Subject: Ooh, that sounds interesting.
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Posted on: 2015-11-24 10:00:00 UTC

Did Jekyll know about Hyde in the original story? Because if not, I can imagine the plot centering around a group of students trying to track the monster roaming Hogwarts, with the enthusiastic help of their Potions Master... >:D

[The] Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde was published in 1886; Albus Dumbledore was born in summer 1881, apparently. So how about setting the story in 1892/3, and having Albus as a first-year student? :D

Actually, that assumes that Hogwarts used a 21st century British school age breakdown in the 19th century, which is... actually more solid than I thought. Per a random Google search, from 1870 children had to go to school from 5-10, which was raised to 11 in 1893; presumably, the Wizarding World let its children be taught to read etc at Muggle schools, then took over when they left. (This would explain why Hogwarts utterly fails to teach any of the standard subjects, such as, y'know, maths - its system comes from an age before there was any schooling after 11.)

So set it in 1893 - the year that Albus Dumbledore is a first-year student for the second year running, since he came in at 10 in '92 (which assumes a late summer birthday) and is now 11... which has just become the youngest age. :D That gives you internal conflict for the characters, a sense that they need to 'prove themselves' in some undefined fashion... and right on time, they hear rumours of a monster known only as the Hide.

hS

PS: Wow, and Dumbledore's family makes for prime drama. A loose-cannon sister (now all of eight years old) held effectively prisoner by his mother, a father in Azkaban for assaulting Muggles, a brother who's just been told he can't go to Hogwarts next year but will have to keep mingling with Muggles until the year after... shards and shells, this is prime story material. (No, I refuse to take it myself. Not my fandom.)

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