Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix is the fifth book in the Harry Potter series of books by J. K. Rowling. The book was published on 21 June 2003 in the United Kingdom, United States, Canada, Australia, and several other countries. It sold almost seven million copies in the United States and the United Kingdom combined on that day. It has 38 chapters, and is about 255,000 words long .
On 5 April 2006 Warner Brothers announced that the film of the same name, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, will be released in cinemas on 13 July 2007. *
In the Czech Republic a college student translated the book in July/September, long before its intended release date, and one 14-year old schoolboy made it available on his private website. This led to confusion, with many newspapers stating that this unofficial translation was done by group of teenagers and the official Czech publisher (Albatros ) announcing that they would sue the schoolboy. Later they retracted this announcement.
In Britain, the blind then-Home Secretary David Blunkett complained about the delay of the cassette version of the book, as well as its projected price.
The Canadian version of the book is made from recycled paper and saved 29,640 trees in the initial print run of 1 million books. J.K. Rowling comments on this in a message written specifically for the Canadian edition of the book.
The German translation of this book is 300 pages longer than the English version.
Harry is wandering about Little Whinging arguing with his cousin Dudley, on August 2 1995 when they are attacked by Dementors. Harry drives them off with a Patronus Charm, but Dudley is hurt. A neighbour, Arabella Figg, comes to help, revealing that she has been asked by Albus Dumbledore to keep an eye on Harry. Back home, Harry receives a letter stating that he has been expelled from Hogwarts (as students are forbidden to do any magic outside of school), and must appear at a hearing at the Ministry of Magic to explain his actions.
Several members of the Order of the Phoenix come to escort Harry safely to their headquarters at the Black family home, 12 Grimmauld Place. The Weasleys, Hermione, and Harry’s godfather Sirius Black are all already there. Harry is upset because, on Dumbledore's orders, no one has been telling him what has been happening in the fight against Lord Voldemort. The Minister for Magic, Cornelius Fudge, refuses to believe that Voldemort has returned, and has been using The Daily Prophet to publish articles discrediting Harry and Dumbledore.
Harry is taken to the hearing by Mr. Weasley. They arrive late, as the time and place have been changed without telling them. Dumbledore also arrives just in time bringing Mrs Figg as witness that Harry acted in self-defence. As they leave, Harry is disturbed to see Lucius Malfoy, a known Death Eater visiting Fudge at the ministry.
The friends return to Hogwarts, meeting Luna Lovegood on the train. Hagrid has not returned to the school, and Dolores Umbridge has been appointed by the Ministry to become the new Defence Against the Dark Arts teacher. It becomes clear she has been appointed to take control of the school, and refuses to teach her classes anything useful to fight Voldemort. She is appointed High Inquisitor and starts to intimidate staff and students alike.
Ron is made the new Keeper for the Gryffindor Quidditch team. The season starts well, but then Umbridge bans Harry, Fred and George from the team. Harry is replaced by Ron's younger sister, Ginny. Hagrid returns, revealing he was sent on a fruitless secret mission by Dumbledore to seek aid from the giants. Both he and Professor Sybill Trelawney are put under heavy scrutiny by Umbridge, as she views both of them as incompetent. In the case of Hagrid, Umbridge's dislike is intensified by her prejudice towards "half-breeds" (Hagrid himself is a half-giant). Umbridge sacks Professor Trelawney, but Dumbledore replaces her with his own appointment, Firenze, before she can use her authority to impose another teacher.
Harry has a number of strange dreams, mostly about running down a hallway and attempting to open a door in the Ministry of Magic's Department of Mysteries. In one of these nightmares, shortly before Christmas, Harry dreams that he is a snake attacking Ron's father, Arthur Weasley, who works at the Ministry. Waking up, Harry raises the alarm, believing his dream to have been a vision, and Arthur is indeed discovered with poisonous snake bites. Harry begins to wonder if he is being possessed and transported by Voldemort to do his bidding. Dumbledore reassures him, but asks Severus Snape to give Harry lessons in the art of Occlumency, the ability to block one's mind from another.
