I though that Death Eaters mostly had only one child, not 2-3.
“Sheila, Flora, and Hestia Carrow. Lost both their parents last night. Students who have lost their fathers include Robert Jugson. Ethan Jugson. Sara Jugson. Michael MacNair. Riley and Randy Rookwood. Lily Lu. Sarah Sproch. Daniel Gibson. Jason Gross. Elsie Ambrose...”
Does EY realize that Alecto and Amycus are siblings? He said that these children lost both parents.
And if Alecto has a child, then either the child is illegitimate, or Alecto kept her last name after marriage, something that no woman does in canon, and that no Witch does in MOR (only the Muggle Evans-Verres couple hyphenates). I don’t take Alecto Carrow for a tradition-defying feminist.
I though that Death Eaters mostly had only one child, not 2-3.
“Sheila, Flora, and Hestia Carrow. Lost both their parents last night. Students who have lost their fathers include Robert Jugson. Ethan Jugson. Sara Jugson. Michael MacNair. Riley and Randy Rookwood. Lily Lu. Sarah Sproch. Daniel Gibson. Jason Gross. Elsie Ambrose...”
Alecto and Amycus Carrow are siblings, and Flora and Hestia are twins (see ch 46). That means one birth per each of their marriages.
Does EY realize that Alecto and Amycus are siblings? He said that these children lost both parents.
And if Alecto has a child, then either the child is illegitimate, or Alecto kept her last name after marriage, something that no woman does in canon, and that no Witch does in MOR (only the Muggle Evans-Verres couple hyphenates). I don’t take Alecto Carrow for a tradition-defying feminist.
So I conclude that this a slip-up.
I thought that powerful wizards had few children—Voldie, Dumbeldoor, Lucius—not a point about death eaters.