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The Origins of Wizardkind (+How They Compare to Humans) - Harry Potter Explained 

Harry Potter Theory
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Hey everyone,
Welcome to another installment of Harry Potter Theory. In this video, we’re going to be discussing both wizardkind and humankind- with the former of course being a subset of the latter. First, we’ll be taking a look at the history of humankind and the first instances of witch/wizards, and then we will be taking a look at the physiological differences between a regular human and a magical being.
While the original ancestors of humans were thought to have first existed about 6 million years ago- the more modern form of humans, the ones that we’re accustomed to, have only been around for 200,000 years or so. The first link to humanity began with a primate group called Ardipithecus- a group based out of Africa that were revolutionary in that they were the first group to begin the path of walking upright, as we do now.
As you can see, as time passed, these pre-humans developed more and more of the traits that we see in more modern day humans. However, It wasn’t until just over 2 million years ago that the Homo Group- the group which contains our own species - Homo Sapiens, first arose. The Homo group can be most notably distinguished from the other groups by their bigger brains, tool-making, and ability to expand their territory- reaching far beyond the confines of Africa. Homo Sapiens, which WE ARE, didn’t pop up until 200,000 years ago, and were particularly resilient in that they were able to survive and thrive despite climate change. Over the course of the last 200,000 years, humans have continued to develop, evolve, and adapt- and I think that wizardkind, which is course a subset of humankind and not an entirely different species altogether, is just another one of these natural developments - achieving, in some ways, a newer and more advanced form of humanity. But, when did wizardkind enter the mix? At what point in history did witches and wizards first come to prominence- or show signs of life?
Unfortunately, In the Harry Potter universe at least, the origins of wizardkind are unknown, or undefined. HOWEVER, we do have some information about the first witches/wizards to have appeared in certain parts of the world. The first known member of wizardkind to exist in Europe was a witch named Cliodna who first presided there sometime in the middle ages.
She was an animagus with the ability to turn into a sea bird, and she actually has her own chocolate frog card. While the middle ages were a long long time ago, the period between the 5th and 15th century, I would have still expected the first member of European wizardkind to have popped up much sooner. However, while Cliodna was the first to appear in Europe, there is one known wizard that lived much sooner than her in another part of the world. The first known wizard, across all continents, was a wizard by the name of Jajamanekh who hailed from Egypt as far back as 2600 BC. There is little to no information available of Jajamanekh, other than where he was from and the period in which he lived, but I do wonder if wizardkind went back further than that, or if he was truly the first.
The origins of magic are still unclear to this day. No one knows whether the inception of wizardkind was born from humans randomly discovering their magical abilities - or if it was created in some form - by way of pact, ritual, or potion. I find the first theory more intriguing, however, as it aligns with the concept of muggle-borns and how they would first develop their magical abilities. So, the first known magical being didn’t appear until 2600 BC- however, members of wizardkind are of course a kind of subspecies of human- meaning they possess many of the same physical characteristics. However, in subtle, perhaps non-visual ways, they also differ physiologically to some extent. One of the largest ways that wizardkind differs from humankind is life expectancy. According to a figure reported by the ministry of Divine Health, the average wizarding life expectancy was reported at an average of 137 ¾ years old- whether that’s down to purely their physiology is up for us to decide- but they do live considerably longer than their human counterparts.
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27 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 823   
@shadowlynx1958
@shadowlynx1958 4 года назад
My personal theory is that those with magical abilities co-existed with non-magical humans throughout most of human history. They were the shamans, the seers, the priests and priestesses, the magi, the wise women and men, the astrologers, the alchemists, and so forth. During the middle ages, however, those with magical abilities (that weren't certified as saints in a particular religion) came to be associated with evil. I think it was during that time that the Wizarding World developed as a place lying alongside "normal" reality. It was a safe haven for those magical humans and a place where they could study magic and practice their magical abilities.
@armedwithwings3953
@armedwithwings3953 3 года назад
Good haha
@drjohndee4322
@drjohndee4322 3 года назад
That make a lot of since. You should post it on pottermore
@lancewalker2595
@lancewalker2595 3 года назад
Magical humans cannot be a sub-species of human, individuals do not evolve, and non-magical parents can produce magical offspring; the manner in which magic manifests in Rowling's world implies the existence of a divine being, the existence of a God (or gods) is quite literally the only rational explanation as to why non-magical parents can produce magical children. And before anyone suggests that the reason for this is due to magic being a recessive gene, I'm pretty darn sure MAGIC would be one of those genes that would be highly selected for; the fact that magical humans exist as a minority of the world's human population makes literally ZERO evolutionary sense as to be plainly absurd... unless the phenomenon is not a manifestation of the material world at all, instead being a result of something supernatural.
@doolallyshake64
@doolallyshake64 3 года назад
Would also explain why their technology is so ridiculously shite. I always laugh at the whole pure blood over muggles thing considering these people haven't learnt anything about science or advanced technology in any way.
@Despotic_Waffle
@Despotic_Waffle 3 года назад
@@doolallyshake64 That's probably a cultural thing with the British wizards. If you read some Fantastic beast and where to find them lore, it's implied that the wizards used to live alongside muggles, but then got persecuted in europe. Thats why the pure blood vs muggle thing is deeper than that. They even tried asking the british monarchy for protection but failed. This is what lead to wizards secluding themselves and signing an international charter of secrecy. Grindlewald, like Voldemort, hated muggles and lead wozard revolutions killing muggles and aimed to conquer the muggle world with wizards as the leaders. Voldemort did the same wanted to get rid of muggle born wizards and keep the wizarding world 'pure', both basically became wizard nazis. But in terms of technology, if you look at the American wizards in Fantastic beasts, they used most of the technology of the 1920s but modified with magic. Magical typewriters, magical elevators etc. So it can be assumed that the rejection of muggle technology may be a British or European thing. Also the fact that European culture likes to cling to the past, they are proud of their thousands year old cultures, and canonically the wizards are the same, even the houses of Hogwarts are hundreds of years old. Another explanation in the lag in technology can be attributed to they just didn't need it, they had magic to fulfill their needs. The muggle world only catched up to them recently.