Hermione contacts journalist Rita Skeeter, threatening to reveal to the authorities that she is an unregistered animagus unless she writes an article for Harry about Voldemort's return. Luna Lovegood's father runs The Quibbler', and he agrees to print the article. Umbridge is furious when it appears. She bans the magazine, but the story spreads rapidly through the school.
Hermione convinces Harry that as Umbridge refuses to teach her subject properly, Harry must teach the students himself. They form the D.A., Defence Association, but this becomes Dumbledore's Army, as Umbridge’s decrees controlling the school become more and more severe. Umbridge eventually discovers a meeting of the D.A., and catches Harry. Dumbledore pretends that it was he who organised the meetings, and is dismissed by Umbridge, who appoints herself as the new headmistress. The Weasley twins use their talent for practical jokes to cause trouble around the school, while all of the teachers pointedly do nothing to help the new Headmistress. The twins set off one last prank as a decoy so that Harry can talk to Sirius via the fireplace in Umbridge's office. The Twins quit school in spectacular fashion to start their own joke shop, 'Weasley's Wizard Wheezes', leaving a magical swamp inside the school.
Harry has another dream in which he sees Sirius captured in the Department of Mysteries, and being tortured. He makes a desperate attempt to contact Sirius via the fireplace in Umbridge's office, but the Black family's house-elf, Kreacher, deliberately tricks Harry into believing Sirius has vanished. Umbridge catches Harry, but Hermione fools Umbridge into believing that they have been hiding something in the woods. Umbridge reveals that it was she who had sent the Dementors to attack Harry. Once in the woods, Umbridge foolishly insults the centaurs. In the confusion that follows Harry and company manage to find the school Thestrals, on which they fly to London and the Ministry of Magic.
Harry, Ron, Hermione, Ginny, Luna, and Neville Longbottom arrive in the Department of Mysteries which Harry saw in his dream, but find it occupied by a group of Death Eaters. The dream was not real, and had been a trap. Voldemort is seeking to steal a prophecy from the ministry, and needs Harry to get it for him. The only people who can pick up a prophecy without suffering madness are the people that the prophecy refers to.
A battle begins between the students and the Death Eaters. Most of the students are injured, but, as they near defeat, five of the adult wizards from the Order of the Phoenix appear to help them. During the ensuing battle, the glass sphere which holds the prophecy is shattered. Tragically, Sirius is struck by a curse from the wand of his cousin, the Death Eater Bellatrix Lestrange, and dies. Dumbledore shows up and captures most of the Death Eaters, but Bellatrix escapes.
Harry blindly chases after Bellatrix and catches up with her in the main atrium of the Ministry of Magic, where they fight. Lord Voldemort himself appears inside the atrium and duels with Dumbledore. Alerted Ministry of Magic employees arrive in time to see Voldemort for themselves before he disapparates taking Bellatrix with him. Cornelius Fudge finally accepts that Voldemort has returned.
Later in Dumbledore's office, an irate Harry receives an apology from Dumbledore concerning his neglect of Harry over the past year. Dumbledore explains his actions and reveals the meaning of the lost prophecy, which states (from Dumbledore's interpretation) that at some point, Harry will either have to murder Voldemort, or be killed by him.
Once the boys arrive home, Vernon and Petunia turn on their nephew, blaming him for Dudley's condition. Vernon demands that Harry leave, even though Harry explains that Voldemort is after him. As this is going on, Harry receives a letter stating that he has been expelled from Hogwarts (as students are forbidden to do any magic outside of school) but then several more letters arrive in quick succession. Letters from Arthur Weasley and Sirius Black warn Harry not to leave the house, while another overturns his expulsion and orders him to appear at a hearing at the Ministry of Magic. The last letter is a Howler which screams "Remember my last, Petunia". Upon hearing this, Petunia insists that Harry will have to stay.
After being locked in his room for several days, a menagerie of wizards and witches comes to rescue Harry, Professor Remus Lupin and Mad-Eye Moody among them. They take him to 12 Grimmauld Place, the home of the Black family, who have used various techniques to hide the building, making it an ideal headquarters for the Order of the Phoenix. The Weasleys, Hermione, and Sirius are all staying there. Sirius has been ordered not to leave the house because of the Ministry's continued search for him (see Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban). Harry finds himself angry and argumentative with those at Grimmauld Place, fueled by his feeling that, despite his trust, they have not been honest with him. He is also disappointed to learn that Ron and Hermione have been made school prefects, but he has not. They all maintain that Dumbledore ordered absolute secrecy, which is why Harry has not been made aware of events. Harry nonetheless manages to learn quite a bit about what has transpired since the end of the last school year.
