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{{short description|People without magical abilities in the Harry Potter universe}}
{{for|all uses of the terms "Muggle" and "Muggles" other than those related to Harry Potter|Muggle (disambiguation)}}
{{about|a term in the ''Harry Potter'' series|other uses|Muggle (disambiguation)}}
{{Use British English|date=August 2011}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2013}}
In [[J. K. Rowling]]'s ''[[Harry Potter]]'' series, a '''Muggle''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|m|ʌ|g|əl}}) is a person who lacks any sort of magical ability and was not born in a magical family. Muggles can also be described as people who do not have any magical blood inside them. It differs from the term ''[[Fictional universe of Harry Potter#Blood purity|Squib]]'', which refers to a person with one or more magical parents yet without any magical power or ability, and from the term [[Fictional universe of Harry Potter#Muggle-born|Muggle-born]] (or the derogatory and offensive term ''[[mudblood]]'', which is used to imply the supposed impurity of Muggle blood), which refers to a person with magical abilities but with non-magical parents. Equivalent terms used by the [[Fictional universe|in-universe]] magic community of the USA include '''No-Maj''' and '''No-Majs''' (short for "no magic"); French equivalents are '''Non-Magiques''' and '''No-Majes.''' Other terms are '''Can't-Spells''' and '''Non-Wizards'''.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2015/nov/06/muggles-jk-rowling-fantastic-beasts-and-where-to-find-them-american-term-non-wizards|title=What, no muggles? JK Rowling fans aghast at new term for non-wizards|last=Child|first=Ben|date=2015-11-06|website=The Guardian|language=en|access-date=2018-05-14|archive-date=13 February 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210213224406/https://www.theguardian.com/film/2015/nov/06/muggles-jk-rowling-fantastic-beasts-and-where-to-find-them-american-term-non-wizards|url-status=live}}</ref>


== Usage in ''Harry Potter'' ==
'''Muggle''', in the [[Harry Potter]] series of books by [[J. K. Rowling]], refers to a person who lacks any sort of magical ability and was not born into the magical world. It differs from the term ''[[Blood_purity_(Harry_Potter)#Squibs|Squib]]'', which refers to a person with one or more magical parents yet without any magical ability, and from the term Muggle-born (or the more offensive ''mudblood''), which refers to a person with magical abilities but without magical parents. Other words also spelled "muggle" have been in use over the years, but they are unrelated to the term used in the Harry Potter series.<ref>Oxford English Dictionary, 2010</ref> It first appeared in the opening chapter of the first Harry Potter book, where Harry's uncle is shocked to find himself called a "muggle" by a tiny old man in a violet cloak.{{Citation needed|date=June 2011}}
The term ''Muggle'' is sometimes used in a [[pejorative]] manner in the novels. Since ''Muggle'' refers to a person who is a member of the non-[[Magic in Harry Potter|magical]] [[Fictional universe of Harry Potter|community]], Muggles are simply ordinary human beings without any magical abilities and almost always with no awareness of the existence of magic. Witches and wizards with non-magical parents are called ''Muggle-borns''. There have also been some children known to have been born to one magical and one non-magical parent. People of this mixed parentage are called ''[[Fictional universe of Harry Potter#Blood purity|half-bloods]]''; magical people with any Muggle ancestry on the one side or the other are half-bloods as well. The most prominent Muggle-born in the ''Harry Potter'' series is [[Hermione Granger]], who was born to Muggles of undisclosed names. Witches and wizards with all-magical heritage are called ''pure bloods''.


In the ''Harry Potter'' novels, Muggles are often portrayed as foolish, sometimes befuddled characters, who are completely oblivious to the wizarding world that exists in their midst. If, by unfortunate means, Muggles do happen to observe the working of magic, the [[Ministry of Magic]] sends Obliviators to cast Memory Charms upon them, causing them to forget the event.
==Harry Potter==
The term '''Muggle''' is sometimes used in a [[pejorative]] manner in the books. Since "Muggle" refers to a person who is a member of the non-[[Magic (Harry Potter)|magical]] [[wizarding world|community]], the Muggles are simply ordinary human beings rather than witches and wizards. According to Rowling, a quarter of the annual [[Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry|Hogwarts]] intake have two non-magical parents;{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} thus far in [[Canon (fiction)|canon]], there have also been some children known to have been born to one magical and one non-magical parent. Children of this mixed parentage are called ''[[Blood purity (Harry Potter)|Half-bloods]]'' (strictly speaking, they are 'Literal Half-bloods'); children with recent Muggle ancestry on the one side or the other are also called Half-bloods.