@MindForgedManacle
@MindForgedManacle 4 года назад
The first European wizard can't be from the Middle Ages, the Ollivanders had been selling wands since 300 BC right?
@blupinkyellogreen
@blupinkyellogreen 4 года назад
LOLOLOLOL Oops seems he forgot bout that teensie winsie little detail
@matthewneubeck4421
@matthewneubeck4421 4 года назад
And Hurpo The Fowl lived in Ancient Greece
@12jswilson
@12jswilson 4 года назад
Cicero is canonically a wizard too, I believe
@Jakobman76
@Jakobman76 4 года назад
The don't necessarily have to have been selling wands in England the entire time.
@MindForgedManacle
@MindForgedManacle 4 года назад
@@GordieKat I didn't say British, I said European. Italy still be there 👀
@InquisitorXarius
@InquisitorXarius 4 года назад
Also, I must add that there are people who are born as legilimancers. As Queenie Goldstein is an excellent example because we know that she doesn’t cast a spell to do it, unlike Snape, Dumbledore, and Voldemort, she just hears the thoughts of others around her. She has to concentrate; otherwise, she will get overwhelmed by hearing the thoughts of everyone around her.
@MMD_16-95
@MMD_16-95 4 года назад
JKR said Snape have a slight natural Legilimancers
@NagatoUzu
@NagatoUzu 4 года назад
@@MMD_16-95 He's more gifted with occulomency, which is why he was able to trick Voldemort and never be found out. It Narcissa Malfoy was probably also gifted with natural occulomency as well.
@MMD_16-95
@MMD_16-95 4 года назад
Kimaris JKR her self said he is slightly naturally legilimancers .
@NagatoUzu
@NagatoUzu 3 года назад
@@MMD_16-95 yeah I know, I'm just saying that he has to be especially gifted with occulomency to be able to fool voldemort and not let him in his head, or to only allow him to see what he wants voldemort to see.
@Arterexius
@Arterexius 3 года назад
Occlumency* As Oculus is latin for "eye"
@carry3476
@carry3476 4 года назад
when I pay attention to magical history than my own history
@The.Panda-02
@The.Panda-02 4 года назад
Meh tooo
@eoghantheuntamed9613
@eoghantheuntamed9613 4 года назад
Same 😂
@Rachel31509
@Rachel31509 4 года назад
Lol
@ChefAlvaro1
@ChefAlvaro1 4 года назад
yeap same!!!!😁😁😁🤣🤣🤣🤣
@ryneprince7113
@ryneprince7113 4 года назад
More*
@cm221b
@cm221b 4 года назад
Remember how Harry had a piece of Voldemort in him? Well, Trelawney predicted Harry’s birthday to be in Midwinter, which was incorrect as Potter was born in July. She described him as dark-haired, mean stature, and having terrible losses early in life. All of those things apply to Voldemort. Trelawney could sense the Voldemort inside Harry.
@number1clownontheinternet
@number1clownontheinternet 4 года назад
It just shows how much thought J.K Rowling put into Harry potter
@chubby_deity3143
@chubby_deity3143 4 года назад
Where was this? I thought the prophecy names the 7th month?
@number1clownontheinternet
@number1clownontheinternet 4 года назад
@@chubby_deity3143 back in the third or fourth book, this was outside the prophecy. I remember laughing at Trelawny being so dumb
@chubby_deity3143
@chubby_deity3143 4 года назад
@@number1clownontheinternet Can you give a little more context? I have 0 recollection of this. When in the story is this? I'm not trying to correct, just trying to understand.
@mkjeuring
@mkjeuring 4 года назад
@@chubby_deity3143 it's in the third book during a divination lesson
@And-lj5gb
@And-lj5gb 4 года назад
2:54 - I'm very confused by this. Olivanders were selling their wands since 382 B.C. and we know of Herpo the Foul who lived in ANCIENT Greece so how is the first known member of the wizardkind in Europe from the Middle Ages?
@savannahbutler5973
@savannahbutler5973 4 года назад
He means recorded. Like with actually names.
@JenksAnro
@JenksAnro 4 года назад
Yeah I was thinking this too, there must have been witches and wizards way back in time, Herpo being a good example. I guess the actual historical references to magic we have are probably examples of past magic users in the harry potter lore.
@Al-ir6vb
@Al-ir6vb 4 года назад
Ancient Greece could refer to a time before 382 BC... The classical period of Greece is between 510 and 323 BC.
@Alastair.S
@Alastair.S 4 года назад
@@savannahbutler5973 Yeah, Herpo the Foul, Who lived in Ancient Greece which was way before the Middle ages.
@em7lycan
@em7lycan 4 года назад
He must be referring to the actual real history and not to the world of Harry Potter wizarding history. Just saying.
@cv2633
@cv2633 4 года назад
I still like to believe that Gandalf started it all
@devjyotidutta898
@devjyotidutta898 4 года назад
Rather eru iluvatar
@arthemis1039
@arthemis1039 4 года назад
Man, you have got a very good point. In Tolkien's lore, modern day Earth is just another age after the ones we see in LOTR. So in the world of Tolkien, wizards could exist nowadays
@thewickedbihoftheeast
@thewickedbihoftheeast 4 года назад
@@arthemis1039 not really. Gandalf was a Maia. The Maiar are more like angels, not wizards.
