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{{mergewith|Wizard (fantasy)}} {{Short description|Magicians appearing in fantasy fiction}}
{{Other uses|Magician (disambiguation)|Magi (disambiguation)}}
A '''magician''' (also known as a magic-user) is someone who uses or practices magic. Magicians are
{{Redirect|Wizard (fantasy)|other uses|Wizard (disambiguation)}}
most commonly found in works of ], such as ], ], ], ], and ]. In modern fantasy, a wizard is more often seen as a practitioner of ] that derives from ] or ] sources, rather than the ] magic used by most popular magicians.
{{More citations needed|date=January 2023}}
] (1889): A magician uses magic to survive.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.artmagick.com/pictures/picture.aspx?id=6467&name=the-enchanted-garden-of-messer-ansaldo |title=The Enchanted Garden of Messer Ansaldo by Marie Spartali Stillman |publisher=ArtMagick |access-date=2013-10-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160308044827/http://www.artmagick.com/pictures/picture.aspx?id=6467&name=the-enchanted-garden-of-messer-ansaldo |archive-date=2016-03-08 |url-status=dead }}</ref>|298x298px]]


A '''magician''', also known as an '''archmage''', '''mage''', '''magus''', '''magic-user''', '''spellcaster''', '''enchanter/enchantress''', '''sorcerer/sorceress''', '''warlock''', '''witch''', or '''wizard''', is someone who uses or practices ] derived from ], ], or ] sources.<ref name="Martin">{{cite book|last1=Martin|first1=Philip|title=The Writer's Guide to Fantasy Literature: From Dragon's Lair to Hero's Quest: How to Write Fantasy Stories of Lasting Value|date=2002|publisher=Writer Books|location=Waukesha, Wisconsin|isbn=0871161958|edition=1st}}</ref>{{rp|54}} Magicians enjoy a rich history in ], ]s, ], and ], and are common figures in works of fantasy, such as ] and ].
Historically, many writers who have written about fictional magicians, and many readers of such works, have believed that such magic is possible -- in ]'s time, witches like the Weird Sisters in '']'' and wizards like Prospero in '']'' (or ] in ]'s play) were widely considered to be real -- but modern writers, and readers, usually deal with magic as imaginary.


==Character archetypes==
Some names, distinctions, or aspects may have more of a negative ], than others, depending on the setting and the context. (See also ] and ], for some examples.)
], from ''The Story of King Arthur and His Knights'' (1903)]]


People who work magic are called by several names in ] works, and terminology differs widely from one ] to another. While derived from real-world vocabulary, the terms: ''magician'', ''mage'', ''magus'', ''enchanter/enchantress'', ''sorcerer/sorceress'', ''warlock'', ''witch'', and ''wizard'', each have different meanings depending upon context and the story in question.<ref name="Clute"/>{{rp|619}} ''Archmage'' is used in fantasy works to indicate a powerful magician or a leader of magicians.<ref name="Clute"/>{{rp|1027}}
For a combination of reasons, including those above, authors of ] have often muddled the meaning of each of the terms (especially when the target audience is children), often using whatever term felt to be the most accurate, but the least controversial, though this is not always the case. (See ] for an example.)


]'' by ] (1903)]]
==Terminology==
'''Enchanters''' typically practice a type of imbued magic that produces no permanent effects on objects or people and are temporary, or of an indefinite duration, or which may require some item or act, to nullify or reverse. For example, this could include enchanting a weapon or tool to be more (or less) effective, enchanting a person or object to have a changed shape or appearance, creating illusions intended to deceive the observer, compelling a person to perform an action they might not normally do, or attempting to ] or ] someone.<ref name="Clute"/>{{rp|318}} For instance, the ] in ]'s '']'' can transform herself into a large green serpent. She also enchants ], compelling him to forget his father and Narnia. And when that enchantment is broken, she attempts further enchantments with a sweet-smelling smoke and a thrumming musical instrument to attempt to baffle him and his rescuers into forgetting them again.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Bassham|first1=Gregory|title=The Chronicles of Narnia and Philosophy: the Lion, the Witch, and the Worldview|date=2005|publisher=Open Court|location=Chicago|isbn=0812695887|page=|edition=1st|url=https://archive.org/details/chroniclesofnarn00bass/page/171}}</ref>
People who work magic are called by many terms in works of fantasy, and the terminology differs widely from one ] to another. While derived from real world vocabulary, "wizard", "witch", "warlock", "enchanter/enchantress", and "sorcerer/sorceress", have within a work of fantasy the meaning the writer invests in them. A variation on the word magic (magician, mage, magus, or even "magic-user"), is typically used as a neutral term to indicate any practitioner of magic. The term ] may be used to indicate a powerful magician, or even a leader of magicians.