Although both Harry and Dumbledore have told the world that Lord Voldemort has returned, no one believes them. Indeed, the complacent Ministry of Magic, keen to avoid panic, has been working to discredit them both, using the wizarding newspaper The Daily Prophet to suggest that Harry and Dumbledore are eccentric liars. Dumbledore's supporters, however, have reformed the Order of the Phoenix, which existed the last time that Lord Voldemort threatened the world. A number of new members are in the Order as well, and it is dedicated to saving everyone from the resurgence of Voldemort and his Death Eaters.
Although this appears to be an attempt to intimidate Harry and to keep Dumbledore from showing up as Harry's defence, the ancient wizard and headmaster of Hogwarts appears nonetheless. Mrs. Figg also appears as a witness, testifying that the Dementors were real, not mere figments of Harry's imagination or lies, and Harry is exonerated. However, something seems strange - Dumbledore scarcely pays any attention to Harry, and as the young boy leaves, he sees Lucius Malfoy conferring with Cornelius Fudge. This shocks Harry, as Malfoy is a known Death Eater, though Mr. Weasley alludes to bribery.
Once school starts, things happen at a rapid pace. The fifth year is when the O.W.L.s are taken, and the teachers push the students hard in preparation. Professor Umbridge gains more and more influence on the school, through a succession of further Decrees passed by the Ministry of Magic, culminating in her appointment as Hogwarts High Inquisitor, and begins to make intrusive and intimidating inspections of teachers and students alike. Ron is made the new keeper for the Gryffindor Quidditch team. In a letter to Ron, Ron's older brother Percy, who is now working for Fudge, advises Ron to 'sever ties' with Harry because Harry is allegedly a very dangerous person to fraternize with. He also recommends that Ron report anything unusual to Umbridge, whom he calls 'a very lovely, helpful woman.' In addition, he hints that this might be Dumbledore's last year at Hogwarts.
Hagrid later returns, looking much the worse for wear. Although he eventually divulges his mission to recruit the giants to the Order's side, he is much more reluctant to come clean about the cause of his injuries. Both he and Professor Sybill Trelawney are under heavy scrutiny by Umbridge, as she views both of them as incompetent; Umbridge is also prejudiced against "half-breeds," and Hagrid is half-human, half-giant.
As Umbridge convinces Fudge to pass more edicts, activities in the school become intensely curtailed. All student groups are banned; the Slytherin Quidditch team is almost immediately reactivated, but the Gryffindor team is held up until Minerva McGonagall goes over Umbridge's head and has Dumbledore reinstate it. This eventually causes Dumbledore's own power as Headmaster to be secondary, in many respects, to Umbridge herself, via yet another edict, which results in a greater dislike of her by many students, save perhaps those in Slytherin House. The Slytherins compose a taunting ditty entitled "Weasley is Our King" in an attempt to intimidate Ron into playing poorly. It succeeds, but Harry captures the Snitch in the first game to clinch victory. However, a fight afterwards provoked by Draco Malfoy results in Harry and Fred and George Weasley being permanently banned from playing by Umbridge so long as she remains at Hogwarts.
All along, Harry has had a number of strange dreams, mostly about running down a hallway and attempting to open a door in the Ministry of Magic's Department of Mysteries. In one of these nightmares, Harry dreams that he is a snake attacking Ron's father, Arthur Weasley, who works at the Ministry. Waking up, Harry raises the alarm, believing his dream to have been a vision, and Arthur is indeed discovered with poisonous snake bites and hospitalised, eventually recovering from his injuries. Harry begins to wonder if he is being possessed and transported by Voldemort to do his bidding; others reassure him that this cannot be so. Soon, however, Dumbledore orders Harry to be placed under Severus Snape's tutelage in the art of Occlumency, the ability to block one's mind from being manipulated.