@prathmeshandani5231
@prathmeshandani5231 4 года назад
@@arthemis1039 True
@MattiMCFC
@MattiMCFC 4 года назад
Naebulys Damn, I didn’t know! Thanks
@kaimagnus5760
@kaimagnus5760 4 года назад
Consisering that magical children can be born to non magical families i'd argue that Magic started as a spontanious genetic mutation. This would also explain squibs as they would simply lack the mutation.
@dranzergigs8333
@dranzergigs8333 3 года назад
No it's bcoz in either of the parents magical Gene was dormant and it became active in children.
@nezuko-chan4553
@nezuko-chan4553 3 года назад
@@dranzergigs8333 but some pure blood family’s have squib kids
@haydenscholze7452
@haydenscholze7452 3 года назад
@@nezuko-chan4553 bro biology is extremely complex won’t go into detail but it possible that squibs have the recessive gene when compared to wizards/witch’s making them muggle but still contain the gene for magic but it is in a no active state and there children for example activated it for whatever reason making them muggle born but are wizards/witches ,this as simple as I can make it
@labaccident2010
@labaccident2010 2 года назад
@@haydenscholze7452 This would potentially explain why Squibs can SEE magic, they simply can’t perform it.
@haydenscholze7452
@haydenscholze7452 2 года назад
@@labaccident2010 Yes it possible that they have innate magic like wizards, but can’t control it. Thus they are magical in a very limited sense.
@chubbyninja842
@chubbyninja842 4 года назад
You forgot about Flitwick, who is half-goblin, and Hagred, who is half-giant. And if that is possible, I would imagine half-elf would also be possible. Seeing as house elves are good at wandless magic, I would suspect a half-house elf would have some really boss abilities.
@edward-ft3qm
@edward-ft3qm 4 года назад
Wasn’t credence’s maid or whatever that got killed a half-elf? Might be remembering wrong
@TheTiredBard
@TheTiredBard 4 года назад
@@edward-ft3qm Yes. Her name was Irma
@puspalatapani2152
@puspalatapani2152 3 года назад
There is a half-elf in Fantastic beasts and where to find them.
@dreadfulspiller8766
@dreadfulspiller8766 3 года назад
What are the details of a small wizard falling in love with a twenty foot giant and how did they mate? Did he shrink her or was Hagrid's dad just a freak?
@Quaronna
@Quaronna 3 года назад
*HAGRID
@uh_dafuq
@uh_dafuq 4 года назад
Video idea: how did the marauders make the marauders map
@kmezinjo3719
@kmezinjo3719 4 года назад
theres a lot of videos ab that
@kmezinjo3719
@kmezinjo3719 4 года назад
@@ashwinsmagicandcardistry im just a memorie, its 21st century, even wizards have phones
@Sciguy95
@Sciguy95 4 года назад
@@kmezinjo3719 and phones have taken the place of wands, now there are special apps that can change the properties of the wand and add special effects to the magic depending on what you need at the time.
@uh_dafuq
@uh_dafuq 4 года назад
Ashwin’s Magic And Cardistry ohhhhh so they basically travelled and found ways to make the map?
@uh_dafuq
@uh_dafuq 4 года назад
Albus Dumbledore woah did Voldemort make a Nokia phone a horcrux?
@michaelsuk5782
@michaelsuk5782 4 года назад
The wizarding world also relays heavily on magic, which takes the physical labor out of many tasks, which can have a considerable impact on a persons’ life expectancy. Everything is just easier for the wizarding world.
@harmanjotsingh4230
@harmanjotsingh4230 3 года назад
most wizards and witches do seem to live hella long
@tylersoto7465
@tylersoto7465 Год назад
I think they live 150-200 yrs of age on average etc , so being magical blood is very beneficial and using a wand or magic items would be great
@kaytlinjustis5643
@kaytlinjustis5643 Год назад
Plus, the majority of them don't have an ounce of logic!
@ginjanutta5865
@ginjanutta5865 3 года назад
The idea of wizards being separate from humanity in any true physiological sense is completely undermined by both the fact that mudbloods turn up randomly in muggle populations, and that wizards and muggles can interbreed to produce fertile offspring ( how you can determine two individuals are of the same species).
@FairytalePrince
@FairytalePrince 3 года назад
I don't think Veela are the only humanoid magical creatures to count. We know that Hagrid is half giant and professor Flitwick had a Goblin in his line of ancestors, in which the height is a very dominant gene that held up generations later. But this also made me wonder, when we know of at least 3 canon types of hybrids, what else could there be? Half house elf, half centaur, half merperson, half leprechaun? All of these could technically happen and it would be interesting to know of such hybrids living among wizards and how they differ.
@misterblue3514
@misterblue3514 Год назад
I think, Flitwck was actually half-Goblin. We also know half-Giants (Hagrid and madam Maxime) and half-House elf (Irma from Fantastic Beasts 2, Credence's nanny).
@tomkatt8274
@tomkatt8274 Год назад
@@misterblue3514 in fiction, everything can mate with everything. a spider can create a hybrid with a goat.
@Vivacious.rabbit
@Vivacious.rabbit 4 года назад
Me when I study evolution of elements in chemistry :😴 Me when watching the evolution of wizardkind..😮😮🤩
@tylersoto7465
@tylersoto7465 Год назад
Exactly, if chemistry had real fascinating experiments people would love it more
@sinonkryze3638
@sinonkryze3638 4 года назад
Just a thought is it possible human's came from wizards like on the beginning everyone has the power of magic but as time goes by the some wizard families lose their power of magic and this is the reason muggleborns exist they have a magic ancestry that wants again resurfaced.
@malinisinha5197
@malinisinha5197 3 года назад
It's a perfect theory .
