I don’t know about you guys, but I am super excited to catch the new Harry 
Potter movie! While critics of the series often complain that Rowling didn’t 
come up with most of the magical aspects of the story herself, they seem to be 
missing the point: rather than creating an alternate world where magic is real 
and wild beasts roam the countryside, she created a mythology that allows these 
fantasy elements to exist in our world, just out of sight of ordinary muggles 
like ourselves. To create this goal, it actually makes sense that she would use 
mythologies of cultures from around the world, as it allows the mythologies to 
work with the stories –muggles have seen dragons and unicorns in the past, but 
the wizarding community has hidden these things so well in the last centuries 
that muggles now accept them to be nothing more than stories.

To create this world within our world, Rowling had to do a lot of research into 
an array of mythologies and stories from all over the globe. She once 
explained, “children know that I didn’t invent unicorns, but I’ve had to 
explain frequently that I didn’t actually invent hippogriffs.” So what are some 
of the mythologies incorporated into her stories? Lets take a look, starting 
with those hippogriffs.

Hippogriffs:



Image via Ben Dodson [Flickr]

Fans of the series are undoubtedly familiar with Buckbeak, the hippogriff that 
Harry and Hermoine saved from execution, but as Rowling pointed out, many 
people don’t realize that hippogriffs have been around much longer than the 
book series. The creatures entered the public consciousness in medieval times, 
where they were said to be a cross between a griffin and a horse. The cross 
breed creature was said to be even stronger, faster and more intelligent than 
either of its parents and could travel as fast as lightening. Fortunately, they 
were said to be much easier to tame than griffins, which is why Buckbeak was so 
willing to be ridden in the novels.

Hippogriffs were exceptionally rare beasts, largely because griffins considered 
horses to be food. In fact, the concept was considered to be so outlandish that 
“to mate griffins with horses” was a similar expression to “when pigs fly.” For 
this reason, hippogriffs were considered a symbol not only of impossibility, 
but of intense love.

Grindylows:

Grindylows were one of the many dark creatures Harry had to face during his 
competition in the Triwizard Tournament. The nasty little creatures are known 
to live in the bottom of Hogwarts Lake and try to pull anyone who comes into 
their territory down to the bottom of the lake.

These creatures originally started being talked about in the English counties 
of Yorkshire and Lancashire, but their myth spread throughout England and 
Ireland, where they were used to scare children from pools, marshes and ponds 
in order to prevent drowning. Stories said that if a child came too close to 
the edge, the grindylows would grab them and pull them down to the water’s 
darkest depths.

Basilisks:



Image via Giovanni Dall’Orto [Wikipedia]

The basilisk that almost took down Harry Potter in the Chamber of Secrets was 
monstrously large, stretching almost 50 feet, and at least 50 years old. 
Rowling credits the creation of the basilisk to Herpo the Foul, who hatched a 
chicken egg under a toad.

Classic tales of basilisks vary quite a bit from those of the Harry Potter 
universe. While both of the creatures can kill with a single glance and are 
exceptionally poisonous, Rowling’s 50 foot serpent is quite a bit larger than 
traditional basilisks, which were no more than five feet long (although they 
seemed to get longer as the stories aged). Notably, the creation of a basilisk 
in classic stories is through a rooster hatching a toad egg, if a toad hatched 
a chicken egg, a cockatrice (a similar creature with wings) would be born.

Boggarts:

Rowling’s boggarts are entirely different from the boggarts of mythology. While 
Harry Potter’s boggarts are quiet terrifying, taking on the form of the 
victim’s worst fear, folklore tells of boggarts being more troublemaker than 
fearmonger. English tales of boggarts describe them as stealing things around 
the house, souring milk, ripping bedsheets from sleeping victims and tugging on 
people’s ears. It’s hardly the terrifying image of boggarts that require the 
“riddikulus” spell to conquer.

