Points of Divergence

Note This Appendix is written from the Author’s perspective, not from a researcher’s perspective.

What is Cannon Here

I as per the [Introduction], this is a multi-way crossover. I am using source material from Harry Potter, following the same rules I use in the [Encyclopedic Reference]. I am then pulling in some stuff from Madeleine L’Engle’s Many Waters, one or two concepts of demonology from C. S. Lewis’ The Screwtape Letters, some other myths and legends (as Rowling herself does in places), and mixing that in with some actual history and some actual theology. Where necessary, I will force the history and the theology to fit my story’s needs, so the result is really really fictional.

Cannon things you must recall

From each work there are certain things you must recall for anything here to make sense.

Things you might have missed in Harry Potter that I am elaborating on

Things Specifically Pulled from Many Waters

Things Specifically Pulled from Screwtape

Things That Make This an Alternate Universe

Historical fabrications

Some Notable Differences from the actual Harry Potter universe

Things differing for those familiar with Many Waters

[Introduction]: /Fan Fiction/Harry_Potter_-_Nephilim/Introduction/ [Encyclopedic Reference]: /Harrypedia [FSSP]: ./FSSP [MW2]: https://wikipedia.org/wiki/Many_Waters [MW3]: https://wikipedia.org/wiki/Many_Waters


  1. Mr. C. S. Lewis. The Screwtape Letters. pp. 120-121. Copyright 1942. HarperOne. Kindle Edition.↩︎

  2. There is nothing truly unique in Fan Fiction.

    • In Error of Soul Materia-Blade has a line referring to magical folk as Nephilim. I came up with this idea well before I found that work. Just goes to show that there is nothing possible that someone else hasn’t also thought of. in
    • In Losing Control JackPotr has an overlapping explanation of where magical humans came from. I had read this before starting this work, but had totally forgotten until after I had fleshed out the primary Appendices and the first handful of chapters.
    ↩︎