↓
 ↑
Регистрация
Имя/email

Пароль

 
Войти при помощи
Временно не работает,
как войти читайте здесь!

Комментарий к сообщению


2 января в 17:13
Вспомнил завет про "хочешь лучше разобраться в конфликте - переизложи его, как что-то более близкое к реальности". Накатали с нейронкой вот что)

The future leader, Tom Marvolo Riddle (born 31 December 1926), emerges from a scandalous union: the son of a wealthy but unpopular landed aristocrat (Tom Riddle Sr.) and a destitute woman (Merope Gaunt) from a dysfunctional, inbred old family notorious for instability and extremist views. The marriage collapses amid scandal (Merope manipulates Riddle Sr. through deception or coercion), leading to her death and Riddle's orphaned upbringing in a state institution. This breeds deep resentment, delinquency, and a hatred of his "common" heritage.In the late 1930s, Riddle is recruited into an elite private academy (analogous to Hogwarts) by a progressive establishment figure (Albus Dumbledore), who recognizes his intellect but warns of his vindictiveness. Sorted into a network of traditionalist students, Riddle excels, charms mentors, and forms a clandestine gang of like-minded youths from old-money families. Obsessed with ancestry, he rejects his father's name, adopting the alias "Lord Voldemort" — a self-styled title evoking fear and grandeur.
By the 1940s–1950s, Voldemort commits his first murders: framing a fellow student for a deadly attack on "undesirables" (minorities or social climbers), killing his paternal family for revenge, and stealing heirlooms as trophies. He evades justice through manipulation and false memories (blackmail/coercion). Traveling Europe and Asia in the 1950s–1960s, he immerses in extremist circles, undergoes ideological "transformations," and builds a network of fanatics. He establishes hidden safe houses and contingency plans (analogous to Horcruxes) to ensure survival — stashed funds, aliases, and loyal operatives.
Build-Up and Ideological Ferment (1960s) Britain in the 1960s sees social upheaval: civil rights movements, immigration from former colonies, and progressive policies clash with entrenched elites. Far-right directories circulate listing "true" British families; many old aristocrats quietly sympathize with purist views. Voldemort recruits allies from criminal underworlds (violent gangs, mercenaries) and designs a symbol — a skull with a serpent — tattooed on followers for summoning and loyalty.The establishment (British government/MI5) enacts reforms promoting equality, fueling purist rage. Dumbledore, now a influential progressive, blocks Voldemort's attempts to infiltrate key institutions.
Open Conflict: The Purity War (1970–1981)In 1970, Voldemort launches open terrorism, proclaiming a "new order" based on ethnic/national purity. His paramilitary group (Death Eaters) — wealthy elites, ideologues, and thugs — conducts bombings, assassinations, and attacks on civilians to sow chaos. Targets include immigrants ("Muggle-borns" as social climbers/infiltrators), liberals ("blood traitors"), and ordinary people. Scenes are marked with the skull-serpent symbol cast in graffiti or fires.Infiltration thrives: operatives embed in government via blackmail and coercion (analogous to Imperius Curse). Allies include savage criminal enforcers (e.g., a notorious gangster like Fenrir Greyback). The government struggles; ministers resign amid failures.In response, Dumbledore forms a private resistance network (Order of the Phoenix) in 1971 — vigilantes, ex-officials, and special forces operatives conducting covert counterstrikes. The conflict escalates: brutal killings, family massacres, and paranoia as innocents are framed.Height (mid-1970s): Attacks peak; public fear leads to avoiding Voldemort's name ("You-Know-Who"). Government authorizes harsh measures (shoot-to-kill, unconventional interrogation). Key losses include resistance families wiped out.

Climax and Downfall (1980–1981)A rumored intelligence report (the "prophecy") predicts a child born in 1980 will vanquish Voldemort. He targets two families, settling on the Potters — defiant liberals with a young son (Harry).On 31 October 1981, Voldemort attacks their hidden safe house (betrayed by a turncoat informant). He kills James Potter, then Lily as she shields her son. In the chaos (perhaps a booby-trapped explosive or firefight backfire), the assault rebounds — Voldemort is gravely wounded or presumed killed, his network shattered.Celebrations erupt; the infant Harry becomes "The Boy Who Survived," symbolizing resilience. Many insurgents are arrested; fanatics torture captured officials for Voldemort's location. Wealthy backers claim coercion and escape justice.

Aftermath
Voldemort flees to exile (e.g., remote Eastern Europe), weakened but alive in hiding, awaiting revival. Trials expose infiltration; some innocents are freed, others imprisoned for life. The insurgency scars Britain, fostering distrust in government and lingering fear of resurgence.
ПОИСК
ФАНФИКОВ









Закрыть
Закрыть
Закрыть