Mahoutokoro by
Matt Cipher
on 2016-01-30 21:16:00 UTC
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Since hS and Scape shared their knowledge on the African school, I feel like I should tell what I know about Japanese culture that is relevant to Mahoutokoro.
FIrst of all, the name - Mahōtokoro - is a compound, consisting of two words: mahō meaning 'magic', and tokoro meaning 'place', 'location', 'spot'... but we know this already from the HP wiki. How about something we've just learned.
The location - Minami-Iwo-Jima, or Southern Sulfur Island, is located about 1300 kilometers (or, 807 miles) south of Tokyo. This is how it looks like.
The school itself is mentioned to be a palace, therefore it most likely looks like the traditional Japanese shiro castle - [CLICK] - and the 'mutton-fat jade' it's made of is simply another name for very light yellow nephrite. Very... Chinese, if I can say so myself; if I recall correctly, the Japanese didn't use as much nephrite.
The reason that the students start school at seven, and then can choose to board it when eleven, is because in Japanese culture the odd number (3, 5, 7, 11, etc.) are considered lucky. There even is a festival which celebrates children of those ages, called the Shichi-Go-San (lit. "Seven-Five-Three").
The most surprising for me was the colours. It's logical for the robes to start as cherry blossom pink, since the sakura tree is an important symbol and the moment of blossoming is a nation-wide festival. I can see gold being the top colour, since it does symbolize strength... white is what caught me off-guard since the symbolism of the colour is generally positive. But then I dug a little deeper and found out that besides 'life' the colour white represents 'anger' and 'danger', which is quite appropriate for those who took the Mahoutokoro equivalent of the Dark Side.
Uagadou by
Huinesoron
on 2016-01-30 16:49:00 UTC
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-Appears to be named after Ouagadougou, the capital of Burkina Faso. Amusingly (given Scapegrace's comments on Ilvermorny) this is a Frenchified spelling of Wage sabre soba koumbem tenga (apparently). That means 'Head War Chief's Village'; the lack of the '-gou' presumably means one or two of those words are missing, or - given the massive compression in the name - have been changed for others.
-Is in the Mountains of the Moon. That is brilliant. The Mountains of the Moon exist on old maps, but not in the real world - they're a cartographical artefact that was never really there. Or, the wizards of Africa have taken whatever it is that's hiding Hogwarts to a whole new level, and have made an entire gigantic mountain range invisible and unnoticeable to anyone else...
hS
Heh. Hehe. Haahaahaaaaaaa! by
Scapegrace
on 2016-01-30 16:31:00 UTC
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There's a convincing argument that it's in America... but not in the US.
Ile Vert-Morne, or Green Hill Island, sounds like a good corruption of wherever it is. This puts it in either French Canada or among the Cajuns - who, by the way, are also from Canada. Cajun is itself a corruption of Acadian.

Say it with me, everybody: AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA by
SkarmorySilver
on 2016-01-30 16:11:00 UTC
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AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
Really though, I love the touch given to Mahoutokoro and the color changing robes, which I assume was inspired by martial arts or something. And I look forward to hearing more about Il Vermorny - and I especially hope it shows up in the upcoming Fantastic Beasts movie! :D
Yay! She estabilished a canonical Brazilian school! :D by
James Shields
on 2016-01-30 15:51:00 UTC
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And it sounds pretty awesome! And yeah, Caipora would surely give Peeves a run for his money. I wonder if there is a Saci or a Curupira there as well. We sure have a lot of trickster spirits in our folklore. :P
And of course a Brazilian wizard would be part of a world-renowned Quiddicht team ! :D
Yay! She estabilished a canonical Brazilian school! :D by
James Shields
on 2016-01-30 15:44:00 UTC
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And it sounds pretty awesome! And yeah, Caipora sure would surely give Peeves a run for his money. I wonder if there is a Saci or a Curupira there as well. We sure have a lot of trickster spirits in our folklore. :P
And of course a Brazilian wizard would be part of a world-renowned Quiddicht team ! :D
Step aside, American exchange students. by
Iximaz
on 2016-01-30 15:05:00 UTC
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Make way for the canonical Brazilian exchange program!
...I wish. :P
Eeee, can't wait to see more! I hope she gives info on the other magical schools she mentioned, not just Ilvermorny.
Ilvermorny. Has such a funny ring to it. :D