@lancewalker2595
@lancewalker2595 3 года назад
Magical humans cannot be a sub-species of human, individuals do not evolve, and non-magical parents can produce magical offspring; the manner in which magic manifests in Rowling's world implies the existence of a divine being, the existence of a God (or gods) is quite literally the only rational explanation as to why non-magical parents can produce magical children. And before anyone suggests that the reason for this is due to magic being a recessive gene, I'm pretty darn sure MAGIC would be one of those genes that would be highly selected for; the fact that magical humans exist as a minority of the world's human population makes literally ZERO evolutionary sense as to be plainly absurd... unless the phenomenon is not a manifestation of the material world at all, instead being a result of something supernatural.
@akumayoxiruma
@akumayoxiruma 3 года назад
@@lancewalker2595: It does makes evolutionary sense: Real-life humans once grew more body hair to regulate their body temperature, and had more finger-like feet to climb better and even grab things. Both traits are superior to what people have nowadays but they disappeared as humans didn't need them anymore due to the introduction of cloths and land-walking on two feet. Magic therefore could have been a protective trait to deal with the environment better and slowly disappeared as humans invented weapons, clothes and accomodations for protection.
@colinkrefting9501
@colinkrefting9501 2 года назад
@@lancewalker2595 I think muggleborns are magical beacuse of a squib a few gens back and magical gene resurfacing
@robertvalcic7508
@robertvalcic7508 2 года назад
Good theory. Even in ancient Egipt there was priest who perform magic that was written in another book with the guy who learn from them and turn a stick into snake and open waters and so on. With the middle ages those who seak power want to supres magic from all the others and mark it as evil so they can be the only one to use it. I love fantasy.... may the magic be with you 😁
@warrior9372
@warrior9372 4 года назад
Uhh I watching this during my online school....
@leah_yeah
@leah_yeah 4 года назад
I just finished mine
@warrior9372
@warrior9372 4 года назад
IT'Z ALISHA nice I’m still in mine
@21centuryhippie61
@21centuryhippie61 4 года назад
Lol it’s 3 am for me, but I’m working in school work
@anvidogra5865
@anvidogra5865 4 года назад
soo relatable
@terribletoe
@terribletoe 4 года назад
I'm in math class lmao
@breadstick8456
@breadstick8456 4 года назад
Honestly I think Harry Potter Theory knows more about Harry Potter than JK Rowling. 👍🏻
@MinistryOfMagic_DoM
@MinistryOfMagic_DoM 4 года назад
Anyone who can apply logic and reasoning knows more about the wizarding world than Joanne. She didn't get the full story right and is filling the gaps with guesses at this point.
@multimanjazzman8203
@multimanjazzman8203 4 года назад
At this point I dont even consider JK Rowling wrote the Harry Potter series. It’s Daniel because he’s not a bigot
@jacenskywalker507
@jacenskywalker507 4 года назад
Silas knows more about and has more knowledge of Harry Potter in a Planck Length of his baby toe than that hack, Movieflame, has in his entire body.
@Alastair.S
@Alastair.S 4 года назад
Ehhh some of HPT's videos aren't entirely correct.
@Waldo_Jr
@Waldo_Jr 4 года назад
is like you knowing more about technology than your parent does , makes sence !
@hidingtk2860
@hidingtk2860 4 года назад
I've learned that you have really studied your craft. I'm liking how you are weaving actual life details and history with the magical. Pretty soon you're going to be on a Chocolate Frog Card. 😃
@lorditis7151
@lorditis7151 4 года назад
I honestly dont think being a parselmouth is strictly from Slytherin, how are there wizards living in African, Indonesian, South American jungles,an none of them have that ability, all those places have way more snakes than England.
@blupinkyellogreen
@blupinkyellogreen 4 года назад
You're absolutely right. Maybe it's only within England that the parseltongue gene has been passed down through the descendants of Salazar Slytherin. But Slytherin himself has to have gotten it from somewhere..... And if all humans originated in Africa, surely it was there where the trait originated and eventually spread to all the other continents of the world, including Europe.
@lorditis7151
@lorditis7151 4 года назад
@@blupinkyellogreen I can agree with that, I just think, that since we really only know of British wizarding culture its tough to say that Parselmouths arent more common in other nations
@blupinkyellogreen
@blupinkyellogreen 4 года назад
@@lorditis7151 True. I get what your sayin.
@dboymax1
@dboymax1 3 года назад
Are there any wizard/witches in Harry Potter lore that can speak to other types of animals like birds or beasts other than just snakes?
@lorditis7151
@lorditis7151 3 года назад
@@dboymax1 not that in aware of, just serpents it seems like, but I think that its entirely possible for that to happen, cause all animals communicate an if you can do magic you could figure it out
@selamayehubirhan1893
@selamayehubirhan1893 4 года назад
Bundling science and fiction together made the Harry Potter world look very real.
@savannahbutler5973
@savannahbutler5973 4 года назад
I think the main differences are Better medicines and they can perform magic so they dont have to perform as much manual labor. So the body isnt under as much stress as a muggle.
@soumyajitroy4783
@soumyajitroy4783 4 года назад
Can u make a video on - Why Dumbledore didn't use Time Turner to go back in time and stop Tom Riddle from making horcruxes?
@eren-dr2tr
@eren-dr2tr 4 года назад
There was no time tuner which can take back to time more than 1 day
@techking3664
@techking3664 4 года назад
@@eren-dr2tr in Harry Potter cursed child , Albus potter and scorpios malfoy went back more than 15 to 18 years at the time of Harry's 4 year ( Goblet of fire time) to save Cedric
@eren-dr2tr
@eren-dr2tr 4 года назад
@@techking3664 if u read that story that time tuner was illegally made at that time it was not made at Dumbledore time and curse child is not Cannon
@techking3664
@techking3664 4 года назад
@@eren-dr2tr Dumbledore was not a full law binding guy and he was a genius . He could have easily made a time Turner and secondly ,it was ministry restriction that a time Turner can't be used to go back in time more than 5 hours
@rohanvangari1658
@rohanvangari1658 4 года назад
@@techking3664 well no ,Dumbledore was an excellent wizard but he cannot make a timeturner .Timeturners could only be created by the few powerful wizards in the department of mysteries and yeah they can block u from reading their mind(legilimency).Second, time travel beyond 5 hours is restricted for a good reason...cuz in 1899 a witch named Eloise Mintumble got trapped in the past and later when she was brought back she was much older and soon after died in saint mungo's leading to the disappearance of more than 15 of her descendants because they were un born
@symonjefferson708
@symonjefferson708 3 года назад
I've always wanted to have a history of magic book that actually fleshes out lore of the Wizarding world. JK uses famous historical names which creates alot of fun room for historical wizard tales.
