Where is azkaban




















Nzall Would that really be the wrong way? He might have been better off in Norway I suspect that "middle of" here is a hyperbole that could mean anything from "half a mile out" to "dead center of the North Sea". Bellatrix - You had to get out of your cell first — Valorum. Show 5 more comments. Sign up or log in Sign up using Google. Sign up using Facebook. Sign up using Email and Password.

Post as a guest Name. Email Required, but never shown. Featured on Meta. Now live: A fully responsive profile. Upcoming Events. November Topic Challenge: Samuel R. Delany ends Nov Related Hot Network Questions. It's a happy arrangement Because of the constant feeding of the Dementors on the prisoners, they are left only with despair. They are gradually reduced to a soulless shell of their former selves, knowing only evil and pain.

As a result, most of the prisoners in Azkaban go insane, even the ones with light sentences. Once the Dementors are finally done reducing the worst offenders of Azkaban to living corpses, there's no going back for the prisoners. They usually die, either of old age or if they're lucky, death by despair. Thus, the Dementors will have no use for them this way, and those cells will not empty themselves.

That is where Azkaban's own graveyard finds its function. It's actually the Dementors themselves who empty the cells of corpses and bury them in Azkaban's graveyard. Relatives of the dead prisoner are then free to visit the graves. According to J. Rowling, the name Azkaban was an amalgamation of two concepts and names.

The first one is Alcatraz, which, like Azkaban, is a prison island and is one of the harshest prisons on Earth. It also just so happens that Azkaban is also located in the middle of the sea and was inescapable for nearly three centuries in the Wizarding World.

In a sense, Alcatraz is the Muggle equivalent of Azkaban. The second notion is the Hebrew word "Abbadon" which literally translates to a "place of destruction" or the "depths of hell. One would think that such an awful place would incite conflict among Wizarding World authorities, after all, even Albus Dumbledore was opposed to it.

Rowles' successor as a Minister of Magic, Eldritch Diggory, actually visited the prison and what he saw there demoralized him so much that he immediately proposed an alternative to the inhumane Azkaban. Sadly, Diggory died of a disease before such a decision regarding Azkaban's replacement was reached. Since then, no Minister until Voldemort's final defeat had opposed the idea and operation of Azkaban, mainly because no one has ever escaped.

Another scary thing about Azkaban is that it probably did not even need walls. The Dementors were enough to keep the prisoners weak, deranged, or incapacitated to cast magic, much less apparate out of there. Despite that, Azkaban most likely has an Anti-Apparition jinx in order to prevent wizards and witches apparating in or out of the prison.

There is also the fact that only the most authoritative of wizards or witches can visit Azkaban at will. Even so, it's not exactly a place one would visit to see their incarcerated relative or friend. Rowling Pm. Rowling Sch1.

Because of a comment by Sirius Black describing his escape from Azkaban, some have conjectured that the island must really located farther south than the North Sea location Rowling has described.

Sirius does state quite clearly that he swam to shore, then visited Privet Drive before heading north to Hogwarts PA Privet Drive is in Surrey, which is south of London. Since it is only logical to assume that Sirius would have swum to the nearest point on the mainland to Azkaban, that point must have been somewhere in the English Channel between England and France.

Several fans have tried to come up with alternative locations which fit the bill. Rowling, however, is very clear on the subject. Azkaban is far to the north, and Sirius chose to travel to Hogwarts with a detour through Surrey. That seems odd to us Muggles, but wizard ideas of "shortest route" don't necessarily use the kind of geometry we Muggles take for granted.

The Knight Bus, for example, seems to move between destinations almost in alphabetical order. This odd logic is similar to that which makes Transfiguration simpler when the two items have similar names guinea pigs and guinea fowl. Therefore we can't necessarily take Sirius' offhand analysis of his trip and superimpose it over a Muggle map to figure out where Azkaban is Sch1.

Tags: Bellatrix Remembrall captive crime criminals despair discipline escapes false accusations fear framed guards hopelessness illegal imprisoned injustice islands justice laws loneliness misery prisoner sadness trapped Wizarding laws. Editors: Zara Girnius and Jeanne Kimsey. History The fortress has existed since the 15th century, and never appeared on any Muggle map. Break-Outs We know of at least four break-outs from Azkaban.

Barty Crouch Jr. Barty Crouch Sr. Crouch into Azkaban to visit. While there, she and Barty Jr.



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