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House Affairs - sounds significant! However, on paper, everything turned out to be much more prosaic. This is just a huge heap of various agreents. Through all these endless folders, you can trace the history of the family for several centuries. They began to draw up the first docunts back in the distant thirteenth century. The parchnts of contracts were interspersed with the personal notes of the wizards, which was quite interesting. Although, Middle English causes a headache despite so experience with it from the Hogwarts library.
Closer to the fifteenth century, the docuntation beca more structured and less like poems. Who got how much and for what, who sold what to whom, who got married to whom, and on what terms - you could see everything here. In what feuds of ordinary people, feudal lords, they took part, on whose side, which of the wizards was against, how much they earned, and so on. There were also small contracts with various families of wizards that were just founded in those days, contracts with dukes for the provision of various kinds of services ... There's a history that no one really knows about!
For example, it is no secret that the British and the French had this tradition in the Middle Ages - to fight almost every hundred years. So the House of Black and several others took an active part in three such wars, including the "centenary." In truth, about a quarter of families took part in this series of clashes - there are militants, healers, and all sorts of saboteurs ... And it's all there. House of Black, in fact, for three centuries managed to be noted in almost all of Europe, and not only on the British Isles and French coasts. And they brought sothing back from everywhere. Sotis all they brought ho was news of the deaths of family mbers, but that was rare.
The most interesting thing to learn from these docunts was sothing else. In the days before the Statute of Secrecy, rather crude and large-scale magical manipulation was common among wizards. Various maleficium, necromancy, and necromagic. Alchemy was popular. The wizards did not hide, and their activities rested on helping the allies on the battlefield, protecting a large number of people, or vice versa, weakening them. It was at that ti that Protego Diabolica appeared - one dark wizard, with its help, sacrificing a dozen prisoners for greater magical energy, helped the allied troops retreat in so battle. Unfortunately, it is not specified in which one. Many such influences were implicit so that the enemy did not catch the use of magic and did not begin to pull up his wizards, turning wars into a farce. It's like nuclear weapons - they exist, you can threaten with them, but it's better not to use them. In everyday life, wizards also found use - they could curse the land of a neighboring feudal lord, or vice versa, remove, or even improve the harvest. There were plenty of healers, herbalists, and potion-makers, and so of them were not even known to be wizards.
With the introduction of the Statute of Secrecy, the need for large and cumberso spells and rituals gradually disappeared. But not only the need for them disappeared - there was no way to apply them. Everything too obvious imdiately gave away the wizards, and persecutions began from the side of the Church and from the side of the newly ford Ministry of Magic. In wizarding families, one might say, by inertia, they still studied those cumberso spells and specific magical disciplines, but gradually this was declining. There were, by the way, other concentrators - staffs for cumberso magical manipulations. They were also no longer needed, and they were finally replaced by wands, taking the place of ritual or symbolic attributes.
By the middle of the eighteenth century, I couldn't find a single ntion of any serious use of magic. But there were plenty of ntions of the developnt of wand magic. Because of the Statute, the sciences that require accuracy, filigree execution received a boost, and the external effect of most spells beca very scanty. Scanty, but surgically accurate. The militants have beco more duelists. The sudden insularity of society had a deleterious effect-all rushed into politics, intrigue, and petty squabbles. The number of agreents and contracts had beco enormous by the nineteenth century, but they were all sohow petty, with a trick, they slled of so kind of anness. Perverted theories of "Purity of Blood" surfaced out of nowhere, which was not particularly ntioned. Typical racism crawled out of all the cracks.
I think the whole point is that many activities, family affairs, beca no longer available to wizards, which is why they literally went crazy. For example, until the very eighties of the twentieth century, I did not find a single contract for the provision of services as a militant. But before the Statute, there were many of them, even from the Crown. In general, everyone went into politics, but in a closed society, it turned out so that they gnawed each other's throats. Since the House of Black has always been nurous, these disputes spread to the family. As a result, almost no one was left. And this, by the way, is in almost all old families. We are few. We have successfully exterminated each other.
However, these are only my conclusions, based on docunts and personal records both to them and to the situation at that ti. I could be completely wrong.
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