Some Muggles are aware of the wizarding world. These include Muggle parents of magical children, such as [[Hermione Granger]]'s parents, the [[Supporting Harry Potter characters#The Muggle Prime Minister of Britain|Muggle Prime Minister]] (and predecessors), the [[Dursley family]] (Harry Potter's unsupportive non-magical and only living relatives), and the non-magical spouses of some witches and wizards.
In the ''Harry Potter'' books, non-magical people are often portrayed as foolish, sometimes befuddled characters who are completely ignorant of the Wizarding world that exists in their midst. If, by unfortunate means, non-magical people do happen to observe the working of magic, the [[Ministry of Magic]] sends Obliviators to cast Memory Charms upon them causing them to forget the event.


Rowling has created the word "Muggle" from "mug", an English term for someone who is easily fooled.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theatlantic.com/culture/archive/2011/07/jk-rowling-muggles-were-joints/352860/|title=Before Harry Potter, 'Muggles' Meant Pot|author=Eric Randall|date=14 July 2011|website=The Atlantic|access-date=2 July 2022|archive-date=2 July 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220702150019/https://www.theatlantic.com/culture/archive/2011/07/jk-rowling-muggles-were-joints/352860/|url-status=live}}</ref>
Some Muggles, however, know of the Wizarding world. These include Muggle parents of magical children, such as [[Hermione Granger]]'s parents, the [[Supporting Harry Potter characters#The Muggle Prime Minister of Britain|Muggle Prime Minister]] (and his predecessors), the [[Dursley family]] (Harry Potter's non-magical and only living relatives), and the non-magical spouses of some witches and wizards.


=== Notable Muggles ===
Rowling has said she created the word "Muggle" from "mug", an [[English language|English]] term for someone who is easily fooled. She added the "-gle" to make it sound less demeaning and more "cuddly".<ref>http://www.accio-quote.org/articles/2004/0304-wbd.htm JK Rowling's World Book Day Chat,
* [[List of Harry Potter characters#The Dursleys|The Dursleys]], Harry's maternal relatives with whom he lives for sixteen years
March 4, 2004</ref>
* [[List of supporting Harry Potter characters#The Muggle Prime Minister|The Muggle Prime Minister]]
* [[Frank Bryce]], the Riddle family gardener
* Jacob Kowalski, [[Newt Scamander]]'s No-Maj friend
* Mary Lou Barebone, leader of the New Salem Philanthropic Society (or the "Second Salemers")


== Other usages ==
== Notable [[Muggle]]s in the series ==
The word ''muggle'', or ''muggles'', is now used in various contexts in which its meaning is similar to the sense in which it appears in the Harry Potter book series. Generally speaking, it is used by members of a group to describe those outside the group, comparable to ''civilian'' as used by military personnel. Whereas in the books ''muggle'' is consistently capitalized, in other uses it is often predominantly lowercase.
*[[Petunia Dursley]], Harry's [[Aunt]]
*[[Vernon Dursley]], Harry's [[Uncle]]
*[[Dudley Dursley]], Harry's [[Cousin]]
*[[Marge Dursley]], Vernon Dursley's [[sister]]
*[[Muggle Prime Minister]]
*[[Frank Bryce]], the riddle family [[garden|gardener]], killed by Voldemort to make a [[horcrux]] from [[Nagini (Harry Potter)|Nagini]].
*[[Tom Riddle Sr|Tom Riddle, Senior]], Lord Voldemort's father
*Mr. & Mrs. Granger, [[Hermione Granger|Hermione]]'s parents
*Mr.Roberts, the manager of the [[campground]] the Weasleys stayed at for the [[Quidditch]] World Cup


