After taking Harry's blood, Voldemort ordered him to a duel. His opponent found a distracting during the duel and was able to use the Portkey to get back to Hogwarts with Cedric's body.
Voldemort used the curse again in the Forbidden Forest, and then again during the final duel that defeated Voldemort once and for all. Harry's encounter with the Killing Curse in the Forbidden Forest has resulted in a lot of confusion, but there are essentially two main reasons in Harry Potter canon that explain why he didn't die at Voldemort's hands as an adult.
There was a belief that obtaining the Deathly Hallows would grant the finder some sort of immortality. In the tale, the Peverell brothers tricked Death, who in return offered them "gifts" intended to corrupt them and lead to their deaths.
Harry notably possessed all three items that comprised the Deathly Hallows when Voldemort tried to kill him the night of the Battle of Hogwarts. He received the Cloak of Invisibility from his father, James, and obtained the Resurrection Stone from Dumbledore after it was hidden in a snitch. While it's unclear whether there's any truth to the "Master of Death" being immortal, the Elder Wand will resist causing harm to its master - who, via a roundabout series of events, was Harry.
Draco was the previous owner of the Elder Wand, but Harry successfully disarmed him, making Harry the new master even while the Elder Wand was technically in Voldemort's possession.
Harry's mastery of the Elder Wand explains why Voldemort failed to kill him in their final battle, but there's also another explanation for why Harry survived the Killing Curse in the Forbidden Forest. When Lily sacrificed herself to save Harry in Godric's Hollow, he was protected by magic's strongest defense: love. Dumbledore explained to Harry at a young age how Lily's love lived on and served as a protection against evil. However, there's more to Lily's protection than that.
Harry remained protected when he moved in with the Dursley family because, as sisters, Lily and Petunia shared the same blood. Dumbledore knew this, which was why he chose the family to take care of Harry after becoming an orphan, and insisted on Harry returning to the Dursleys every summer despite their ill treatment of him. Lily's protection still encompassed Harry when he started at Hogwarts.
Voldemort was unable to touch Harry, and if he tried, he would be a victim of serious pain - as proven in Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone.
The love protection spell lifted when Harry turned seventeen in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows , which is why he had to be hurried away from the Dursleys' house in the dead of night. To make things clear now — as of this moment, Harry Potter is in continuity alive and is heading the Department of Magical Law Enforcement with the Ministry of Magic. So, no — he did not die. But the issue is not that simple and we are going to see how and why.
Despite being protected by his parents, James and Lily Potter, Harry soon met Lord Voldemort, as he killed his parents with ease and approached the child.
Voldemort intended to kill Harry, but his Killing Curse backfired and he was not successful. Lord Voldemort seemingly died in this incident, while Harry was left with his famous thunder-shaped scar. The rest is history — Lord Voldemort never actually died, but disappeared for a while, while was sent off to his Muggle relatives until his enrolment in Hogwarts.
As they faced each other, Harry Potter gave himself up without a fight, an act Voldemort punished by casting the Killing Curse at Harry. Harry Potter fell to the ground and awoke in a place called the Limbo. There, he met his old mentor, Albus Dumbledore, who apologized for his behavior and explained his actions. After reconciling with his former mentor, Harry decided to go back. He woke up in the Forbidden Forest but feigned death.
Oct 21, AM. Harry explains to Voldemort why the wand won't kill him. That wand is special--it was created by Death. And it won't kill its own master. And Harry was the true master of the Elder Wand.
When Voldemort threw the curse at Harry in the forest, the curse killed the only part of Harry that wasn't really Harry--the bit of Voldemort's soul inside him. Oct 22, PM. Got it? Well, it made kinda a shell around his soul. Like a green icky gooey evil shell. I THINK that from that point on, if Voldemort ever hit him with a killing curse, he'd still go to that limbo thing because all that the killing curse would do is break the shell.
