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Cauldrons
Cauldrons are a basic item for any witch or wizard. These versatile
items are used to brew potions, but can also be used to carry supplies,
and, in a pinch, to clobber
an attacker.
Many cauldrons seem to be at least partially magical. Self-stirring,
collapsible, and other cauldrons are for sale in a shop on
Diagon Alley, for example
(PS5)
Gaspard Shingleton invented
Self-Stirring Cauldrons
(fw/87), a fact which the
first years had to remember for their
History of Magic
exam at the end of the year
(PS16)
Cauldrons can carry a lot of books, which suggests that they might
have enchantments
on them to make them bigger on the inside than they are on the outside
(CS4)
Young Bruno Schmidt of
Germany hit an
Erkling
over the head with his father's collapsible cauldron and killed it
(FB).
Neville melted his sixth cauldron in
Potions
Percy spent a lot of time
while working in the
Department of International Magical Cooperation
writing a report about the need to standardize
cauldron thickness to prevent the market being flooded with defective
thin-bottomed imported cauldrons
(GF5).
Fire-Crab shells,
which resemble tortoise shells encrusted with jewels, are prized by
unscrupulous wizards as magical cauldrons
(FB)
Although they own their own cauldrons, when the students come into their
Potions class,
twenty cauldrons are already in place, waiting for them.
Perhaps they use school cauldrons in class and their own to practice the
techniques... (PS8)
A wizard named
Humphrey Belcher
believed "the time was ripe for a cheese cauldron." He was wrong
(HBP10).
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