* According to the BBC quiz show ''[[QI]]'', in the episode "Hocus Pocus", ''muggle'' was a 1930s jazz slang word for someone who uses cannabis. "Muggles" is the title of a 1928 recording by [[Louis Armstrong and His Orchestra]].
==Later usages==
* A ''muggle'' is, according to Abbott Walter Bower, the author of the ''Scotichronicon'', "an Englishman's tail". In Alistair Moffat's book ''A History of the Borders from Early Times'', it is stated that there was a widely held 13th-century belief amongst Scots that Englishmen had tails.<ref>Alistair Moffat, ''The Borders: a history of the Borders from earliest times'', 2002, Deerpark Press, {{ISBN|9780954197902}}, pp.211-212</ref>
The word "muggle" or "muggles" is now used in various contexts in which its meaning is similar to the sense in which it appears in the Harry Potter series of books. Generally speaking, it is used by members of a group to describe those outside the group, comparable to "[[civilian]]" as used by military personnel. Whereas, in the books, "Muggle" is consistently capitalised, in other uses it is often all lower case.
* Ernest Bramah referred to "the artful Muggles" in a detective story published decades before the Potter books ("The Ghost at Massingham Mansions", in ''The Eyes of Max Carrados'', Doran, New York, 1924).
* "Muggle" was added to the [[Oxford English Dictionary]] in 2003, where it is said to refer to a person who is lacking a skill.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/cbbcnews/hi/uk/newsid_2882000/2882895.stm|title=BBC: 'Muggle' goes into Oxford English Dictionary | date=2003-03-24 | accessdate=2010-01-05|work=BBC News}}</ref>
* Muggles is the name of a female character in the children's book ''[[The Gammage Cup]]'' by Carol Kendall published in 1959 by Harcourt, Brace & World.
* "Muggle" is used in informal English by members of small, specialised groups, usually those that consider their activities to either be analogous to or directly involve magic (such as within [[hacker culture]];<r ef>''[[Jargon File]]'': [http://catb.org/~esr/jargon/html/M/muggle.html muggle]</ref> and [[paganism|Pagans]], [[Neopagans]] and [[Wiccans]])<ref>Faith von Adams, "I Roomed With A Muggle", New Witch Magazine, Issue 5 (Fall 2003) pg. 34</ref> to refer to those outside the group.
* Published in 1982, Roald Dahl's character the Big Friendly Giant uses the word "Muggled" while describing a good dream to the other main character, Sophie - “And the whole school is then cheering like mad and shouting bravo well done, and, for ever after that, even when you is getting your sums all gungswizzled and muggled up, Mr. Figgins is always giving you ten out of ten and writing Good Work Sophie in your exercise book.” – ''[[The BFG]]''. Roald Dahl also names a family of monkeys "The Muggle-Wumps" in ''[[The Twits]]'' and other works.
* "Muggle" (or '''geomuggle''') is used by geocachers to refer to those not involved in or aware of the sport of [[geocaching]]. A cache that has been tampered with by non-participants is said to be plundered or "muggled".<ref>{{cite web
* ''Muggle'' was added to the ''[[Oxford English Dictionary]]'' in 2003, where it is said to refer to a person who is lacking a skill.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/cbbcnews/hi/uk/newsid_2882000/2882895.stm |title=BBC: 'Muggle' goes into Oxford English Dictionary |date=24 March 2003 |work=BBC News |access-date=5 January 2010 |archive-date=19 May 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210519063809/http://news.bbc.co.uk/cbbcnews/hi/uk/newsid_2882000/2882895.stm |url-status=live }}</ref>
| title = Geocaching Glossary
* ''Muggle'' is used in informal English by members of small, specialised groups, usually those that consider their activities to either be analogous to or directly involve magic (such as within [[hacker culture]];<ref>''[[Jargon File]]'': [http://catb.org/~esr/jargon/html/M/muggle.html muggle] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071008183303/http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html/M/muggle.html |date=8 October 2007 }}</ref> and [[pagan]]s, [[Magic (illusion)|magicians]],<ref>{{Cite web |title=Conjuring Terms - Magicpedia |url=https://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Conjuring_Terms#M |access-date=2023-12-29 |website=geniimagazine.com |archive-date=29 December 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231229214606/https://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Conjuring_Terms#M |url-status=live }}</ref> [[Neopagan]]s and [[Wicca]]ns)<ref>Faith von Adams, "I Roomed with a Muggle", New Witch Magazine, Issue 5 (Fall 2003) pg. 34</ref> to refer to those outside the group.
| work =
* ''Muggle'' (or ''geomuggle'') is used by geocachers to refer to those not involved in or aware of the sport of [[geocaching]]. A cache that has been tampered with by non-participants is said to be plundered or ''muggled''.<ref>{{cite web | title = Geocaching Glossary | publisher = Geocaching.com | url = http://www.geocaching.com/about/glossary.aspx#Geomuggle | access-date = 20 September 2007 | archive-date = 21 April 2022 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20220421091751/https://www.geocaching.com/about/glossary.aspx#Geomuggle | url-status = live }}</ref>
| publisher = Geocaching.com
| url = http://www.geocaching.com/about/glossary.aspx#Geomuggle
| accessdate = 2007-09-20 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web
| title = Muggle
| work = GeoWiki
| url = http://wiki.geocaching.com.au/wiki/Muggle
| accessdate = 2007-09-20}}</ref>
* "Muggle" is also used to refer to a "common person" who is not obsessed with nail polish, unlike a small portion of the population on Internet message boards. <ref>{{cite web|title=Muggle|url=http://www.makeupalley.com/board/j.asp?bid=10}}</ref>