The term '''sorcerer''' has moved from meaning a ], or "one who alters ]", to meaning a practitioner of magic who can alter reality. They are also sometimes shown as able to conjure supernatural beings or spirits, or to "]" inanimate objects, such as in '']''. Due to this perception of their powers, this character may be depicted as feared, or even seen as evil. Villainous sorcerers were so crucial to ] that the genre in which they appeared was dubbed "]", where typically the ] (or ]) would be the ], thus leaving the ] for his opponent.<ref name="Clute"/>{{rp|885}}
]'s ''The Times & Life of Lucifer Jones'' describes the distinction thus: "The difference between a wizard and a sorcerer is comparable to that between, say, a lion and a tiger, but wizards are acutely status-conscious, and to them, it's more like the difference between a lion and a dead kitten."


'''Witch''' (an—often female—practitioner of ]) and ''wicked'' (an adjective meaning "bad, evil, false") are both derivative terms from the word, '']'' (an Old English word with varied meanings, including soothsayer, astrologer, herbalist, poisoner, seductress, or devotee of supernatural beings or spirits). ] combined these terms in naming the ], and other witches in the ]. Baum named ] the "Good Witch of the South" in '']''. In '']'', he dubbed her "Glinda the Good," and from that point forward and in subsequent books, Baum referred to her as a sorceress rather than a witch to avoid the term that was more regarded as evil.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Riley|first1=Michael O.|title=Oz and Beyond: The Fantasy World of L. Frank Baum|date=1997|publisher=University Press of Kansas|location=Lawrence, Kansas|isbn=070060832X|page=104}}</ref> In modern fiction, a witch may be depicted more neutrally, such as the female witches (comparable to the male wizards) in the '']'' series of books by ].
The term "]" is more often applied to a male magic-user, as in ]'s '']'', just as a "witch" is more often female, as in ]'s '']''. In ''Witch World'', a man who, anomolously, showed the same abilities as the witches was termed a warlock. The term "warlock" is sometimes used to indicate a male witch in fiction.


In medieval chivalric romance, the '''wizard''' often appears as a ] and acts as a ], with ] from the ] being a prime example.<ref name="Frye">{{cite book|last1=Frye|first1=Northrop|title=Anatomy of Criticism; Four Essays|date=1971|publisher=Princeton University Press|location=Princeton|isbn=0691012989|edition=2nd|url=https://archive.org/details/anatomyofcritici00frye}}</ref>{{rp|195}} Wizards such as ] in '']'' and ] from '']'' are also featured as mentors, and Merlin remains prominent as both an educative force and mentor in the modern works of ].<ref name="Clute">{{cite book|last1=Clute|first1=John|last2=Westfahl|title=The Encyclopedia of Fantasy|date=1999|publisher=St. Martin's Griffin|location=New York|isbn=0312198698|edition=1st}}</ref>{{rp|637}}<ref name="Driver">{{cite book|last1=Driver|first1=Martha W.|title=The Medieval Hero on Screen: Representations from Beowulf to Buffy|date=2004|publisher=McFarland|location=Jefferson, North Carolina|isbn=0786419261|pages=167–191}}</ref>
However, either term may be used in a unisex manner, in which case there will be members of both sexes bearing that title. If both terms are used in the same setting, this could indicate a gender-based title for practicers of identical magic, such as in ], or it could indicate that the two sexes practice different types of magic, as in ], or perhaps indicating something else entirely.


Wizards can be cast similarly to the ]: being foolish and prone to misconjuring. They can also be capable of great magic, both good and evil.<ref name="Martin"/>{{rp|140–141}} Even comical magicians are often capable of great feats, such as those of Miracle Max in '']''; although he is a washed-up wizard fired by the villain, he saves the dying hero.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Card|first1=Orson Scott|title=Characters and Viewpoint|date=1999|publisher=Writer's Digest Books|location=Cincinnati, Ohio|isbn=0898799279|page=|edition=1st|url=https://archive.org/details/charactersviewpo00card_0/page/100}}</ref>
Enchanters generally practice a type of magic that produces no physical effects on objects or people, but rather deceives the observer or target, creating illusions. Enchantresses, in particular, practice this form of magic, often to seduce.


