No, initially Amos Diggory did not blame Harry for Cedric's death; he was grateful Harry returned Cedric's body and explicitly thanked him, though he was overcome with grief. Later, in the play Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, an older, bitter Amos did blame Harry and pressured him to use a Time-Turner to save Cedric, revealing a shift in his feelings due to prolonged grief.
Pettigrew was not so important so under such circumstances to give the news in short he might have said that voldemort killed him. Wormtail kills Cedric by Voldemort's wand. The world thought Pettigrew to be dead, so none would have believed Harry. So he said that Voldemort killed Cedric.
While Harry may have felt a form of survivor's guilt, Cedric's death was not Harry's fault. While very common for survivors of something like that to feel some sort of guilt over their actions or inaction, it does not mean the survivor caused what happened.
He was killed by Wormtail with Voldemort's wand. Notice how Cedric was the first to appear from the wand mid duel in Goblet of Fire with Harry. Because it was under Voldemort's immediate instruction.
Harry watched Cedric die in front of him. What's worse, it wasn't even in combat. Cedric was murdered right in front of Harry, just for being there. That helplessness and confusion, coupled with the horror of escaping Voldemort and Co., did serious mental and emotional damage to Harry.
There's no single "saddest" death, as fans cite different characters, but Dobby, Sirius Black, Fred Weasley, Remus Lupin, and Snape are consistently named among the most heartbreaking due to their profound loyalty, tragic lives, or sudden, impactful losses, with Dobby's selfless sacrifice often topping lists for his pure heart and newfound freedom, and Fred's death devastating his twin George and family, notes Quora and Facebook users https://www.facebook.com/groups/309399756202202/posts/2389613828180774, and Reddit.
Harry managed to escape the graveyard and honoured Cedric's request, returning him to his devastated parents (Amos openly sobbed later while Harry explained what happened). Amos thanked Harry for returning Cedric's body, and assured him that they did not blame Harry for his death.
“Take my body back to my father.” This quote is certainly a sad one to end on, because these are Cedric Diggory's last words.
That June, when Cedric was murdered by Peter Pettigrew on Lord Voldemort's orders. Cho was devastated and openly cried at the memorial service at the end of the school year.
“The T is silent because it's French,” because that's what JK Rowling said, and she wrote it - which by your own reasoning, is all that really matters. Thiago Demendonca Just because Voldemort is based on a French phrase, doesn't mean that every name in the story should be pronounced as if it were French.
The Ministry was running a disinformation campaign against Harry, claiming his sanity was in question in order to discredit him. They didn't want to accuse him of murder because that would play into the “Harry and Dumbledore versus the Ministry” narrative that Fudge was afraid of.
Krum is attacked moments later, however, and spends the rest of the Tournament afraid, and with good reason: Barty Crouch, disguised as Moody, puts Krum under the Imperius Curse and forces him to perform the Cruciatus Curse on Cedric.
Wormtail DID kill Cedric with Voldy's wand. Voldy wasn't in the shape to use his wand, so he used the only person he sort of trusted, which was Wormtail. Doesn't matter if it was Voldy's wand or not, he still killed Cedric. Voldemort: "Kill the spare." ..
Remember that, and Cedric Diggory will not have died in vain. You remember that, and we'll celebrate a boy who was kind, and honest, and brave, and true. Right to the very end.
Delphini, nicknamed Delphi, is the titular main antagonist of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child. Although she initially introduces herself as the niece of Amos Diggory, Delphi is in fact, the child of Lord Voldemort and Bellatrix Lestrange and has only one goal, restoring her father.
Cedric Diggory is very bitter and hateful, joining the Death Eaters to overcompensate for being humiliated years before he murdered Neville Longbottom in cold blood.
Harry cannot help feeling that Cedric's death is at least partly his fault; his assuming responsibility will result in his partially closing himself off to friends and other Hogwarts students. It will also make him reluctant to accept his share of the Triwizard prize.
Harry, who was inexperienced with girls, found Cho's behaviour very confusing, especially when she tried to make him jealous and to gauge his feelings for her by mentioning that Roger Davies had asked her out.
Draco, despite his often condescending and belittling attitude toward Crabbe and Goyle (as well as his other underlings), grieves for his lost friend.
Page 394 in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban refers to Professor Snape telling the class to turn to that page in their Defense Against the Dark Arts (DADA) textbook, which is about werewolves, a deliberate hint that the substitute teacher, Professor Lupin, is one himself, a secret Snape was trying to expose. While the specific text varies slightly by edition, it introduces the topic of werewolves as nocturnal beasts, contrasting with the Red Caps and Hinky-Punks they were learning about, to reveal Lupin's true nature.
Tonks' last words -- "Have you seen Remus?" -- are particularly poignant in light of how we next see her; lying side-by-side with her husband in the Great Hall.
Hufflepuff is often considered the worst house at Hogwarts because it hasn't contributed as much to magic as other houses, except for a few exceptions like Newt Scamander. Hufflepuffs are known for their hard work but it rarely leads to major magical discoveries.
Romilda started her fourth year at Hogwarts in 1996. She was among the majority of the wizarding population who believed Harry Potter was the 'Chosen One' destined to destroy Lord Voldemort, and became attracted to him.
Winky was found with Harry's wand, which is why she was accused of conjuring the Dark Mark. The Dark Mark is a symbol created by the spell "Morsmordre," representing Lord Voldemort and his Death Eaters. Mr. Diggory accused Winky of conjuring the Dark Mark in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire.