How can voldemort fly without a broom




















Once again, Voldemort's advanced magical knowledge helped him achieve this feat. Inferi can only be destroyed by fire, making them a valuable asset to the Dark Lord. Where exactly he learned this skill is unclear, but it's doubtful it came from Hogwarts — even from the restricted section. Harry would never have any use for an army of inferi, but even if he did, it would take years for him to crack the spell.

Voldemort was willing to do anything and everything he had to to get what he wanted - and this included claiming lives. He took down anyone who got in his way in any form. Lily and James Potter were among the very lucky few who escaped him, and they did it not once, but three times.

Voldemort took eight lives alone just to create his Horcruxes he took down both Lily and James on the night that a piece of him was transferred into Harry. Voldemort didn't have any regard for lives outside of his own. For example, think of how easily he took Cedric Diggory's life. Harry was always conscious of risk; he didn't even want his friends coming with him to the Department of Mysteries for fear of them getting hurt.

Voldemort always had followers, never friends. He did what it took to get what he wanted from people. Sometimes this included feigning a friendship. However, in reality, Voldemort never truly cared for anyone but himself; he couldn't feel emotions like a normal person could. This stems from the fact that he was born as the result of a love potion. Then, when his father left and his mother didn't give him attention, Tom Riddle's ways were sealed.

Harry even taunts Voldemort with his lack of connection in Order of the Phoenix, saying how Voldemort will "never know love or friendship. And I feel sorry for you. It's Harry's happy memories of his friends and their bond that help him to knock Voldemort out of control. One of the creatures that Voldemort and his followers relied most heavily on was the Dementor.

They had legions of Dementors at their disposal, and often sent them off to torture people. In Order of the Phoenix , Harry and Dudley are attacked by a pair of Dementors at the behest of Voldemort though Cornelius Fudge refused to believe it. Because they generally worked alongside the creatures, Death Eaters never learned to conjure a Patronus.

Harry was particularly sensitive to Dementors, as we learn in Prisoner of Azkaban. According to Lupin, it's likely because there is so much pain in Harry's past. The Dementors can sense this and so they target him specifically. As a result, Harry learns to conjure a Patronus very early on in his education.

It's highly doubtful that he'd ever be capable of working alongside the creatures. In his life, there was only one person who Voldemort truly feared: Dumbledore. He knew that Dumbledore saw him for what he was: a manipulative, vindictive boy obsessed with power. Dumbledore kept Tom Riddle under close watch, making it much hard for him to complete his nefarious deeds. Of course, this made Dumbledore Voldemort's number one target. The fact that he also owned the Elder Wand didn't help his case.

On the contrary, Dumbledore was a close mentor and friend to Harry. He trusted his professor implicitly, even when the assigned tasks were crazy and dangerous. Harry made this very clear when talking to Aberforth Dumbledore. He even yelled at Ron for doubting their former headmaster while hunting Horcruxes. He would never do anything to hurt Dumbledore. During his ascent to "Dark Lord" status, Tom Riddle had to take great care to cover his tracks. I still think the introduction of it in the seventh book was pretty abrupt, but what can you do?

The woman had a million other plot lines to tie up at the time. By Anna Menta. First, Jo explained how wandless magic works for the more talented wizards, like Dumbledore. Voldemort was flying like smoke on the wind, without broomstick or thestral to hold him, his snake-like face gleaming out of the blackness, his white fingers raising his wand again — " — Lord Voldemort flying unsupported [src]. Levitation is commonplace, but our ancestors were not content with hovering five feet from the ground.

They wanted more. They wanted to fly like birds, but without the inconvenience of growing feathers. Lord Voldemort [1]. Severus Snape [8]. Delphini [10]. Quirinus Quirrell [9]. Wands and brooms and flying cars are tools that channel magic. Another can be that it's not actually required. If you want to go somewhere, use Floo or Apparate. Q: So would that work the same for brooms? JKR: Exactly. Wands and brooms and flying cars are tools that channel magic.

The most gifted can dispense with them. JKR : No, there's a cultural tradition of using wands and broomless flight is as you might imagine very risky! I believe Voldemort created a way to do it, probably through the use of dark magic, remember he said he pushed magic to its limits If anyone would have found a way to, it would have been him.

Remember he spent years out of the public eye in remote places performing experiments and magical transformations that Dumbledore theorized altered and deformed his appearance, along with his Horcruxes. Once Voldy learned and mastered it He probably taught it to his closest lieutenants like Snape and Bellatrix Lestrange. Bellatrix claimed to have learnt Dark Magic directly from Voldy himself However people like Bellatrix who tended to get distracted easily might not have chosen to use flight; she didn't need to, Apparition or floo worked for her.

Snape HAD to use it to escape Hogwarts since there were anti-Apparition charms on the place and he had no other means of escaping during his sacking. As far as I know, he was not an Animagus like Pettigrew or McGonagall, so he couldn't change into a small animal and run away.

Flying seems like a spell that one would mainly use to intimidate or terrify an enemy through your foreboding presence in the sky more so than being the most practical means of getting from one place to the other.

Good witches and wizards would never intend to use their presence in the air to intimidate or terrify others, therefore Dumbledore, McGonagall and the others would have little to no use for such a spell. Voldemort of course used it during the Battle of the Seven Potters, to Apparate you have to have a clear destination in mind, such as Hermione Apparating herself, Ron, and Harry to a forest where she used to go camping with her parents since their Grimmauld Place hideout had been compromised.

You can't Apparate to a random place in the sky, and as independent as Voldemort was he would definitely not wish to rely on objects like broomsticks which could be destroyed or compromised by various means. Plus flying would prove Voldy was an extremely powerful wizard, unlike any other, as no one was able to figure out how to do it without the aid of an object, until him.

It would seem that unaided flight is something that powerful wizards and witches can achieve through practice and the exercise of strong magics. Which way do you think? Three minutes gone. We have two minutes left. Harry Potter and the Cursed Child. In DH McGonagall said that only Voldemort and Snape learned to fly without any broom, which is a rare hard skill, so I guess it requires being not only particularly powerful as a wizard, but also attitude.

Dumbledore was as powerful as Voldemort and Snape as a wizard, they are probably the most powerful ones in the series, but each one has got their own attitudes Dumbledore just didn't have this attitude. In fact, given that Daumbledore was interested in power and in the the Dark Arts when he was young, I don't think it's just something he never wanted to try Volemort was known as the most powerful legilimens and still Snape fooled him with his Occlumancy skills because Occlumancy and Potions are his main inclinations.

Attempts to fly unaided have been made by wizards since ancient times. Unaided flight of a human being, however, was long considered a magical impossibility. Sometime prior to , Tom Riddle succeeded where other wizards had failed and managed true flight.

He first publicly showed off this ablity during the Battle of the Seven Potters, using the spell to great effect and almost managing to defeat Harry Potter if not for an odd reaction with their wands.

He also taught this spell to Severus Snape, who used it to safely escape from Hogwarts shortly before the Battle of Hogwarts. With the deaths of Snape and Voldemort, knowledge on how to perform this spell may have been lost forever. So Voldemort is the only wizard to have figured out how to fly, and he only taught Snape.



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