Other wizards, such as ] from ''The Lord of the Rings'' or ] from ''Harry Potter'', can appear as hostile villains.<ref name="Frye"/>{{rp|193}}
Terms derived from more specific magics, such as voodoo, alchemy, or ], generally remain closer to their real-world inspirations. Fantasy necromancers often work magic that has something to do with death, although the exact connections vary widely from work to work.


]'s '']'' explored the question of how wizards learned their art, introducing to modern fantasy the role of the wizard as the protagonist.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Wood|first1=Susan|title=The Language of the Night: Essays On Fantasy and Science Fiction|date=1982|publisher=Berkley Books|location=New York|isbn=0425052052|page=41|edition=Reprinted}}</ref> This theme has been further developed in modern fantasy, often leading to wizards as heroes on their own quests.<ref>{{cite web|last=Fike |first=Justin |url=http://www.victorianweb.org/courses/fiction/65/tolkien/fike14.html |title=The Role of Wizards in Fantasy Literature |work=The Victorian Web |access-date=2013-10-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131016155839/http://www.victorianweb.org/courses/fiction/65/tolkien/fike14.html |archive-date=2013-10-16 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Such heroes may have their own mentor, a wizard as well.<ref name="Clute"/>{{rp|637}}
A common motif in fictional magic is that the ability to use it is innate and often rare. In ]'s ], it was limited to non-humans — even ], whose hands heal, has some ] blood — but in many writers, it is reserved to a select group of humans, as in ]'s '']'' books, ]'s '']'', or ]'s '']'' universe. This is often a secretive or persecuted group.


=== In role-playing games ===
Magic in some stories may be the exclusive ability of magicians; which would mean that non-magician characters, no matter how learned, cannot actually cast spells. In such instances, magic could be inherited, or perhaps it is a random ability appearing in some children, or the result of some other unique effect or situation.
Magicians in ] often use names borrowed from fiction, myth and legend. They are typically delineated and named so that the game's players and ]s can know which rules apply.<ref name="Clute"/>{{rp|385}} ] and ] introduced the term "]" in the original ''Dungeons & Dragons'' as a generic term for a practitioner of magic (in order to avoid the connotations of terms such as ''wizard'' or ''warlock''); this lasted until the second edition of ''Advanced Dungeons & Dragons'', where it was replaced with ''mage'' (later to become ''wizard''). The exact rules vary from game to game.<ref>{{Citation |title=Dungeons & Dragons |date=2024-08-03 |work=Misplaced Pages |url=https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Dungeons_%26_Dragons&oldid=1238436102 |access-date=2024-08-07 |language=en}}</ref> The ], as a ], is distinguished by the ability to cast certain kinds of magic but being vulnerable in direct combat; sub-classes are distinguished by strengths in some areas of magic and weakness in others.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Cook|first1=David "Zed"|title=Advanced Dungeons & Dragons Player's Handbook|date=1989|publisher=TSR|location=Lake Geneva, Wisconsin|isbn=0880387165|pages=30–31|edition=2nd}}</ref> ] are distinguished from wizards as having an innate gift with magic, as well as having mystical or magical ancestry.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Williams|first1=Skip|title=Dungeons & Dragons Player's Handbook|date=2003|publisher=Wizards of the Coast|location=Renton, Washington|isbn=0786928867|page=51|edition=Special}}</ref> ] are distinguished from wizards as creating forbidden "pacts" with powerful creatures to harness their innate magical gifts, similarly to ] and ], who are empowered through divine and deific sources to perform ] feats, while ] and ] draw power from nature and the elements. ], on the other hand, are similar to wizards in learning magical abilities as scholarly practices, but differ in their power being tied to artistic expression rather than arcane knowledge.