@Jenacide
@Jenacide 3 года назад
Imagine being some of the very earliest wizards. So early they're barely even aware of other wizards in existence if any. You wouldn't know what the power you had was, had to figure out entirely on your own how to use it. I would totally understand if they mistook themselves for being descendants of gods.
@FishermanFriends143
@FishermanFriends143 4 года назад
I CLICKED AS SOON AS IT POPPED UP
@kaenachoo4783
@kaenachoo4783 4 года назад
When I pay more attention to magical history than real history
@theredstonebros4882
@theredstonebros4882 4 года назад
I always assumed that wizards came first before humans given how some magical creatures are ancient and being a wizard would make it easier to survive
@Boogeyyyman
@Boogeyyyman 2 года назад
Wizards are humans too. You mean muggle
@josephRB1987
@josephRB1987 4 года назад
Bit of a grasp.... hopefully you do more videos on different art and literature. You the voice for it. Kudos on your work man.
@Axzuin
@Axzuin 3 года назад
I always figured witches and wizards were just descendants of hybrids from human and magical creatures because of the fear the wizarding world towards near human creatures. Also think about how muggle borns can inherit magic after generations of no magic in their families. Think about it.
@aniruddhamishra8232
@aniruddhamishra8232 4 года назад
Indeed a good topic for explanations.. Love your contents. I appreciate your hard work.
@Oneofthecoments
@Oneofthecoments Год назад
I know technically we’re talking about a fantasy universe BUT… The ability for humans and “semi human beings” such as Veela to procreate suggests a common ancestor. Genetically speaking at least HP (maybe unintentionally) suggests that the creatures in the “being” category, at least those who can produce human hybrids are basically just humans that have taken a different evolutionary path.
@jdbb3gotskills
@jdbb3gotskills 2 года назад
I wish there was magical hospitals that muggles could go get fixed or healed and than the wizard or witch would just obliviate them. Or make magical remedies into a common pill so muggles could take it without knowing it’s magical.
@24kcrimz24
@24kcrimz24 4 года назад
Are wizards body more durable or stronger than muggle bodies because they get some extreme injuries
@LytraVolt1
@LytraVolt1 Год назад
I beilive the first humans all possessed magical genes but overtime there were many squibs who formed their own groups called muggles.
@vrillionaire88
@vrillionaire88 2 года назад
The Cro-Magnons came onto the scene fully developed, with no fossil linking them to another hominid. Genetic differences between them and other hominids are large enough to call them different species.
@lavillahawthorn5608
@lavillahawthorn5608 3 года назад
Forgot I was watching a Harry Potter Theory video so I got thrown for a loop at 2:25 when the lovely evolution documentary started discussing wizards lol
@sandeepmalde7901
@sandeepmalde7901 2 года назад
Hi this is a good assessment of ‘Whiztory’ Just an observation The Hindu myths of The Ramayana and The Mahabharata go long way back to almost 10,000 yrs & 5,000yrs respectively In both these myths there is a lot of magic and “god’s ways” being used and are unexplained on how they happened. So magic could go beyond the 10,000 yrs mark, probably even much older
@Rachel-xg7hs
@Rachel-xg7hs 3 года назад
Humans go through a lot of wear and tear throughout our lives, though this comes in degrees and is worse for some than others (for example, some people make their living working outside in the sun and develop skin cancer, but not all people). I think that wizards having quick and easy cures for ailments and being able to avoid things like heavy lifting and physical exertion through magic means that they don’t have to contend with nearly as much stress on their bodies as we do. If you aren’t going through really any physical stress at all, then you live longer. This is not to say they don’t have any problems, we know they do. Mental and emotional stress still apply. But their bodies are safe from many of the things we go through. Because of this, I think they live longer lives simply because their bodies don’t give out as quickly as ours do.
@tonyaxis3063
@tonyaxis3063 Год назад
Untrue. Generally speaking, moderated physical stress makes you live longer, not shorter.
@tiotoy99
@tiotoy99 Год назад
@@tonyaxis3063 agreed
@godisfake78
@godisfake78 3 года назад
This is freaking awesome. This guy just combined evolutionary science and mixed it with the fictional world of magic and Harry Potter. Pretty cool.
@lancewalker2595
@lancewalker2595 3 года назад
Magical humans cannot be a sub-species of human, individuals do not evolve, and non-magical parents can produce magical offspring; the manner in which magic manifests in Rowling's world implies the existence of a divine being, the existence of a God (or gods) is quite literally the only rational explanation as to why non-magical parents can produce magical children. And before anyone suggests that the reason for this is due to magic being a recessive gene, I'm pretty darn sure MAGIC would be one of those genes that would be highly selected for; the fact that magical humans exist as a minority of the world's human population makes literally ZERO evolutionary sense as to be plainly absurd... unless the phenomenon is not a manifestation of the material world at all, instead being a result of something supernatural.
@godisfake78
@godisfake78 3 года назад
@@lancewalker2595 ok. Calm down. I mean it's fiction after all.
@curtislangford3181
@curtislangford3181 4 года назад
I thought the 1st known European wizard would have been Herpo the foul from Ancient Greece?
@krisvandyck9738
@krisvandyck9738 4 года назад
Did the first wizards and witches get their magical ability from magical beasts? It would make evolutionary sense I think.
