Hogwarts was referred to on a number of occasions in canon as the “best” wizarding school in Britain.
As long as it doesn’t directly bear on the storyline though, I wouldn’t trust J. K. Rowling to keep careful track of everything she’s already written; I suspect she had different ideas at different times of whether Hogwarts was the only wizarding school in Britain.
I’m not sure about that, if anything she’s put on Pottermore is to be trusted, she’s written an extensive off-page history for her world.
The most interesting example is what she’s written about the Malfoy’s. Evidently, the family made most of their money in dealing with muggles prior to the ministry instituting the laws regarding secrecy. Once it became politically favorable to distance a prominent family from muggle ties, the Malfoy’s put on a strong pureblood facade that caught on after a few generations.
That sounds plausible, but not necessarily contradictory, since she may have come up with that history after writing things in earlier books which conflicted with it. She didn’t seem to have outlined all the books thoroughly in advance (if she did, she certainly failed to set up elements like the Deathly Hallows very well.)
Hogwarts was referred to on a number of occasions in canon as the “best” wizarding school in Britain.
As long as it doesn’t directly bear on the storyline though, I wouldn’t trust J. K. Rowling to keep careful track of everything she’s already written; I suspect she had different ideas at different times of whether Hogwarts was the only wizarding school in Britain.
I’m not sure about that, if anything she’s put on Pottermore is to be trusted, she’s written an extensive off-page history for her world. The most interesting example is what she’s written about the Malfoy’s. Evidently, the family made most of their money in dealing with muggles prior to the ministry instituting the laws regarding secrecy. Once it became politically favorable to distance a prominent family from muggle ties, the Malfoy’s put on a strong pureblood facade that caught on after a few generations.
That sounds plausible, but not necessarily contradictory, since she may have come up with that history after writing things in earlier books which conflicted with it. She didn’t seem to have outlined all the books thoroughly in advance (if she did, she certainly failed to set up elements like the Deathly Hallows very well.)