| • Science | • People | • Locations | • Timeline |
| Severus Snape | |
|---|---|
| Gender | Male |
| Hair Colour | Black |
| Eye Colour | Black |
| House | Slytherin |
| Blood Purity | Pureblood |
| Loyalty | Death Eater (formerly) Order of the Phoenix (currently) |
In the Harry Potter movies, the character is played by Alan Rickman.
The enmity between Harry Potter and Snape begins in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (the film and book version in the US was titled Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone), from the moment that they first see each other. From Harry's point of view Snape has the physical appearance of a classic villain: tall, thin, "hook-nosed" and "oily," and clad from head to toe in forbidding black robes, "like a great black bat". His name may come from the Imperial Roman Severan Dynasty, noted for their dictatorial ways and despised by the rest of the Roman elite as being (Phoenician-descended) outsiders. Though Harry is repeatedly reassured that Snape is one of the professors guarding the stone, his estimations based upon Snape's attitude and his concept of events leads him to believe that Snape is attempting to steal the stone.
However, further reading of this series of books reveals that appearances can be deceiving as we learn that Snape is actually one of the heroThis article is about the type of character. For other meanings, see Hero (disambiguation . Sir Galahad, a prototypical hero In many myths and folk tales, a hero is a man or woman (then often called a heroine , traditionally the protagonist of a story, lees. When Lord VoldemortLord Voldemort is a fictional character and the arch villain in the Harry Potter book series by J. He is an evil wizard bent on controlling the magic world and achieving immortality through the practice of dark magic. He is so feared by magical people tha rose to power the first time, Snape served him as a Death Eater; his left arm still bears the Dark Mark that showed his allegiance to his evil master. At some point, before Voldemort's downfall, it seems that he changed sides, and became a 'secret agent,' answering Lord Voldemort's summons for the purpose of spying on the doings of Voldemort and the Death Eaters and reporting their clandestine activities to Albus Dumbledore.
Much of Severus Snape's dislike of Harry Potter seems to arise from a rivalry between Snape and Harry's father, James Potter, when they were both attendees at Hogwarts. At first, it is hinted that Severus was obsessed with the Dark Arts, which seemed to put off James' clique. It was said that as a first year Hogwarts student, Snape knew more hexes and curses than most seventh-year students; furthermore, his bookish and "nerdy" demeanor and appearance made him an outsider and an object of scorn by the "popular" set.
In Harry Potter and the Prisoner of AzkabanHarry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban is the third book in the Harry Potter series of children's books by J. A film based on the book was released on May 31st, 2004, in the United Kingdom (released early due to popular demand) and June 4th in the Unite, Harry is told that this dislike may be due to the perpetration of a dangerous "prank" by Sirius Black (James Potter's best friend), in which Sirius used deceptive means to lure Snape to the Shrieking Shack where he could have met either permanent injury or death at the hands of Remus Lupin in his feral werewolf form. Snape's life is saved by James Potter; however Snape believes that Potter had actually been involved in the plot and only decided to intervene out of fear of the Marauders' expulsion from Hogwarts. Later, in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, we also learn that Snape's dislike of Harry is the consequence of a grudge spawned as a result of a humiliating public incident of unprovoked malicious maltreatment (hazing and bullying) suffered at the hands of James Potter and Sirius Black during their fifth year at the school (Snape's Worst Memory).
Despite Snape's loathing of Harry, he has saved the boy's life on more than one occasion; he is a member in good standing of the Order of the Phoenix, as is revealed in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, and as such thwarted Dolores Umbridge in her attempts to discredit Harry. Despite this, he invariably gives Harry poor marks in Potions, harangues him verbally, and has even attempted to have Harry (and Ron) expelled from school, such as in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, after the flying car they had taken was seen by Muggles.
For a time during the course of the fifth book, Dumbledore assigns Snape the task of giving Harry lessons in a branch of magic called Occlumency, having to deal with the protection of one's mind from outside intrusion or influence. Snape is assigned this task because he is extremely skilled in both Occlumency and its companion art of Legilimency, both proficiencies undoubtedly useful in his undercover work among the Death Eaters. The classes were cut short, however, when Harry was caught using Dumbledore's Pensieve to observe Snape's Worst Memory. Viewing this memory proved to be an unpleasant shock for Harry, who discovered that his father and Sirius had been arrogant bullies who persecuted Snape much as Dudley Dursley and Draco Malfoy persecute him. It seems that Harry's best strategy in dealing with Snape might be to emphasize their common ground and shared trait of being considered "outsiders." Only time (and J.K. Rowling) will tell if the two ever reach any kind of reconciliation.