@lancewalker2595
@lancewalker2595 3 года назад
Magical humans cannot be a sub-species of human, individuals do not evolve, and non-magical parents can produce magical offspring; the manner in which magic manifests in Rowling's world implies the existence of a divine being, the existence of a God (or gods) is quite literally the only rational explanation as to why non-magical parents can produce magical children. And before anyone suggests that the reason for this is due to magic being a recessive gene, I'm pretty darn sure MAGIC would be one of those genes that would be highly selected for; the fact that magical humans exist as a minority of the world's human population makes literally ZERO evolutionary sense as to be plainly absurd... unless the phenomenon is not a manifestation of the material world at all, instead being a result of something supernatural.
@silentlyawake8471
@silentlyawake8471 4 года назад
This channel deserves so much more subscribers given the amount of work you put in for these videos. x.
@HighmageDerin
@HighmageDerin Год назад
The Newest subtype of wizaedkind. The keeper. One who can see and use Ancient magic
@orbitexe1624
@orbitexe1624 4 года назад
I just wish this was a subject in school😔
@Sharon-pb7so
@Sharon-pb7so 3 года назад
I wish it was a major in college! I'd be working on my PhD now. 🦉
@PlagueOfGripes
@PlagueOfGripes Год назад
One would think that magical humans would be so rare and isolated at first that recording them in history wouldn't have been possible until much later into their development as a culture. Similarly to normal history. So it's quite possible that "muggleborn" existed well past human history. The more interesting part of it to me is the insistence upon "pureblood" wizards when all wizard families were muggles. There's no such thing as pureblood. Even if magical humans was an invention, they were still ordinary humans at one point.
@colin.d
@colin.d 3 года назад
There must be other characteristics different for example the ability of wizards to have no fear of heights allowing them to play Quidditch and fly on broomsticks.
@thehomophobickidsinclass6588
@thehomophobickidsinclass6588 3 года назад
i swear i found this channel yesterday and ive just binged it
@dakshanbalaramesh
@dakshanbalaramesh 3 года назад
So why didn't Harry become an Obscurial when he was with the Dursleys?
@dakshanbalaramesh
@dakshanbalaramesh 3 года назад
@Harry Potter Theory, this would be a great video idea
@MothLP
@MothLP 4 года назад
I wonder if Dumbledore and the other wizards who knew about the dursleys were worried Harry may become a Obscurus
@TheMathias95
@TheMathias95 3 года назад
Obacuruses/Obscuri? Weren't a thing until Magical Beasts and Where To Find Them got introduced. So the answer would be no, they weren't worried
@funny3272
@funny3272 2 года назад
You need to do an update since Asia (Bhutan) was mentioned in both the book and recent Fantasic Beast movie as the birthplace of magic.
@verylostdoommarauder
@verylostdoommarauder 2 года назад
Plot twist: The wizarding world we see is just the union of a bunch of magic-using groups that broke off centuries ago because they refused to worship the gods which gave them their powers. So you would have a group of wizards in Egypt that became a distinct group because they refused to honor Thoth, a group in Greece that formed out of refusal to honor Hecate, and so on. Or at least that is how I headcanon it into the Percy Jackson universe so that Percy and company can show up and kick Harry's transphobic ass.
@camgeorge6222
@camgeorge6222 2 года назад
Which could add to the fact why they depend on wands while and wandless magic users could achieve alot but still require greater control.
@ellieparry1463
@ellieparry1463 4 года назад
great video as always:) how long does it take to gather all the research and make a video? i imagine it takes up a good portion of your day, not to mention the videos for your other theory channels
@sonofthesun3672
@sonofthesun3672 2 года назад
Harry Potter is really the name Herus the Elder in ancient Egyptian culture. Lord Vuldimort is a representation of Set trying to stop the rise of Heru.
@marcelsgroot
@marcelsgroot Год назад
You really do a have a relaxing suiting voice. If you ever decide on making meditation podcast I would buy them all :)
@tordlindgren2123
@tordlindgren2123 3 года назад
Huh, perhaps there was a lesser known maybe even secret or lost to time way for muggles to brew a series of potions that can awaken magic within them.
@Kill-for-change
@Kill-for-change 4 года назад
Ollivander the Roman, Herpo the Foul, Falco Aesalon, Mopsus, Andros the Invincible and Circe will count as older Witches and wizards of Europe though.
@vivek27789
@vivek27789 3 года назад
True.. Very True
@dawg897
@dawg897 4 года назад
I say that it is uncommon for a wizard to speak an animal language but extremely rare for one to speak Parsltounge. for Ron is not suprised when he finds out Harry can talk to an animal but that more surprised that it was Parsltounge. Ron says that its very rare for a wizard to speak Parsltounge. which suggest that it is not unheard for wizards to speak other animal languages.
@sined911
@sined911 4 года назад
Hagrid the half Giant: am I a joke to you?
@mmardh799
@mmardh799 4 года назад
and what about Flitwick? rumoured to have goblin ancesto
@adamH.1
@adamH.1 4 года назад
It is pretty obvious, Gilderoy Lockhart created the wizard comunitty, bless this hero and adventurer!
@mrjava2467
@mrjava2467 3 года назад
Disagree
@amicaaranearum
@amicaaranearum 3 года назад
I like this Harry Potter channel, because there is a minimum amount of self-promotion and off-topic filler unrelated to the topic of the video.
@thisjosiah
@thisjosiah Год назад
I think that what happened is likely to be that the wizarding kind might have come from normal humans, but just learned magic, and kept it to their own tribe. This would explain why muggle borns could be magical, and prove that pure-blood-ness doesn't matter.
