Post by Suzi2kidsthe descendents of muggle-borns become recognized as
full-blooded wizards? Yes, I would imagine so. For example,
I am primarily of European lineage, but my great,
great-grandmother was a Huron. Now just to look at me you'd
swear I just stepped off the Irish coast. Whatever Native
American blood still runs in my veins has long since been
discolored by my Celtic ancestry. I wouldn't ever mark
Native American on a box asking about race even though
technically I guess I could. But if you look at it from a
rights of primogeniture point of view, all it takes is a
drop of the right blood to make one an heir to the throne.
Provided nobody else has more drops of royal blood than you
do. So supposing the Huron's were looking for a tribal
princess (which they wouldn't be since they are disbanded
now) and I could prove that my great, great-grandmother was
a shaman and I was her only descendent I suppose I would
qualify. If Hermione were to marry a pureblood, her
offspring would be half-blood. Then, let's say, that child
marries a pureblood, that offspring would be a
quarterblood. Repeat again, it would be eighthblood, repeat
again sixteenthblood, etc. After, say 10 or 20 generations,
do you suppose that little bit of muggle would still show up
on genealogy charts? Do you suppose there is an agency that
keeps track of this sort of thing? If there is an agency
that keeps track of that sort of thing, certainly muggle
ancestry would show up. No matter how many generations have
passed.
I would expect that you are right about this. As here in
the USA there are people that keep track of indean blood.
My dad was the last one who they would except as being of
the indean blood. But oddly nither my dad or my grand
father ever tryed to belisted.
Also take earni he said that you could trace his pureblood
back 6 generations. ever think why he has to stop at 6?
Dumbledore seems fairly certain of the fact that Voldemort
is Slytherin's only heir and I presume he has some basis for
that assumption. Of course there are plenty of variables
that Dumbledore couldn't possibly account for, illegitimate
births for example. I doubt he was hand-cuffed to Salazar
Slytherin a thousand years ago and knows for a fact every
single person he ever had sex with.
That would depend on what kind of spells they have to trace
such things down.
Perhaps that's what a squib really is - a muggle
"throwback" born into a so-called pureblood family (after
the time that the muggle/wizard liaison was forgotten
about). I have another crazy theory for everyone to scoff
at, and it's this: Magic isn't genetic. It isn't about
your family or your blood type, it's about what you
believe. Squibbs are people from prominently magical
families who doubt their magical abilities to the extent
that they cannot perform. Muggles are people who simply
don't believe in magic, or don't want to believe in it.
Vernon and Petunia won't even *discuss* it. Harry does
magic and does it well because nobody ever told him he
couldn't. Neville, on the other hand, has difficulty with
it because he's always comparing himself to others in his
family who are better at it than he is. Ditto with Ron.
People like Filch are too self-concious and bitter to
believe in themselves. They'd rather blame others for what
they can't do than try to figure out how to do what they
want.
Intresting thought. How do you get this to work with the
thing JKR said about a person is either born a muggle or a
witch or wizard?
Not trying to shoot holes here. Just trying to see how well
it fits.
I gave up trying to understand this sort of thing until JKR
releases the rules that she did for magic. She said she
wrote them down, but I don't think we will see them until
after book 7.