==Appearance==
Magical practicioners on the Disc (of the ] series) are rare, and often innate (with exceptions - the eight son of an eight son must become a wizard, even if the son is a daughter), and do require some form of training (again, with exceptions - see '']''). Also, magical practicioners on the Disc treat the use of magic not unlike the use of nuclear weaponry - it's okay for people to know that you have it, but ''everyone'' will be in trouble if it gets used.
]]]
Due to their traditional image as a ], magicians may be depicted as ], ], and in some instances with their hair (and in the case of male wizards, ]), being long and majestic enough to occasionally host lurking woodland creatures. This depiction predates the modern fantasy genre, being derived from the traditional image of wizards such as Merlin.<ref name="Driver"/><ref>{{cite book|last1=Colbert|first1=David|title=The Magical Worlds of Harry Potter: A Treasury of Myths, Legends, and Fascinating Facts|date=2001|publisher=Lumina Press|location=Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina|isbn=0970844204|page=|edition=1st|url=https://archive.org/details/magicalworldsofh00colb/page/70}}</ref>


In fantasy, a magician may be shown wearing a ], ], and/or a ]. In more modern stories, a magician may be dressed similarly to a ], wearing a ] and ], with an optional ].
Sorcerors and sorcery are a staple of ] ] fiction and are dramatically featured in many ].


Several ] adorned with astronomical sequences have been found in Europe. It has been speculated by archaeologists and historians that they were worn by ancient wizards.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Paterson |first1=Tony |title=Mysterious gold cones 'hats of ancient wizards' |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/germany/1388038/Mysterious-gold-cones-hats-of-ancient-wizards.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220112/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/germany/1388038/Mysterious-gold-cones-hats-of-ancient-wizards.html |archive-date=2022-01-12 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |website=The Telegraph |date=17 March 2002 |access-date=14 October 2021}}{{cbignore}}</ref> The similarities shared with a fantasy magician's hat shape may mean that it is ultimately derived from them. ], circa 1,400-1,300 BC, ] in ], Germany.
==See also==
*]
*]
*]


] described robes as a magician's way of establishing to those they meet that they are capable of practicing magic.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nl.lspace.org/books/analysis/kneidinger-marcio.html#Section4.3 |title=Analysis |work=Terry Pratchett's Discworld |publisher=L-Space Web |date=1948-04-28 |access-date=2013-10-16 |first=Kneidinger |last=Marcio |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130607141528/http://www.nl.lspace.org/books/analysis/kneidinger-marcio.html#Section4.3 |archive-date=2013-06-07 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
]

In the '']'' campaign setting of the '']'' role-playing game, wizards show their ] by the colour of their robes.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Hickman|first1=Tracy|last2=Weis|first2=Margaret|title=DragonLance Adventures|url=https://archive.org/details/dragonlanceadven00hick|url-access=registration|date=1987|publisher=TSR|location=Lake Geneva, Wisconsin |isbn=0880384522 |pages=}}</ref>

===Magical implements===
]'' by ] (1902): showing ]s used for magical purposes; the crystal, a book, a skull, and a wand]]

A magician's ] is a ] or ] ball commonly associated with ], ], or ].

]s and ] have long been used as requirements for the magician.<ref name="Frye"/>{{rp|152}} Possibly derived from wand-like implements used in ], such as ], the earliest known instance of the modern magical wand was featured in the ''],'' used by ] to transform ]'s men into animals. Italian ]s put wands into the hands of powerful ] by the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.endicott-studio.com/rdrm/rrItalianF.html |title=Italian Fairies: ''Fate'', ''Folletti'', and Other Creatures of Legend |first=Raffaella |last=Benvenuto |work=Journal of Mythic Arts |date=2006 |publisher=Endicott Studio |access-date=2013-10-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131016212139/http://www.endicott-studio.com/rdrm/rrItalianF.html |archive-date=2013-10-16 |url-status=usurped }}</ref> Today, magical wands are widespread in literature and are used from ''Witch World'' to ''Harry Potter.'' In ''The Lord of the Rings'', Gandalf refuses to surrender his own staff, breaking ]'s, which strips the latter of his power. This dependency on a particular magical item is common, and necessary to limit the magician's power for the story's sake – without it, the magician's powers may be weakened or absent entirely.<ref name="Kern"/> In the ''Harry Potter'' universe, a wizard must expend much greater effort and concentration to use magic without a wand, and only a few can control magic without one; taking away a wizard's wand in battle essentially disarms them.{{citation needed|date=February 2022}}<!-- Do not restore citation to accio-quote, which is an ] policy breach, massive host of copyright violations -->

In the '']'', ] depicts ''wizards'' who use magic based on their staves, and ''magicians'' who practice several kinds of magic, including wizard magic;{{Clarify|date=September 2016}} in the '']'' fantasies, she and ] depict magicians as identical to wizards, though inferior in skill and training.