@Thelaretus
@Thelaretus Год назад
This is incorrect. The Wikia has full lists of names of Wizards who lived in Antiquity, a thousand years before Christ, even in Europe. Ollivander's family alone has been established in England since the IV century BC, and the wand's invention predates them at least for a couple centuries.
@The_Daily_Tomato
@The_Daily_Tomato Год назад
Thank you, I was seriously loosing it over this video 🤣
@Gamefreak8112
@Gamefreak8112 3 года назад
Like to just say I enjoy longer videos and am happy to see a longer one here than I am used to.
@magdelenasattler2054
@magdelenasattler2054 Год назад
I heard something that muggleborns and even half bloods can get both wizard illnesses like dragon pox’s and muggle illness like chickenpox. Where things like the common cold and flue can affect everyone magical or not (even pure bloods in book 2 when they thought Ginny had one).
@jacobm6090
@jacobm6090 4 года назад
Damn this got me thinking so much. This would be a good story, not many original fantasy franchises actually go back to the very beginning. This was cool, keep up the good work
@dgaller06
@dgaller06 3 года назад
I have a theory about wizards that leads into a theory about house elves. I think the first ever wizards and witches were taught magic by a tribe of elves who would eventually become the house elves. My theory is that humans weren't ever supposed to learn magic, and the elves that taught them, were punished for it by being cursed into eternal servitude to the humans they taught magic to.
@InquisitorXarius
@InquisitorXarius 4 года назад
Question why didn’t you mention the subspecies of the wizard that tom riddle is. Which are witches or wizards that are born without love or empathy due to being conceived by a love potion.
@MinistryOfMagic_DoM
@MinistryOfMagic_DoM 4 года назад
And they are born of a muggle and a squib.
@danielinskip8427
@danielinskip8427 4 года назад
They're not a subspecies, that's why. Riddle couldn't feel love because he was conceived under the influence of a love potion.
@sehajsinghbanga
@sehajsinghbanga 4 года назад
Hey can you make a video on: Avada Kedavra VS Protego Diabolics VS Fiendfyre. Like if you want the video
@GoldenTV3
@GoldenTV3 Год назад
I like to think of it like X-Men, where it's a mutation in the DNA that allows them to alter energy and frequencies in the known universe and simply use the laws of science to do stuff.
@skateata1
@skateata1 3 года назад
Great points about sub types of wizards! Never thought of them that way.
@haziqiman5576
@haziqiman5576 4 года назад
Can you explain about brooms? Like when do they start to use them. And who is the first to use broom to fly?
@chinolebron6233
@chinolebron6233 4 года назад
This video was very interesting. This is the kind of stuff I love listening to.
@RealElequist
@RealElequist Год назад
I always held the theory that the wizarding world looks like 17th or 18th century because they didn't really need much technological advances as the use of magic covers most of what they need.
@Iluvantir
@Iluvantir Год назад
Last time I checked, Rome was part of Europe. Ergo, wizard kind has been in Europe since at LEAST 300 BC or so. Olivander's was established then, who was the first wand maker. Don't need to make wands, nor can you, unless you're magical.
@brennantouchet1877
@brennantouchet1877 4 года назад
Gosh dang it I love this channel.
@aniksamiurrahman6365
@aniksamiurrahman6365 Год назад
Trust me, given the level of technical development and know hows, Wizards look more like people who inherited superior technology, but lost the knowledge completely.
@BarokaiRein
@BarokaiRein 3 года назад
It's pretty likely that wizards are as old as humanity but were just called different things like Shamans for example. Since wizards live far longer than humans they would fit perfectly into our own history as Seers,village elders,cleverfolk etc. The creator of basilisk lived in ancient greece,which refers to a time period between 1300 BCE and 600 EC and Ollivander's store has been around since almost 400BCE. So it seems like the wizarding community itself also goes back long before the common era even started,if wand shops were already a thing back then. Also average life expectancy over here in my country is almost 82 years,so I wonder just how long wizards from here would live.
@cyclonz382
@cyclonz382 3 года назад
i always kinda thought that wizards were the first people then muggles were just squibs that breeded and stuff thats why i thought you could get muggle borns because theres still little bits of magic in the muggles
@JamesMC04
@JamesMC04 2 года назад
I was thinking about this very subject just a few hours ago.
@hardbrocklife
@hardbrocklife Год назад
Im a Christian, so I typically like to theory craft these ideas through that lense. Even following Judæo Christian history you can theory craft some ideas, like the Nephilim. Even within the biblical concept of Noah, his children could have carried the genetic code for what makes magic accessible to humans. Magic could have even be a "lost technology" used to build something like the Ark. The Nephilim were the product of "the sons of God marrried the daughters of men" implying formally divine beings procreating with humanity. These were divine beings that had taken on mortality, but "magic" and its limitations could have been a crude means of still being able to access a sort of "divine energy" that they would have had access to as true immortals. Its a fun theorycraft to play through. Even using the same thoery crafting towards moden concepts like intutives from Jungian psychology imply there is some sort of extra-natural recessive trait for advanced abilitties amongst modern humans. Studying Jungian typology changed my life entirely. Its a fascinating concept if you are an intutitve yourself.
@bradywalker5291
@bradywalker5291 3 года назад
You cited 2600bc, BUT we know for a fact that native Americans were magical and they separated 15k years ago, so we could assume A) the step was prior B) they evolved separately, but in a natural direction. Very common, actually. It also needs mentioning, what forms of magic. Last I recall, the natives didn't do want magic, but more like potions and stuff. So maybe magic manipulation is far younger
@k.m512
@k.m512 3 года назад
That history of humankind intro just gave me flashbacks to high school biology 😭😭😭
@Arterexius
@Arterexius 3 года назад
I've never seen this being mentioned before, but Occlumency is another great example of J. K. Rowling using her knowledge of several languages and cultures to construct her universe. Occlumency could be derived from *Oculus* since *Oculus* is latin for "Eye" and thus Occlumency could mean "clouding of the eye". Another example is the Nimbus 2001 broomstick. Nimbus literally means cloud in latin.