Hermione has contacted the journalist Rita Skeeter, and threatens to reveal to the authorities that she (Rita) is an unregistered animagus (see Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire) unless she interviews Harry concerning the truth about Voldemort's return. Luna Lovegood's father happens to be the editor of The Quibbler, and her father agrees to take Rita's article. When it appears, Umbridge is furious: she forbids Harry to go on any further Hogsmeade trips, and bans copies of The Quibbler inside the school. Fortunately for Harry, this gives the magazine the lure of the forbidden and soon the publication spreads like wildfire throughout the school despite Umbridge's frantic efforts to stop it.
Empowered to do so by Ministry edicts, Umbridge sacks Professor Trelawney, but Dumbledore, citing his remaining authority as Headmaster, insists that Trelawney be allowed to stay in residence at the castle despite Umbridge's attempt to evict her as well. Dumbledore also manages to recruit a replacement Divination teacher, a centaur named Firenze, whom Harry met in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone. This irritates Umbridge greatly. Dumbledore has outwitted her using her own rules; the Ministry decrees have only given Umbridge the power to make appointments when the Headmaster is unable to find a satisfactory candidate. She also dislikes what she disdainfully - but wrongly - refers to as "half-breeds", including centaurs.
Things begin to come to a head between Harry and Cho, when, in the middle of a DA meeting, the members are informed that they have been exposed and Umbridge is on her way to catch them. Harry is the only one caught and is taken to Dumbledore's office, where he discovers that Cho's friend, Mariette Edgecombe was the informer, who is heavily disfigured following an ingenious charm employed by Hermione. Dumbledore, in order to protect the students, convinces Fudge and Umbridge that it was his idea to form the DA in order to depose Fudge as Minister of Magic, pandering to Fudge's existing paranoia. Dumbledore escapes, and Umbridge is installed as the new Headmistress (per one of the many Decrees passed by the Ministry) and forms an Inquisitorial Squad. The Weasley twins use their talent for practical jokes to cause trouble around the school, while all of the teachers, who dislike Umbridge intensely, pointedly do nothing to help the new Headmistress cope. Both Harry and Cho defend their respective friends' actions, which leads to a heated argument. When he sees tears of rage in Cho's eyes, Harry warns her that he won't tolerate her crying anymore as he has enough to cope with as it is. Stung, Cho snaps that he can go ahead and cope with his problems then, and storms off angrily. Extremely angry, Harry walks away too. After that fight, Harry and Cho stop talking to each other.
The Weasley twins set off one last prank as a decoy so that Harry can talk to Sirius via the fireplace in Umbridge's office - the only one not under surveillance - and are caught; they decide to leave Hogwarts in spectacular fashion, leaving a magical swamp inside the school, and to use the winnings from the Triwizard Tournament given to them by Harry to start their joke shop, 'Weasley's Wizard Wheezes'.
Harry and his crew make a desperate attempt to contact Sirius via the fireplace in Umbridge's office, but the Black family's house-elf, Kreacher, deliberately tricks Harry into believing Sirius has vanished; he was in fact tending to Buckbeak, the hippogriff. Umbridge and her minions--mainly Slytherin students--capture Harry's gang. Thinking fast, Hermione makes up a story about whom they were trying to contact, and says that they were protecting a weapon, and that she and Harry would lead Umbridge to it. Umbridge asks Snape to give her some Veritaserum, but he claims he has none left; she is not aware that he is also a member of the Order of the Phoenix. Umbridge tells Harry that it was she who ordered the Dementors on him during the summer.
Upon arriving at the Department of Mysteries, and after a number of false turns, they arrive at the location in Harry's dream to find not Voldemort and Sirius, but a group of Death Eaters. The Death Eaters include, among others, Draco's father, Lucius Malfoy; MacNair, the executioner in the employ of the Ministry; Azkaban escapee and former Department of Mysteries employee Rookwood; and Azkaban escapee Bellatrix Lestrange, who is Sirius's cousin and the torturer of Neville Longbottom's parents. The vision of Voldemort and Sirius at the Department of Mysteries was a trap. When Voldemort realised that Harry's dreams gave him access to Voldemort's mind, he planted the vision of Sirius being tortured to lure Harry to the Ministry and use him to retrieve a glass sphere, the record of a prophecy, from the Department of Mysteries. The prophecy, made before Harry's birth, is apparently about Voldemort and Harry. Only the subjects of a prophecy can handle it, and as Voldemort does not want to risk discovery, he lures Harry into retrieving it for him. Having previously heard the first part of the prophecy relating to Harry's ability to conquer the Dark Lord - on which basis Voldemort attempted unsuccessfully to murder Harry as a baby, precipitating his own downfall - Voldemort is now determined to hear the full prophecy, hoping to learn how to destroy Harry.