==Education==
] (1853): studying for arcane knowledge]]

Magicians normally learn spells by reading ancient tomes called ]s, which may have magical properties of their own.<ref name="Clute"/>{{rp|126}} Sorcerers in '']'' often gained powers from such books, which are demarcated by their strange bindings. In worlds where magic is not an innate trait, the scarcity of these strange books may be a facet of the story; in ]'s '']'', Prince Rupert seeks out the books of the magician ] to learn magic. The same occurs in the ''Dungeons and Dragons''-based novel series ''Dragonlance Chronicles'', wherein ] seeks out the books of the sorcerer Fistandantilus. In JK Rowling's ''Harry Potter'' series, wizards already have skills of magic but they need to practise magic in '']'' in order to be able to use it properly''.''

Some magicians, even after training, continue their education by learning more spells, inventing new ones (and new magical objects), or rediscovering ancient spells, beings, or objects. For example, ] from the ] continues to learn about magic even after being named Sorcerer Supreme. He often encounters creatures that have not been seen for centuries or more. In the same universe, ] continues to pursue magical knowledge after mastering it by combining magic with science. ] from ''Harry Potter'' invent new magical items and sell them as legitimate defense items, new spells and potions can be made in the ''Harry Potter Universe;'' ] invented a variety of jinxes and hexes as well as substantial improvements in the process of making ]s; Albus Dumbledore, along with Nicolas Flamel, is credited with discovering the twelve uses of ]'s blood.

==Limits on magic==
To introduce conflict, writers of fantasy fiction often place limits on the magical abilities of magicians to prevent them from solving problems too easily.<ref name="Clute"/>{{rp|616}}

A common motif in fiction is that the ability to use magic is innate and often rare, or gained through a large amount of study and practice.<ref name="Clute"/>{{rp|616}} In ]'s ], it is mostly limited to non-humans, such as the ] (more commonly known as wizards), or elves crafting magical items. In many writers' works, it is reserved for a select group of humans,{{Citation needed|date=September 2015}} such as in ]'s '']'' novels, ]'s ''Harry Potter'' novels or ]'s '']'' universe.

A common limit invented by ] in his '']'' series, and later popularized in role-playing games is that a wizard can only cast a specific number of spells in a day.<ref name="Clute"/>{{rp|385}} In ]'s '']'', once an area's mana is exhausted, no one can use magic.<ref name="Clute"/>{{rp|942}}

The extent of a magician's knowledge is limited to which spells a wizard knows and can cast.<ref name="Kern">{{cite web|url=http://www.victorianweb.org/courses/fiction/65/tolkien/kern14.html |title=The Limits of Magic |last=Kern |first=Michael |website=The Victorian Web |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131016135508/http://www.victorianweb.org/courses/fiction/65/tolkien/kern14.html |archive-date=2013-10-16 |access-date=2013-10-13 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Magic may also be limited by its danger; if a powerful spell can cause grave harm if miscast, magicians are likely to be wary of using it.<ref name="Martin"/>{{rp|142}} Other forms of magic are limited by consequences that, while not inherently dangerous, are at least undesirable. In ''A Wizard of Earthsea'', every act of magic distorts the equilibrium of the world, which in turn has far-reaching consequences that can affect the entire world and everything in it. As a result, competent wizards do not use their magic frivolously.<ref name="Kern"/>

In Terry Pratchett's '']'' series, the Law of Conservation of Reality is a principle imposed by forces wanting wizards to not destroy the world, and works to limit how much power it is humanly possible to wield.{{Citation needed|date=July 2017}} Whatever your means, the effort put into reaching the ends stays the same. For example, when the wizards of Unseen University are chasing the hapless wizard Rincewind in the forest of Skund, the wizards send out search teams to go and find him on foot. The Archchancellor beats them to it by using a powerful spell from his own office, and while he gets there first by clever use of his spell, he has used no less effort than the others.{{Citation needed|date=July 2017}}

Magic may require rare and precious materials, such as rare herbs or flowers (often selected by prescribed rituals), minerals or metals such as ], parts of creatures such as the eye of a ], or even fantastic ingredients like the cool of a soft breeze on a summer's day. Even if the magician lacks scruples, obtaining the materials in question may be difficult.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Card|first1=Orson Scott|title=How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy|date=1990|publisher=Writer's Digest Books|location=Cincinnati, Ohio|isbn=0898794161|pages=|edition=1st|url=https://archive.org/details/howtowritescienc00card/page/47}}</ref> This can vary by fantasy work. Many magicians require no materials at all;<ref name="Clute"/>{{rp|617}} or those that do may require only simple and easily obtained materials. Role-playing games are more likely to require such materials for at least some spells for ] reasons.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Woolsey|first1=Doug|last2=Olson|first2=Donald|title=Battleaxe Rpg: Reforged Edition|date=2004|publisher=Lulu.com|isbn=9781442105935|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3FLMoKdIMogC|access-date=19 February 2016|pages=167–173}}</ref>{{self-published inline|date=February 2020}}