Dementors:



Image via San Diego Shooter [Flickr]

While Rawling claims to have had no inspiration from J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord Of 
The Rings, it seems unlikely given certain similarities between the two epic 
tales. The Forbidden Forrest’s giant spider, Aragog, has a very similar 
personality to the spider of the Ephel Dúath Mountains, Shelob. Lord Sauron and 
Lord Voldemort also have quite a bit in common, to the extent that many 
characters of both stories refuse to use their name and are occasionally 
referred to as “The Dark Lord.” While the horcrux’s themselves are largely 
different than anything seen in Lord of the Rings, it is notable how the locket 
used as a horcrux is similar to the One Ring as it makes the wearer behave in a 
negative fashion.

One the most notable creature similarities is the way the dementors seem so 
similar to the Nazgul. Both are tall, thin hooded figures with faces that 
generally cannot be seen. Aside from their terrifying appearances, both of the 
creatures are said to affect those in contact with them by making them feel 
cold and scared. Prolonged contact with either creature can even result in 
unconsciousness filled with abhorrent nightmares.

Horcruxes:

Lord Voldemort has split his soul into seven parts with the use of horcruxes in 
an attempt to become immortal. Each fraction of his soul is held in a different 
magical item and the items must all be destroyed before he can die. This 
concept of immortality via the storage of the soul in an inanimate object is 
not Rowling’s, but a concept that originated in Slavic mythology in the tale of 
Koscei the Deathless.

Koscei evades death by trapping his soul in the eye of a magical needle, which 
is inside of an egg, inside of a duck, inside a hare, inside an iron chest 
buried under a great oak tree, on the magical island of Buyan. While Koscei 
does not have seven different horcruxes to protect his soul, the idea is that 
if the chest is ever opened, the hare will run away. If the hare is killed, the 
duck will try to fly away. If someone gets their hand on the egg though, they 
control Koschei and if they break the egg or the needle, he will die.

Liches:



Image via Wikipedia

Similarly, liches are sometimes said to be magicians who use spells to attach 
their soul to an object. After they die, they will continue to live as corpses 
until the object is destroyed. In many stories, they also have armies of slaves 
and servants similar to the Dark Lord. The fact that Voldemort doesn’t look 
entirely human indicates that he may be a lich.

The Philosopher’s Stone:

The first novel of the series was released as Harry Potter and the 
Philosopher’s Stone. But when the book was set to be released in America, 
Rowling was asked to change the title and all references to the stone to the 
“Sorcerer’s Stone” because publishers worried American children wouldn’t want 
to read a book with the word “Philosopher” in the title. Unfortunately, 
changing this word didn’t just affect the book title, it also made the novel 
lose the connection between a legendary part of alchemy and the Harry Potter 
book.



Many readers don’t realize that the philosopher’s stone and its creator 
Nicholas Flamel (also mentioned in the book) are not just figments of Rowling’s 
imagination. The stone is said to be able to turn metals into gold and silver 
and to help create an elixir of life that could keep someone alive forever. 
Even Sir Isaac Newton tried to uncover the secret to creating the stone during 
his lifetime.

Flamel’s actual biography is questionable. He died in the 1400’s, but it wasn’t 
until the 1600’s that a book was published connecting him to the philosopher’s 
stone and other alchemy-related quests. He was known to be a manuscript-seller 
and his posthumous biography claimed this is where he had run across a 
mysterious 21-page book that he was told was a copy of the original Book of 
Abraham the Mage. Stories say that he and his wife then worked to translate the 
book, which taught them how to make the Philosopher’s stone. While some critics 
doubt that this story, there is little doubt that Flamel has some interest in 
alchemy, as he designed his own tombstone, which was adorned with alchemical 
signs and symbols.

While Flamel and his wife both lived into their eighties, many stories claim 
they are still alive thanks to the stone. In Harry Potter, the couple survived 
until the 1990s, living over 600 years.

Are you a fan of Harry Potter? Are you going to see the film when it comes out?

Sources: Wikipedia #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6, #7, #8, #9, #10, #11 (And of course, 
the books themselves)



http://www.neatorama.com/2010/11/10/the-mythologies-behind-harry-potter/



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