Then his soul would be just a regular human vulnerable soul. So when Voldemort hit him with the killing curse, it broke the shell. It also knocked Voldemort out because it killed a piece of his soul Harry was a horcrux.
Dec 10, PM. This made absolutely no sense. Dec 11, PM. I agree with Emma. The first time in DH in the forest it is a combination of the fact that Voldemort had Harry's Blood and Harry had a piece of Voldemort's soul. In the Great Hall the Elder wand won't kill its master. Harry is its master because he won its allegiance through Draco who disarmed Dumbledore in the end of HBP.
In the King's Cross chapter, Harry asked Dumbledore this exact question. The answer has nothing to do with Hallows. Harry didn't die because Voldemort used Harry's blood to resurrect himself, taking Harry's mother's protection inside him. This made it so Voldemort can touch Harry, but it also tied Harry to life for as long as Voldemort lives.
Feb 11, PM. He was the owner of stone, cloak and wand. So if the myth was true - he was immortal. The protection charm works "when Harry is with a person who carries her mother's blood in a place where both call as their home. As Voldemort carries the blood of Harry - therefore Lily's - the charm may still work. Feb 12, PM. The legend doesn't say the deathly hallows makes one immortal.
It says they make one the master of death. The idea that Master of Death means immortal is merely an assumption or interpretation.
That is not stated anywhere. I believe it was that he was the owner of all three hallows, therefore making him master of death. I've also thought about the fact that he was a horcrux, and it would make sense. It just killed one of the two souls he had inside of him.
Either explanation makes sense, but I'm not sure which one is the actual answer. Emma wrote: "I believe it was that he was the owner of all three hallows, therefore making him master of death. It just killed on It was because Voldemort used Harry's blood in his resurrection.
That kept Lily's protection alive as long as Voldemort was alive. Dumbledore explained this in King's Cross. The Hallows were simply a macguffin. Harry became the Master of Death because he learned that death was not something to fear. This was the lesson of the story of the three brothers. The third brother learned that death was not to be feared but embraced at the proper time.
Harry learned that death was not to be feared because there was another life afterward. The only use the Hallows had was in teaching him that lesson. That's why he rejected both the stone and the wand and attempted to rid the world of them. Harry didn't die because she couldn't kill him. The story called for it and it would have been better ending, but in the end she just couldn't pull the trigger. Feb 13, AM. Michele wrote: "I thought that Harry stayed alive because in Goblet of Fire, Voldemort rebuilds himself from the "blood of his enemy", Harry's blood.
It is then Harry's blood in Voldemort that tethers Harry to th Dumbledore said this in the King's Cross Chapter of Deathly Hallows: "He took your blood and rebuilt his living body with it! He tethered you to life while he lives! Oct 03, PM. Stephanie wrote: "Harry didn't die because she couldn't kill him. You can use whatever twisted crazy made up magic laws you want, but in the end, it was the author's inability to kill a character she created and loved. Oct 16, PM. Is this seriously that hard to understand?
Like a few people in this thread pointed out, it's explained in the King's Cross chapter. Voldemort took Harry's blood and rebuilt his body with it, which means he also took in Lily's protection. In effect, he made himself a horcrux for Harry and tethered him to life. Harry couldn't die while Voldemort still lived. End of story. Austin is right, but that's not the only reason.
Because Harry chose to die, and because he was a horcrux, he couldn't die. Because he chose to sacrifice himself, he kept the opportunity to stay or go on. That connection may not have been strong enough, however, but that combined with the horcrux thing made it quite definite that Harry was to decide.
Dec 28, PM. Harry didn't die because Voldemort used Harry's blood to resurrect himself, tak Voldemort had used Harry's blood to come back to life.
Blood sacrifice was still there 2. Harry was a horcrux. Harry had made the choice to die. So what happened was that Voldemort killed his own horcrux. If you put a horcrux in a living thing and it dies, the horcrux dies but the thing's soul does not.
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