==Use of magic in society==
Nevertheless, many magicians live in pseudo-medieval settings in which their magic is not put to practical use in society; they may serve as mentors, act as quest companions, or even go on a ] themselves,<ref name="Clute"/>{{rp|1027}} but their magic does not build roads or buildings, provide immunizations, construct indoor plumbing, or do any of the other functions served by machinery; their worlds remain at a medieval level of technology.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Brin|first1=David|title=Otherness|date=1994|publisher=Bantam Books|location=New York|isbn=0553295284|page=|url=https://archive.org/details/otherness00brin/page/261}}</ref>

Sometimes this is justified by having the negative effects of magic outweigh the positive possibilities.<ref name="Martin"/>{{rp|8}} In Barbara Hambley's '']'', wizards are precisely pledged not to interfere because of the terrible damage they can do. In ''Discworld'', the importance of ] is that they actively do not do magic, because when wizards have access to sufficient "thaumaturgic energy", they develop many psychotic attributes and may eventually destroy the world. This may be a direct effect or the result of a miscast spell wreaking terrible havoc.<ref name="Martin"/>{{rp|142}}

In other works, developing magic is difficult.{{Citation needed|date=September 2015}} In ]'s '']'' series, the extreme danger presented by magic and the difficulty of analyzing the magic have stymied magic and left humanity at the mercy of the dangerous ] until a wizard summons a computer programmer from a ] — ours — to apply the skills he learned in our world to magic.

At other times, magic and technology do develop in tandem; this is most common in the ] genre.{{Citation needed|date=September 2016}} Patricia Wrede's '']'' fantasies include a Royal Society of Wizards and a technological level equivalent to the actual Regency; ]'s '']'' series, ]'s '']'', and ]'s '']'' all depict modern societies with magic equivalent to twentieth-century technology. In ''Harry Potter'', wizards have magical equivalents to non-magical inventions; sometimes they duplicate them, as with the ].

The powers ascribed to magicians often affect their roles in society.{{Original research inline|date=September 2015}} In practical terms, their powers may give them authority; magicians may advise kings, such as Gandalf in ''The Lord of the Rings'' and ] and ] in ]'s '']''. They may be rulers themselves, as in ]'s '']'', where both the heroes and the villains, although kings and lords, supplement their physical power with magical knowledge, or as in ]'s '']'', where magicians are the governing class.<ref name="Clute"/>{{rp|1027}} On the other hand, magicians often live like ]s, isolated in their towers and often in the wilderness, bringing no change to society. In some works, such as many of ]'s, they are despised and outcast specifically because of their knowledge and powers.<ref name="Clute"/>{{rp|745}}

In the magic-noir world of the '']'', wizards generally keep a low profile, though there is no explicit prohibition against interacting openly with non-magical humanity. The protagonist of the series, ], openly advertises in the Yellow Pages under the heading "Wizard" and maintains a business office, though other wizards tend to resent him for practicing his craft openly. Dresden primarily uses his magic to make a living finding lost items and people, performing ]s, and providing protection against the supernatural.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://strandmag.com/theres-something-about-harry-dresden/ |title=There's Something About Harry: A Look Into Jim Butcher's Character Harry Dresden |last=Krug |first=Kurt Anthony |date=2018-07-27 |website=The Strand Magazine |access-date=2019-01-18}}</ref>

In the series '']'', human forms of life should have only been capable of acquiring divine magic powers through individual spiritual development, whereas the race of human magicians with inborn magical ability ended in conflict with pureblood human society, because this race appeared as a result of an experiment of mixing humans with non-human sentient Heavenly Beings that acquired magic powers not through spiritual development, but through deep studying of laws of nature and by falsely causing the world's laws to react to actions of the Heavenly Beings as to actions of Divinities.<ref name="Mizuno2019">{{cite book|last=Mizuno|first=Ryou|title=Sorcerous Stabber Orphen Anthology. Commentary|year=2019| language=ja |publisher=TO Books|isbn= 9784864728799|pages=235}}</ref> In the ''Harry Potter series'', the Wizarding World hides themselves from the rest of the non-magic world, because, as described by ] simply, "Why? Blimey, Harry, everyone’d be wantin’ magic solutions to their problems. Nah, we’re best left alone.”

