รายละเอียด : Quidditch Through the Ages
Quidditch Through the Ages
An entertaining Harry Potter companion book written by J.K. Rowling
Did you know that : there are 700 ways of committing a foul in Quidditch? The game first began to evolve on Queerditch Marsh? What Bumphing is? That Puddlemere United is oldest team in the Britain and Ireland league? (founded 1163) All this information and much more could be yours once you have read this book: this is all you could ever need to know about the history, the rules - and the breaking of the rules - of the noble wizarding sport of Quidditch.
Quidditch Through the Ages is one of the most popular titles in the Hogwarts school library. Madam Pince, our librarian, tells me that it is pawed about, dribbled on and generally maltraeated' nearly every day - a high compliment for any book. anyone who plays or watches Quidditch ragularly will relish Mr Whisp's book.as do those of us interested in wider wizarding history. As we have developed the game of Quidditch, so it has developed us; Quidditch unites witches and wizards from all walks of life, bringing us together to share moments of exhilaration, triumph and (for those who support the Chudley Cannons ) despair.
สารบัญ : Quidditch Through the Ages
- Foreworgd by Albus Dumbledore
- The Evolution of the Flying Broomstick
- Ancient Broom Games
- The Game from Queerditch Marsh
- The Arrival of the Golden Snitch
- Anti-Muggle Precautions
- Changes in Quidditch since the Fourteenth Century
เนื้อหาปกหลัง : Quidditch Through the Ages
If you have ever asked yourself where the Golden Snitch came from, how the Bludgers came into existence or why the Wigtown Wanderers have pictures of meat cleavers on their robes, you need Quidditch Through the Ages This edition is a copy of the volume in Hogwarts school library, where it is consulted by young Quidditch fans on an almost daily basis.
proceeds from the sale of this book will go to Comic Relief, who will use your money to continue improving and changing lives - work that is even more important and astonishing than the three and a half second capture of the Golden Snitch by Roderick Plumpton in 1921