===Trademark lawsuit===
* The [[NBC]] [[science fiction]] [[Television drama|drama]] series ''[[Heroes (TV series)|Heroes]]'' features a [[Pomeranian (dog)|dog]] named [[List of characters in Heroes|''Mr. Muggles'']], who is owned by the Bennet family. The writers of the show have stated that the dog's name is an [[allusion]] to the ''Harry Potter'' series as, like [[Harry Potter (character)|Harry]], [[Claire Bennet]] has been [[adoption|adopted]] by a family who does not have any special abilities.
Nancy Stouffer, author of ''The Legend of Rah and the Muggles'' (1984) accused Rowling of a [[trademark]] violation for the use of the term "muggles", as well as copyright violations for some similarities to her book.<ref>Burden of Proof 'Harry Potter' Book Lawsuit: 'Legend of Rah and Muggles' Author Claims Trademark Violations, Burden of Proof, CNN Transcripts, July 5, 2000, https://www.eyrie.org/~robotech/stouffer.htm {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220728111829/https://www.eyrie.org/~robotech/stouffer.htm |date=28 July 2022 }}</ref> Rowling and Scholastic, her publisher, sued for declaratory judgment and won on a [[summary judgment]] motion,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.eyrie.org/~robotech/stouffer.htm|title=Stouffer v. Rowling Summary Judgment Decision, Sept. 17, 2002|website=www.eyrie.org|access-date=1 March 2018|archive-date=28 July 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220728111829/https://www.eyrie.org/~robotech/stouffer.htm|url-status=live}}</ref> based on a lack of likelihood of confusion.
*Used by some Greek fraternities and sororities to describe non-Greek students on their respective campuses.


==See also==
==See also==

{{portal|Harry Potter}}
* [[Fictional universe of Harry Potter#Blood purity|Blood purity in ''Harry Potter'']]
{{Wikipedia-Books|Harry Potter}}
<!-- transferative senses listed at disambiguation page, not here -->
* [[Blood purity (Harry Potter)]]
* [[Layman]]
* [[Mundane]]
{{-}}


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


{{Wiktionary|muggle|position=left}}
==External links==
{{Wiktionary|muggle|Appendix:Harry Potter/Muggle}}
{{Harry Potter}}
[[Category:Fictional elements introduced in 1997]]
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/cbbcnews/hi/uk/newsid_2882000/2882895.stm BBC: 'Muggle' goes into Oxford English Dictionary]
[[Category:Fictional universe of Harry Potter]]
* [http://www.muggleguide.com Muggle Guide: The Muggle Guide to the Harry Potter Wizarding World]
[[Category:Harry Potter characters]]
* [http://www.newwitch.com/archives/05/read/muggle.html I Roomed with a Muggle: Tips for Living with Non-Magical People]
[[Category:Words originating in fiction]]

