Description: Faithful reproduction of the Marauder Map taken from the Harry Potter...
Description: Faithful reproduction of the Marauder Map taken from the Harry Potter saga. Made of parchment paper. It is an officially licensed product by Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. The Marauder's Map is a map created by the group which included James Potter (Harry's father, 'Ramoso' - Prongs in the original English), Sirius Black (Harry's godfather, 'Padfoot' - Padfoot), Remus Lupin ('Lunastorta' - Moony) and Peter Minus (Peter Pettigrew, 'Codaliscia' - Wormtail). The name Map of the Wormtail is representative of the fact that, within the events of Harry Potter, it is used by the four to combine all the colours. The map may look like a simple parchment sheet, but if you say the words 'I solemnly swear I have no good intentions', a map appears representing all of Hogwarts, including secret passages leading to Hogsmeade and information on how to open them. The map can also locate anyone at Hogwarts and show their movements in real time. In the end, once used, by saying the words: 'Done the misdeed', the map disappears and becomes a harmless piece of white parchment again. This stratagem prevents those who don't know the secret from using it, however it was commandeered by Gazza who must have vaguely understood what it was about. The twins Fred and George Weasley found it in their office and stole it and only in the third year, after learning it by heart, they gave it to Harry Potter, to allow him to visit Hogsmeade (for which he was not allowed). In this same book, Professor Snape finds the map in Harry's possession and tries to get its secrets, but it answers him insulting him. This does not surprise him, however, as the creators of the map hated Snape when he was a boy. Even Lupin, after seeing it, asks to borrow it from him. Snape, however, insists on requisitioning the map, claiming that it contains black magic, but more likely because he recognized the nicknames of his 'enemies' at school. In the sixth book, however, it turns out that the map of the evildoer does not show the room of necessity, which remains 'mysteriously' concealed, since it is indisgnable, as it appears only when necessary and changes shape and size according to the necessary use.
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