==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}

==External links==
{{Commons category|Fictional magicians}}
*], "Magic and Magicians",

{{Fantasy fiction}}
{{Speculative fiction all}}
{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Magician (Fantasy)}}
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Latest revision as of 18:03, 6 December 2024

Magicians appearing in fantasy fiction For other uses, see Magician (disambiguation) and Magi (disambiguation). "Wizard (fantasy)" redirects here. For other uses, see Wizard (disambiguation).
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The Enchanted Garden of Messer Ansaldo by Marie Spartali Stillman (1889): A magician uses magic to survive.

A magician, also known as an archmage, mage, magus, magic-user, spellcaster, enchanter/enchantress, sorcerer/sorceress, warlock, witch, or wizard, is someone who uses or practices magic derived from supernatural, occult, or arcane sources. Magicians enjoy a rich history in mythology, legends, fiction, and folklore, and are common figures in works of fantasy, such as fantasy literature and role-playing games.

Character archetypes

The Enchanter Merlin, by Howard Pyle, from The Story of King Arthur and His Knights (1903)

People who work magic are called by several names in fantasy works, and terminology differs widely from one fantasy world to another. While derived from real-world vocabulary, the terms: magician, mage, magus, enchanter/enchantress, sorcerer/sorceress, warlock, witch, and wizard, each have different meanings depending upon context and the story in question. Archmage is used in fantasy works to indicate a powerful magician or a leader of magicians.

The Love Potion by Evelyn De Morgan (1903)

Enchanters typically practice a type of imbued magic that produces no permanent effects on objects or people and are temporary, or of an indefinite duration, or which may require some item or act, to nullify or reverse. For example, this could include enchanting a weapon or tool to be more (or less) effective, enchanting a person or object to have a changed shape or appearance, creating illusions intended to deceive the observer, compelling a person to perform an action they might not normally do, or attempting to charm or seduce someone. For instance, the Lady of the Green Kirtle in C. S. Lewis's The Silver Chair can transform herself into a large green serpent. She also enchants Rilian, compelling him to forget his father and Narnia. And when that enchantment is broken, she attempts further enchantments with a sweet-smelling smoke and a thrumming musical instrument to attempt to baffle him and his rescuers into forgetting them again.

The term sorcerer has moved from meaning a fortune-teller, or "one who alters fate", to meaning a practitioner of magic who can alter reality. They are also sometimes shown as able to conjure supernatural beings or spirits, or to "animate" inanimate objects, such as in The Sorcerer's Apprentice. Due to this perception of their powers, this character may be depicted as feared, or even seen as evil. Villainous sorcerers were so crucial to pulp fantasy that the genre in which they appeared was dubbed "sword and sorcery", where typically the hero (or anti-hero) would be the sword-wielder, thus leaving the sorcery for his opponent.

Witch (an—often female—practitioner of witchcraft) and wicked (an adjective meaning "bad, evil, false") are both derivative terms from the word, wicca (an Old English word with varied meanings, including soothsayer, astrologer, herbalist, poisoner, seductress, or devotee of supernatural beings or spirits). L. Frank Baum combined these terms in naming the Wicked Witch of the West, and other witches in the Land of Oz. Baum named Glinda the "Good Witch of the South" in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. In The Marvelous Land of Oz, he dubbed her "Glinda the Good," and from that point forward and in subsequent books, Baum referred to her as a sorceress rather than a witch to avoid the term that was more regarded as evil. In modern fiction, a witch may be depicted more neutrally, such as the female witches (comparable to the male wizards) in the Harry Potter series of books by J. K. Rowling.

In medieval chivalric romance, the wizard often appears as a wise old man and acts as a mentor, with Merlin from the King Arthur stories being a prime example. Wizards such as Gandalf in The Lord of the Rings and Albus Dumbledore from Harry Potter are also featured as mentors, and Merlin remains prominent as both an educative force and mentor in the modern works of Arthuriana.

Wizards can be cast similarly to the absent-minded professor: being foolish and prone to misconjuring. They can also be capable of great magic, both good and evil. Even comical magicians are often capable of great feats, such as those of Miracle Max in The Princess Bride; although he is a washed-up wizard fired by the villain, he saves the dying hero.

