I would not be very stoked to go to school with fans of the Austro-Hungarian Empire or those that still support the horrid way the Allies treated my country after WW2.

    • @gabimferraz5212
      @gabimferraz5212 Před 8 měsíci +14

      literally, i could never send my kid to portugal or spain to sotudy just like that, absolutely not my kid is staying in brasil

    • @kouusa
      @kouusa Před 8 měsíci

      EXACTLY

  • @justas423
    @justas423 Před rokem +577

    Rowling really was just a Facebook Mom who accidentally got her Children's Book turned into a YA Novel Series and was suddenly forced to develop her world.

    • @red_calla_lily
      @red_calla_lily Před rokem +83

      Exactly. She wrote it for children - but the children refused to let go of her world and have become adults. And now these adults demand answers for the plot holes that are inherent in a children's book. Maybe it's more the fault of adults who refuse to grow up than of the creator of something meant for kids. They like Harry Potter because it reminds them of their cozy childhood but they end up bringing in the issues of adulthood into the world, corrupting it in the process.
      While I read Harry Potter, I played a Pokémon game for the first time. If I scrutinized the world of Pokémon the same way today, it would also fall apart in a second. But back then it was a blast.

    • @VonVikoGoat
      @VonVikoGoat Před rokem +66

      @@red_calla_lily i mean you can say its for children all you want but you can't deny is inappropriate. the books not only have a pro slavery message but they also have this character i think that is literally an antisemitic caricature

    • @I_love_dr_stone
      @I_love_dr_stone Před 9 měsíci +22

      ​@@red_calla_lilythe part about scrutinising the pokemon world in same way just isn't true. the pokemon world is a much more well developed world.

    • @oddsdenver9673
      @oddsdenver9673 Před 9 měsíci +23

      ​@@seventeenseventysix5589yeah books fitting in with my morals is pretty normal thing to want, yeah.

    • @hollowwoods7130
      @hollowwoods7130 Před 9 měsíci +33

      ​@@seventeenseventysix5589you're absolutely overreacting to that comment lmao. Being against a book literally being pro slavery is basic decency not moral high ground.

  • @gowzahr
    @gowzahr Před 7 měsíci +5

    With how oblivious Pureblood families (including the Weasleys) are to the Muggle World, I don't think that grouping students together from regions that are traditionally hostile to each other would be a big problem.

    • @me-vx4wi
      @me-vx4wi Před 6 měsíci +3

      Disagree. While I don't think it would really be a concern for pureblood students, it would absolutely be one for muggle-born students, and we don't have any reason to believe that any of the schools apart from Durmstrang wouldn't allow muggle-borns to attend. I suppose you could argue that they would lose any interest in muggle affairs once they learn they are a wizard, but I honestly wouldn't believe that for a second.

  • @aiiiia9971
    @aiiiia9971 Před 8 měsíci +7

    It would have been kind of fun to have a fic where they go over some of the ridiculous conditions that would exist in some of these schools as a result of the careless assembling of kids

    • @oskar5724
      @oskar5724 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Perfect material for a sketch show. Israeli kid’s first day in Tehran. North Korean kids flying across the DMV

  • @myfairytalelife3
    @myfairytalelife3 Před rokem +132

    Considering the fact that Draco almost ended up in Durmstrang, and that it's pretty common for parents to teach their own children magic instead of sending them to a Wizarding school I think it's safe to say that what matters is where the schools are and not where students come from.

  • @samuellickiss8463
    @samuellickiss8463 Před rokem +118

    I'm a teacher and the idea that 1000 students go to Hogwarts gives me a lot of sympathy for the teachers there. Snape, Flitwick, et al. are responsible for covering their subjects by themselves. I think that number of 1000 is absolute nonsense though as frankly it doesn't work with a timetable. Also, we know how many Gryffindor students are in Harry's year so it would be easy to extrapolate, and the number will be much less than 1000. Very few, if any, UK private schools (which is essentially what Hogwarts is) have that many students.

    • @Jotari
      @Jotari Před rokem +21

      It might functionally draw on the imagery of a private school, but it seems to be very much a public school for practical attendance matters. And 1,000 isn't that crazy a number. What is strange is your point about the number of teachers though. Having just one teacher for each subject would make for a very intense schedule. I went to a secondary school with only 600 or so students and even there each subject had at least three teachers.