Harry blindly chases after Bellatrix, intent on avenging Sirius, and soon catches up with her in the main atrium of the Ministry of Magic, where they fight. Then Lord Voldemort himself appears inside the atrium. He and Dumbledore duel, and after a dramatic fight and a brief episode where Voldemort actually manages to possess Harry, tempting Dumbledore to kill him in Harry's body, Voldemort eventually retreats by disapparating, taking Bellatrix with him. Alerted Ministry of Magic employees arrive in time to see He Who Must Not Be Named for themselves. Among them is Cornelius Fudge, who finally accepts Voldemort's return and believes what Dumbledore and Harry have been saying. In turn, The Daily Prophet reverses its hostile attitude towards the pair, restoring their reputations and praising them for warning the wizarding community of Voldemort's return.
The one with the power to vanquish the Dark Lord approaches...born to those who have thrice defied him, born as the seventh month dies...and the Dark Lord will mark him as his equal, but he will have power the Dark Lord knows not...and either must die at the hand of the other for neither can live while the other survives...the one with the power to vanquish the Dark Lord will be born as the seventh month dies...
This was interpreted to mean that Voldemort would kill either Harry or Neville Longbottom, who were both born at the end of July, or vice-versa. Only part of this prophecy was told to Voldemort, as Voldemort's spy, who was eavesdropping on the conversation between Trelawney and Dumbledore, was thrown out before Trelawney had completed the prophesy (The identity of the eavesdropper was later revealed in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. After Voldemort, hearing only part the prophecy, attacked Harry as a child, the latter part of the prophecy was realised; Harry would be his foe and kill or be killed by him, not Neville. Had Voldemort heard all the prophecy, he would have realised that by attacking Harry, he would transfer some of his powers to Harry.
The existence of this prophecy brings clarity to Dumbledore remarking that Trelawney's prediction in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban has been her second real one. The first prediction was the Harry/Voldemort prophecy.
Dumbledore also tells why Harry must stay with the Dursleys each summer. After Harry's mother died to save him, the charm of protection against Voldemort that her act cast on Harry is sustained as long as Harry has a home among those who share Lily Potter's blood. Aunt Petunia, Lily's sister, therefore acts as a protector for Harry, and it was Dumbledore who sent Petunia the Howler at the beginning of the story to remind her of this.
In the end, Harry goes back to the Dursleys', but not without Vernon and Petunia getting a stern talking-to by a number of wizards in the Order (including a menacing Alastor Moody). Changes are brewing in the wizarding world. Indeed, the last chapter of the book is entitled "The Second War Begins."
2003 novels | Harry Potter books | Sequels
هاري بوتر و نظام العنقاء | Harry Potter og Fønixordenen | Harry Potter und der Orden des Phönix | Harry Potter y la Orden del Fénix | Harry Potter et l'Ordre du phénix | हैरी पॉटर और फ़ीनिक्स की श्रेणी | Harry Potter i Red feniksa | Harry Potter e l'ordine della fenice | הארי פוטר ומסדר עוף החול | Haris Poteris ir Fenikso brolija | Harry Potter és a Főnix Rendje | Harry Potter dalam Kumpulan Phoenix | Harry Potter en de Orde van de Feniks | ハリー・ポッターと不死鳥の騎士団 | Harry Potter og Føniksordenen | Harry Potter i Zakon Feniksa | Harry Potter e a Ordem da Fênix | Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix | Harry Potter in feniksov red | Harry Potter ja Feeniksin kilta | Harry Potter och Fenixorden | Harry Potter ve Zümrüdüanka Yoldaşlığı (kitap) | 哈利·波特与凤凰社
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"Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix".
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