While Tom Riddle (Voldemort) was a Slytherin prefect and Head Boy during his time at Hogwarts (around 1944-45), a definitive, famous Slytherin Head Boy in the main Harry Potter books isn't heavily featured, though Severus Snape served as Slytherin Head Boy and prefect from 1974-1977, according to fan wikis. Craig Bowker Jr. is also mentioned as a Slytherin Head Boy in Harry Potter and the Cursed Child.
As the prefect of Slytherin and the Head Boy at Hogwarts, Craig Bowker Jr. is ambitious and always trying his best.
He and Sirious caused so much trouble, people remembered them for years after. Anyone can be Head Boy or Girl, they don't have to have been a prefect. Not all Head Boys and Girls have to be Prefects first or at all. The books do mention that James changed a lot when he started dating Lily.
The canon Slytherin boys of the marauders era are Snape, Mulciber, Avery, Rosier and Wilkes who all hung out together. And then Regulus who is not named as being friendly with any of these boys (possibly because he is younger). Snape we know.
A Head Boy or Head Girl was a seventh-year student who had authority over prefects at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Each year, both a Head Boy and a Head Girl were selected by the Headmaster or Headmistress of Hogwarts.
He was not chosen as Head Boy because he never went back to do his 7th year at Hogwarts. He wasn't chosen as Prefect, because, frankly, he's not the best person to keep other students in check AND he had more than enough on his plate with the whole Voldemort thing & Quidditch & OWLS.
He was made a prefect of his house and was a member of the Inquisitorial Squad during his fifth year, at the end of which his father was imprisoned in Azkaban following the Battle of the Department of Mysteries.
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.
Tom Riddle In 1943, Tom Riddle, the "Heir of Slytherin", opened the Chamber of Secrets to conduct a purge on Muggle- born students. This resulted in the death of Myrtle Warren, who eventually returned as a ghost. Riddle opened the Chamber again in 1993 through the use of one of his seven Horcruxes, his diary.
Theodore Nott (b. 1979/1980) was a pure-blood wizard who was a Slytherin student in the same year as Harry Potter at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. He came from a family of Death Eaters and supporters of pure-blood supremacy.
The main LGBTQ+ character confirmed by J.K. Rowling is Albus Dumbledore, revealed to be gay and to have had a passionate, intense love relationship with the dark wizard Gellert Grindelwald in their youth, though this isn't explicitly detailed in the books but rather in later interviews and supplementary materials. While not canon, some fans also interpret other characters like Sirius Black, Remus Lupin, or even Harry Potter as queer, but Dumbledore and Grindelwald are the key confirmed figures.
As for Ron, Hufflepuff is probably the worst house for him. He's not hard-working (unless he really has to be), particularly tolerant (look at his treatment of Krum, for instance), or patient (see the first half of Deathly Hallows).
Harry misinterprets Tonks's behavior to be about Sirius because that's how he was feeling. But Tonks was depressed because she'd been rejected by Lupin.
In Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Slughorn briefly appears with other teachers assembling to fight Death Eaters. As Snape is now Headmaster, Slughorn has again assumed the post of Head of Slytherin.
Rubeus Hagrid – Our favourite half-giant and Care of Magical Creatures teacher was a member of Gryffindor house.
Bridget Wenlock (1202–1285) was a famous thirteenth-century English witch and Arithmancer, and the first to establish the magical properties of the number seven. She was mainly known for being extremely protective of her theorems, therefore writing many of her ideas down in invisible ink.
Harry is the heir of Gryffindor, although he had characteristics of both Slytherin (cleverness, resourcefulness, determination) and Gryffindor (bravery, honor, recklessness, chilvary). It is why Harry was able to claim the Sword of Gryffindor.
Voldemort met Nagini, a Maledictus (a woman cursed to become a snake), during his exile in Albania after his first defeat, likely in the forests there, where she was already a massive snake. He found her while possessing snakes to survive, and their connection grew due to his Parseltongue ability and her unique ability to sustain him, eventually leading him to make her a Horcrux by killing Bertha Jorkins in 1994.
He trusted snape because snape had proven himself many times before. Voldemort took anyone that was magical and had his own ideas in common during his first crusade.
Hermione wasn't in Ravenclaw because the Sorting Hat prioritizes choices and core values, and despite her immense intelligence, Hermione consistently chose bravery, loyalty, and friendship over pure intellect, valuing doing what's right (Gryffindor) over just knowing things (Ravenclaw). The Hat considered Ravenclaw, but her decisive actions and moral courage, like breaking rules to help her friends and stand up for justice, aligned more with Gryffindor's spirit, which values courage above all.
The Gryffindors think Slytherins aren't noble, which doesn't help.
Here's our list of all eight films, ranked from the worst to the best!
Now, the most well-known LGBTQ characters in 'Harry Potter' are Albus Dumbledore and Gellert Grindelwald, who were in a loving romantic relationship in their youth before Grindelwald's beliefs turned him dark. However, they aren't the only LGBTQ characters in the movies, books, and canon video games.
Her mother accidentally died while experimenting with spells when Luna was nine and Luna was raised by her father, editor of the magazine The Quibbler, in a rook-like house near the village of Ottery St Catchpole in Devon. She was the niece of Lucius and Narcissa Malfoy and the cousin of Draco Malfoy.
On page 53, in the list of school supplies that Harry receives from Hogwarts, the item “1 wand” must appear twice, once at the beginning and once at the end. This mistake was corrected in the second printing of the book (although it re-appeared in some later printings).