    • @missgiroud97
      @missgiroud97 Před 8 měsíci +21

      ​@@Jotarithe problem is that there isnt 1000 students.
      They have between 4 and 5 for dorms of just one grade and gender. If we multiplicate that for the other gender, 4 houses and 7 years gives us less than 300.
      Harry and Ron share a room with Seamus, Dean y Neville. They dont mention any other one in their Gryffindor grade

    • @auliamate
      @auliamate Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@Jotari I live in Canada, and there are virtually 0 schools, for children who have not graduated high school/secondary school, that have 1000 students.

    • @msky_uwz7451
      @msky_uwz7451 Před 8 měsíci +3

      I just graduated a grammar school with almost 1000 students (930 to be exact). If I remember correctly we had roughly 80 teachers.

    • @Jotari
      @Jotari Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@auliamate You've phrased that strangely. Are you saying all high schools in Canada have more than 1000 students?

  • @void-creature
    @void-creature Před 7 měsíci +3

    Having the Latin countries join with the germanic ones to create a central Europe school makes more sense to me.
    Aside from language, these countries are all very cuturally compatible (comparativley).
    As a German myslef, I can say that doing excange programs with french schools is already incredibly common, so attending the same school would not be that complicated.

  • @Obi-Wan_Kenobi
    @Obi-Wan_Kenobi Před 8 měsíci +7

    8:53 Live footage of European rationale when creating Middle Eastern countries after WWI.

  • @All-ze9cl
    @All-ze9cl Před rokem +250

    I bet JK Rowling sat down one day, pulled up google translate and a map online, and slapped them on a map. She didn't even look for language barriers, lmao

    • @haldalas
      @haldalas Před rokem +32

      This is 100% what happened.
      And honestly I’m surprised she even bothered doing that. She should have just taken her money and dipped out years ago

    • @All-ze9cl
      @All-ze9cl Před rokem +12

      @@haldalas fr, we did not need this. This is so disrespectful and pointless. Can she please leave the series alone? I want to actually enjoy the re reads without thinking about all the other shit shes done.

    • @BurningQuestion
      @BurningQuestion Před rokem +1

      I'm glad she's just having fun without overstressing about what others think. XD

    • @jak1165
      @jak1165 Před rokem +19

      This is probably the most British thing ever, honestly lol

    • @Reydriel
      @Reydriel Před rokem

      @@jak1165 LMFAO

  • @nakenmil
    @nakenmil Před rokem +297

    One thing I think you could say in the "Wizarding World's" favor (and bear in mind I am not really a too knowledgeable about HP stuff) is that many of the wizarding communities are a lot older than the modern states or even ethnic groups in their regions. Wasn't Hogwarts founded in the high middle ages? That's long before a unified Britain as a thing, before England and Scotland unified. I kinda assume that some of this is true for other regions as well, especially Eurasian ones (Ilvermorny still comes off as an obvious construct of colonialism), and at least partially, the wizarding communities might exist as separate cultures less affected by mainstream divides. Maybe the MENA school PREDATES the split of Islam? Or hell, maybe it predates Islam itself. Maybe the South Asian or SEA school is so old it effectively has its own internal philosophy that's neither completely hindu or buddhist? Drumstrang being a central-northern European school kinda implies it predates the Reformation and maybe even arose alongside the early state formation in the region, so it might be as old as 800-1000 AD or something. That's long before most of the ethnic groups and countries that exist today were even conceived of.
    I know most of this is nonsense, I'm just trying to have some fun with it, and I kinda like the idea of the Wizarding world have cOMPLETELY different ways of viewing the world, even if the Anglocentrism of the actual books is very clear and implies a fairly conventional worldview (ie. a British ministry, an American thing, etc. etc.)

    • @Jotari
      @Jotari Před rokem +56

      That makes sense for pureblood only schools, but the existence of muggle borns and even half bloods with muggle parents means the modern world is effectively going to seep in. Unless the wizards are just very effective at propaganda wiping away all of their original culture. After all, the original series does take place in the early 90s and we see zero tension between Seamus and any of the students over the ongoing Northern Ireland conflict known as the Troubles.

    • @CrystalLily1302
      @CrystalLily1302 Před 8 měsíci +15

      also rowling confirmed that castelbruxo existed since the year 400CE ish I think but it's a portugese speaking school.....

    • @lucciqs
      @lucciqs Před 8 měsíci

      this makes sense!