@kreia187
@kreia187 4 года назад
On Pottermore, there is a very interesting article about wandwoods, where the traits of every type of wandwood are explained. One of those wandwoods listed is 'apple' and in its description there is this phrase: "An unusual ability to converse with other magical beings in their native tongues is often found among apple wand owners." This to me seems like another type of wizard 'subspecies', one very closely linked to parselmouths, but still worth mentioning in my oppinion.
@shadowlynx1958
@shadowlynx1958 4 года назад
Animal speech was one of the talents of druids, and if you see druids as part of the wizard sub-species ... I also wonder if Hagrid has a touch of animal speech with how much he understands about various creatures.
@kreia187
@kreia187 4 года назад
@@shadowlynx1958 I doubt that characters like Hagrid or Newt for that matter, have that talent without us knowing. I'd assume it's more like legitimacy, where you can either be born with an innate talent, or you learn it. Although to be precise I don't think they learned how to speak with animals, they just have a great affinity and understanding for them.
@jeremysteed3527
@jeremysteed3527 Месяц назад
Humans can live a max of 120 years so wizards only live 30 years longer, I think the age play is more towards how much more resilient they are and how age doesn't affect them physically the same, deterioration seems slower in wizards.
@chillausmc
@chillausmc 4 дня назад
We need a Wizarding World ancient Egypt series. lets say 3000-2000 BC? Or ancient persia? Something historicaly accurate but unique. Or get a story of traveling wizard/witch to meet with shamans of amazon, african tribe, aborigine?
@sritejavedula4395
@sritejavedula4395 4 года назад
Can you please do a video on what would happen if wizards went to war with muggles
@lancewalker2595
@lancewalker2595 3 года назад
Are you familiar with the fate of Neanderthals? If magic can be explained evolutionarily (and I don't believe it can for the below reasons) then both Grindewald and Voldemort are correct. Magical humans cannot be a sub-species of human, individuals do not evolve, and non-magical parents can produce magical offspring; the manner in which magic manifests in Rowling's world implies the existence of a divine being, the existence of a God (or gods) is quite literally the only rational explanation as to why non-magical parents can produce magical children. And before anyone suggests that the reason for this is due to magic being a recessive gene, I'm pretty darn sure MAGIC would be one of those genes that would be highly selected for; the fact that magical humans exist as a minority of the world's human population makes literally ZERO evolutionary sense as to be plainly absurd... unless the phenomenon is not a manifestation of the material world at all, instead being a result of something supernatural.
@SuswetaDas24
@SuswetaDas24 3 года назад
Often I forget that it's fiction. And well after you describing it like this...I am convinced...and I'm like...this has to be reality...how could I have doubted! 😅
@carito24h28
@carito24h28 4 года назад
Thank you for answering this. I've been wondering this for a while.
@itzamedio5427
@itzamedio5427 Год назад
My personal theory is that a strange and unkowable alien race visited long ago, and the remnants of their visit have seeped into every part of the now magical world.
@Dooblevoo
@Dooblevoo 4 года назад
Imagine the time it will take making a story about a whole history of wizardkind.
@tomkatt8274
@tomkatt8274 Год назад
humans, wizards, goblins, house elves, giants and trolls share a common ancestor.
@lipingrahman6648
@lipingrahman6648 4 года назад
This is one of the few problems I have with the Harry Potter universe. The implications of magic existing and the history of the it in the course of human history is not particularly well fleshed out. This is further exasperated by fact that there are a great many magical beasts and what not, where are the magical fossils, how was magic used among primitive humans, how does magical humans interact with religion, non of these are even touched upon.
@lancewalker2595
@lancewalker2595 3 года назад
Magical humans cannot be a sub-species of human, individuals do not evolve, and non-magical parents can produce magical offspring; the manner in which magic manifests in Rowling's world implies the existence of a divine being, the existence of a God (or gods) is quite literally the only rational explanation as to why non-magical parents can produce magical children. And before anyone suggests that the reason for this is due to magic being a recessive gene, I'm pretty darn sure MAGIC would be one of those genes that would be highly selected for; the fact that magical humans exist as a minority of the world's human population makes literally ZERO evolutionary sense as to be plainly absurd... unless the phenomenon is not a manifestation of the material world at all, instead being a result of something supernatural.
@noblenumenorean5165
@noblenumenorean5165 2 года назад
I think the unknown is what frustrates me about potter lore. This is not a comparison of "what's better" but if you look at something like Tolkiens work, the entire history and future is laid out, albeit there are still unanswered questions but the foundation is known.
@OVERLOARD949494
@OVERLOARD949494 3 года назад
A broken bone can be healed in mere seconds. Regrowing takes 1 night.
@JohnDoe-lx3dt
@JohnDoe-lx3dt Год назад
Yonder Middle Ages witch can’t be Europe’s first, Ollivanders open in 325 ad, his ancestors turn up with the romans
@nhansen197
@nhansen197 7 месяцев назад
Seers would likely have been among the first of wizard kind. In ancient human society they would have been very valuable. And no, they would not be classified as a sub type and definitely not a subspecies. . That makes about as much sense as saying people who can play musical instruments are a subspecies. It just means they have different talents and abilities.
@Juscait
@Juscait 3 года назад
Actually it's how they compare to muggles, as they are humans as mentioned in the books and films
@joespeigle1240
@joespeigle1240 6 месяцев назад
My level of maturity was severely strained at the fact that I giggled every time you said "homo" 🤭
@darthvitiate7373
@darthvitiate7373 4 года назад
is harry an obscurus as he grew up in a place where magic was not tolerated but he never knew it was magic so is he as when he grew up and learned he was a wizard he lived with the dursleys but more in hogwarts and the burrow
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