[[Category:1997 neologisms]]
{{hpw|Muggle}}

{{harrypotter}}

[[Category:Harry Potter universe]]
[[Category:Fictional human races]]

{{Link GA|es}}
[[be:Магл]]
[[bs:Bezjak]]
[[ca:Muggle]]
[[da:Muggler]]
[[de:Begriffe der Harry-Potter-Romane#Muggel]]
[[et:Mugud]]
[[el:Μαγκλ]]
[[es:Muggle]]
[[eo:Muggle]]
[[fa:مشنگ (هری پاتر)]]
[[fr:Univers de Harry Potter#Moldus]]
[[gl:Muggle]]
[[ko:머글]]
[[hi:मगलू]]
[[hr:Bezjak (Harry Potter)]]
[[id:Muggle]]
[[is:Muggi]]
[[it:Glossario di Harry Potter#Babbano]]
[[lb:Muggle]]
[[hu:Mugli]]
[[mk:Muggle]]
[[mr:मगल]]
[[ms:Muggle]]
[[nl:Bloedzuiverheid#Dreuzel]]
[[ja:マグル]]
[[no:Gomp]]
[[pl:Mugol]]
[[ru:Волшебство мира Гарри Поттера#Маглорождённые]]
[[sl:Bunkelj]]
[[sr:Нормалци]]
[[fi:Harry Potter -sarjan käsitteet]]
[[sv:Blod (Harry Potter)#Mugglare]]
[[th:มักเกิล]]
[[tr:Muggle]]
[[uk:Маґл]]
[[vi:Muggle]]
[[zh:麻瓜]]

Latest revision as of 17:05, 13 October 2024

In J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter series, a Muggle (/ˈmʌɡəl/) is a person who lacks any sort of magical ability and was not born in a magical family. Muggles can also be described as people who do not have any magical blood inside them. It differs from the term Squib, which refers to a person with one or more magical parents yet without any magical power or ability, and from the term Muggle-born (or the derogatory and offensive term mudblood, which is used to imply the supposed impurity of Muggle blood), which refers to a person with magical abilities but with non-magical parents. Equivalent terms used by the in-universe magic community of the USA include No-Maj and No-Majs (short for "no magic"); French equivalents are Non-Magiques and No-Majes. Other terms are Can't-Spells and Non-Wizards.[1]

Usage in Harry Potter

[edit]

The term Muggle is sometimes used in a pejorative manner in the novels. Since Muggle refers to a person who is a member of the non-magical community, Muggles are simply ordinary human beings without any magical abilities and almost always with no awareness of the existence of magic. Witches and wizards with non-magical parents are called Muggle-borns. There have also been some children known to have been born to one magical and one non-magical parent. People of this mixed parentage are called half-bloods; magical people with any Muggle ancestry on the one side or the other are half-bloods as well. The most prominent Muggle-born in the Harry Potter series is Hermione Granger, who was born to Muggles of undisclosed names. Witches and wizards with all-magical heritage are called pure bloods.

In the Harry Potter novels, Muggles are often portrayed as foolish, sometimes befuddled characters, who are completely oblivious to the wizarding world that exists in their midst. If, by unfortunate means, Muggles do happen to observe the working of magic, the Ministry of Magic sends Obliviators to cast Memory Charms upon them, causing them to forget the event.

Some Muggles are aware of the wizarding world. These include Muggle parents of magical children, such as Hermione Granger's parents, the Muggle Prime Minister (and predecessors), the Dursley family (Harry Potter's unsupportive non-magical and only living relatives), and the non-magical spouses of some witches and wizards.