    • @bibbr4137
      @bibbr4137 Před 8 měsíci +17

      ​@@Jotarimost wizards canonically do not give af about muggle culture. if a pureblood saw a chinese and korean fighting, that'd just be funny to them. pureblood supremacists would completely destroy whatever preexisting cultural differences were in modern muggles.

    • @gustavolopes5094
      @gustavolopes5094 Před 8 měsíci +2

      ​@@CrystalLily1302That is dumb in so many different levels I'm chocked to even hear it. But I don't doubt it for a second.

  • @urnad12345
    @urnad12345 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Most wizards are homeschooled. The named wizarding schools are merely the ones which are joined together under an international confederation. Other schools exist but aren’t regulated by this confederation and are often much smaller and less prestigious.
    Plus other institutions are said to exist which provide education in some specific field, like broom flying.
    I guess it would be more comparable to Ivy League schools being apart of a collegiate

  • @leo-paulgrain3832
    @leo-paulgrain3832 Před 8 měsíci +1

    You work on the assumption that every wizard kid go to a wizard school similar to Hogwharts, but it is not necessarily the case. We could assume that a large portion of wizard of the world are homeschooling. We could also assume that in certain country / part of the world they traditionally have a lot of very small school, too small to be counted as such. Like only 1 or 2 teachers for 20-30 student. It would explain why there is only one big school in certain large areas.
    We should not assume that the entirety of the wizards world follow the same exact education model than England

  • @lindseylorio6153
    @lindseylorio6153 Před rokem +154

    The cannon of the Wizarding World tends to fall once you leave Britain, and I think this is as good as any other attempt to try to make it believable. As a hard core Harry Potter fan, my personal head canon is that 11 schools exist, but most magical children never have access to a magical school. They would practice magic differently than the British and Americans most likely, and each culture would have their own ways of handling magical education. Some cultures may even consider it better for children to be educated with muggles if their magical community isn’t large enough in their area to be self sufficient.

    • @snakewithapen5489
      @snakewithapen5489 Před 8 měsíci +21

      Like learning languages. People who learn a language in an academic setting in one country may be able to speak it with proper grammar, but it will always be fundamentally different to the way kids grow up speaking the language natively in small towns on the opposite side of the world, and communication between the two might be difficult. There's probably a significant difference between the school-taught way to use magic, and the vernacular way magic is commonly used by kids without access to a school.

    • @andmos1001
      @andmos1001 Před 8 měsíci +4

      In the game, we actually get to know that the African school is the largest and oldest school of magic, and their main study is natural magic

  • @johannes4123
    @johannes4123 Před rokem +90

    I tried to make a wizarding school map that made sense (relatively speaking), I ran into two major problems
    1. Grouping cultures together in a functional way is hard
    2. I ran low on visually distinct colors surprisingly quickly (I didn't run out of colors, but I'm not bothering making a distinction between golden yellow and honey yellow)

  • @levigoodrich5276
    @levigoodrich5276 Před 8 měsíci +4

    An interesting way to make these schools make sense is if she used it to parallel historical colonialism, that different places throughout the world had their own forms of magic and ways of teaching magic, but when europe came around they started repressing knowledge of folk magic and forcing young witches and wizards of other nationalities to go and have a “proper wizarding education” but that can’t really work because according to her lots of these schools were already in use for centuries before colonialism, which is a good thing but if that was the case then they wouldn’t pull from several language areas

    • @levigoodrich5276
      @levigoodrich5276 Před 8 měsíci

      TLDR: have the history of the schools be a reflection of real world history

  • @neoshenlong
    @neoshenlong Před 6 měsíci +2

    The way I see it these could be the officially recognized schools, but not the only one. Places like latín América with huge Spanish speaking populations would likely try to form their own school separated from Spain, and this could lead to some interesting world building avenues. Or maybe in some of the most culturally diverse and conflicted parts of the world like the middle east, the official schools would be preferred by a few (maybe even dominated by a single culture) while most wizards actually go to different not recognized schools that are better catered towards their own culture.

  • @nathishvel5725
    @nathishvel5725 Před 8 měsíci +115

    As a spatial science student, I think this was a very good exercise in GIS, that is, making strategic decisions on where to allocate schools with several datasets (e.g population size, ethnicity, travel distance etc), and using a map to display that information. Just an excellent way to start my school week!