Rowling has created the word "Muggle" from "mug", an English term for someone who is easily fooled.[2]

Notable Muggles

[edit]

Other usages

[edit]

The word muggle, or muggles, is now used in various contexts in which its meaning is similar to the sense in which it appears in the Harry Potter book series. Generally speaking, it is used by members of a group to describe those outside the group, comparable to civilian as used by military personnel. Whereas in the books muggle is consistently capitalized, in other uses it is often predominantly lowercase.

  • According to the BBC quiz show QI, in the episode "Hocus Pocus", muggle was a 1930s jazz slang word for someone who uses cannabis. "Muggles" is the title of a 1928 recording by Louis Armstrong and His Orchestra.
  • A muggle is, according to Abbott Walter Bower, the author of the Scotichronicon, "an Englishman's tail". In Alistair Moffat's book A History of the Borders from Early Times, it is stated that there was a widely held 13th-century belief amongst Scots that Englishmen had tails.[3]
  • Ernest Bramah referred to "the artful Muggles" in a detective story published decades before the Potter books ("The Ghost at Massingham Mansions", in The Eyes of Max Carrados, Doran, New York, 1924).
  • Muggles is the name of a female character in the children's book The Gammage Cup by Carol Kendall published in 1959 by Harcourt, Brace & World.
  • Published in 1982, Roald Dahl's character the Big Friendly Giant uses the word "Muggled" while describing a good dream to the other main character, Sophie - “And the whole school is then cheering like mad and shouting bravo well done, and, for ever after that, even when you is getting your sums all gungswizzled and muggled up, Mr. Figgins is always giving you ten out of ten and writing Good Work Sophie in your exercise book.” – The BFG. Roald Dahl also names a family of monkeys "The Muggle-Wumps" in The Twits and other works.
  • Muggle was added to the Oxford English Dictionary in 2003, where it is said to refer to a person who is lacking a skill.[4]
  • Muggle is used in informal English by members of small, specialised groups, usually those that consider their activities to either be analogous to or directly involve magic (such as within hacker culture;[5] and pagans, magicians,[6] Neopagans and Wiccans)[7] to refer to those outside the group.
  • Muggle (or geomuggle) is used by geocachers to refer to those not involved in or aware of the sport of geocaching. A cache that has been tampered with by non-participants is said to be plundered or muggled.[8]

Trademark lawsuit

[edit]

Nancy Stouffer, author of The Legend of Rah and the Muggles (1984) accused Rowling of a trademark violation for the use of the term "muggles", as well as copyright violations for some similarities to her book.[9] Rowling and Scholastic, her publisher, sued for declaratory judgment and won on a summary judgment motion,[10] based on a lack of likelihood of confusion.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Child, Ben (6 November 2015). "What, no muggles? JK Rowling fans aghast at new term for non-wizards". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 13 February 2021. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  2. ^ Eric Randall (14 July 2011). "Before Harry Potter, 'Muggles' Meant Pot". The Atlantic. Archived from the original on 2 July 2022. Retrieved 2 July 2022.
  3. ^ Alistair Moffat, The Borders: a history of the Borders from earliest times, 2002, Deerpark Press, ISBN 9780954197902, pp.211-212
  4. ^ "BBC: 'Muggle' goes into Oxford English Dictionary". BBC News. 24 March 2003. Archived from the original on 19 May 2021. Retrieved 5 January 2010.
  5. ^ Jargon File: muggle Archived 8 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ "Conjuring Terms - Magicpedia". geniimagazine.com. Archived from the original on 29 December 2023. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
  7. ^ Faith von Adams, "I Roomed with a Muggle", New Witch Magazine, Issue 5 (Fall 2003) pg. 34
  8. ^ "Geocaching Glossary". Geocaching.com. Archived from the original on 21 April 2022. Retrieved 20 September 2007.
  9. ^ Burden of Proof 'Harry Potter' Book Lawsuit: 'Legend of Rah and Muggles' Author Claims Trademark Violations, Burden of Proof, CNN Transcripts, July 5, 2000, https://www.eyrie.org/~robotech/stouffer.htm Archived 28 July 2022 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ "Stouffer v. Rowling Summary Judgment Decision, Sept. 17, 2002". www.eyrie.org. Archived from the original on 28 July 2022. Retrieved 1 March 2018.