  • @eamonreidy9534
    @eamonreidy9534 Před rokem +404

    Jk clearly never envisaged world building at this level. She wrote a book or two, it became bigger than she ever could have imagined and then she had to cover plot issues and world building issues.

    • @greenamber9827
      @greenamber9827 Před rokem +65

      It's evident that Harry Potter wasn't meant to be the start of an extended universe.

    • @eamonreidy9534
      @eamonreidy9534 Před rokem +46

      @@greenamber9827 in a world of flying cars, brooms, magic chimney travel, apparition, and anything else conceivable, kids get in a regular train in London to go to school in Scotland. None of it makes sense.

    • @greenamber9827
      @greenamber9827 Před rokem +8

      @@eamonreidy9534 I'm not saying Harry Potter doesn't make sense, but that it was meant to just be a series of seven books.

    • @mrcephalopod
      @mrcephalopod Před rokem +39

      Rowling is a very vivid world-builder, but by God is she an inconsistent one. She can't even keep things straight across her 7 books, where the hell was priori incantatem and veritaserum in the trial of sirius black?

    • @ConfusedRambutan
      @ConfusedRambutan Před rokem +43

      i feel like a good description of her world-building is "all aesthetics, not much substance"

  • @juliebbb6031
    @juliebbb6031 Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you for addressing this issue. It has been bothering me for a long time. You forgot the cannon also has a separate school in France. It is ridiculous.

  • @mikedangerdoes
    @mikedangerdoes Před 7 měsíci +1

    I'm so jealous of writers who can be so blaise with certain aspects of their world building. I cannot write a sentence without knowing the exact percentage of people engaged in whatever magical activities are in my writing, and how they effects the economy, and where do they all live, and who is feeding them, and this and that and and and....

  • @simongosimon
    @simongosimon Před rokem +83

    When I went to music school in Denmark where I live, we were visited by a band that was a fusion between Scandinavian jazz and west African folk music, specifically Gambian I think.
    The way they described studying music in Gambia was that the school was essentially the estate of a family of musicians, who they then lived, worked and played music with.
    I feel like I can imagine a similar situation regarding the study of magic, considering how relatively few actual magicians there are, and how its kinda weird that the entire world is supposed to use the same model of British boarding school, if you really think about it

  • @thegreatestoctopus9739
    @thegreatestoctopus9739 Před rokem +153

    My question is, were there any global conflicts and if they were, how did they go down with all the magic happening. It will be extremely interesting for you to make a video about that

    • @robland3253
      @robland3253 Před rokem

      WW2 had hitler & Grimwald marching around killing people, Great leap forward, cultural revolution, and Chinese civil war would have killed a lot of Chinese wizards

    • @Astro_Guy_1
      @Astro_Guy_1 Před rokem +47

      Fantastic Beasts did pretty much confirm that there were Magic-Nazis and a Magic Hitler. With German wizards fervently supporting him.
      I chock that up to lazy writing though.

    • @justaponyyy
      @justaponyyy Před rokem +5

      agree it sounds very lazy

    • @RenegadeShepard69
      @RenegadeShepard69 Před rokem +15

      It's what I was asking myself about in another comment thread. Basically a Wakanda situation, where were those african wizards when their continent was getting torn apart? I guess it would need her to elaborate on internal tribal warfare between wizards who are more preoccupied with the magic world than the muggle world, or/and isolationism, with wizards not wanting to and not having resources to fight off colonizing wizards. Lol the more you think of this stuff the less magical it sounds and honestly, the story should just be as much about a lonely orphan with a funny scar as possible, it's not LOTR, the worldbuilding is around the characters not otherwise. Still, it'd be better to have most german wizards turning their backs to their muggle counterparts, or even being persecuted, during the third reich than nazi witches, sounds too op to me lol.

    • @comradewindowsill4253
      @comradewindowsill4253 Před rokem +14

      @@RenegadeShepard69 I mean, I was mostly surprised that she went with nazi wizards and DIDN'T go for the obvious opening of the Ahnenerbe, a division of the SS dedicated to supernatural phenomena and artifacts- basically, the guys Indiana Jones was up against. I could see it working- in fact, other magic realist works have made that connection, for example the Rivers of London series, but the way she did it was so ham-fisted and obviously lacking in any actual effort to connect the two factions properly, or do even a bare minimum of historical research.

  • @DavidSmithsTardis
    @DavidSmithsTardis Před 8 měsíci +1

    Man i just love PH...
    The youtube Channel.