Other wizards, such as Saruman from The Lord of the Rings or Lord Voldemort from Harry Potter, can appear as hostile villains.

Ursula K. Le Guin's A Wizard of Earthsea explored the question of how wizards learned their art, introducing to modern fantasy the role of the wizard as the protagonist. This theme has been further developed in modern fantasy, often leading to wizards as heroes on their own quests. Such heroes may have their own mentor, a wizard as well.

In role-playing games

Magicians in role-playing games often use names borrowed from fiction, myth and legend. They are typically delineated and named so that the game's players and game masters can know which rules apply. Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson introduced the term "magic-user" in the original Dungeons & Dragons as a generic term for a practitioner of magic (in order to avoid the connotations of terms such as wizard or warlock); this lasted until the second edition of Advanced Dungeons & Dragons, where it was replaced with mage (later to become wizard). The exact rules vary from game to game. The wizard or mage, as a character class, is distinguished by the ability to cast certain kinds of magic but being vulnerable in direct combat; sub-classes are distinguished by strengths in some areas of magic and weakness in others. Sorcerers are distinguished from wizards as having an innate gift with magic, as well as having mystical or magical ancestry. Warlocks are distinguished from wizards as creating forbidden "pacts" with powerful creatures to harness their innate magical gifts, similarly to clerics and paladins, who are empowered through divine and deific sources to perform thaumaturgical feats, while druids and rangers draw power from nature and the elements. Bards, on the other hand, are similar to wizards in learning magical abilities as scholarly practices, but differ in their power being tied to artistic expression rather than arcane knowledge.

Appearance

White-haired and white-bearded wizard with robes and hat

Due to their traditional image as a wise old man or wise old woman, magicians may be depicted as old, white-haired, and in some instances with their hair (and in the case of male wizards, beards), being long and majestic enough to occasionally host lurking woodland creatures. This depiction predates the modern fantasy genre, being derived from the traditional image of wizards such as Merlin.

In fantasy, a magician may be shown wearing a pointed hat, robes, and/or a cloak. In more modern stories, a magician may be dressed similarly to a stage magician, wearing a top hat and tails, with an optional cape.

Several golden hats adorned with astronomical sequences have been found in Europe. It has been speculated by archaeologists and historians that they were worn by ancient wizards. The similarities shared with a fantasy magician's hat shape may mean that it is ultimately derived from them. Golden Hat of Schifferstadt, circa 1,400-1,300 BC, Historical Museum of the Palatinate in Speyer, Germany.

Terry Pratchett described robes as a magician's way of establishing to those they meet that they are capable of practicing magic.

In the Dragonlance campaign setting of the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game, wizards show their moral alignment by the colour of their robes.

Magical implements

The Crystal Ball by John William Waterhouse (1902): showing implements used for magical purposes; the crystal, a book, a skull, and a wand

A magician's crystal ball is a crystal or glass ball commonly associated with clairvoyance, fortune-telling, or scrying.

Wands and staves have long been used as requirements for the magician. Possibly derived from wand-like implements used in fertility rituals, such as apotropaic wands, the earliest known instance of the modern magical wand was featured in the Odyssey, used by Circe to transform Odysseus's men into animals. Italian fairy tales put wands into the hands of powerful fairies by the Late Middle Ages. Today, magical wands are widespread in literature and are used from Witch World to Harry Potter. In The Lord of the Rings, Gandalf refuses to surrender his own staff, breaking Saruman's, which strips the latter of his power. This dependency on a particular magical item is common, and necessary to limit the magician's power for the story's sake – without it, the magician's powers may be weakened or absent entirely. In the Harry Potter universe, a wizard must expend much greater effort and concentration to use magic without a wand, and only a few can control magic without one; taking away a wizard's wand in battle essentially disarms them.

In the Enchanted Forest Chronicles, Patricia Wrede depicts wizards who use magic based on their staves, and magicians who practice several kinds of magic, including wizard magic; in the Regency fantasies, she and Caroline Stevermer depict magicians as identical to wizards, though inferior in skill and training.

Education

The Alchemist by William Fettes Douglas (1853): studying for arcane knowledge

Magicians normally learn spells by reading ancient tomes called grimoires, which may have magical properties of their own. Sorcerers in Conan the Barbarian often gained powers from such books, which are demarcated by their strange bindings. In worlds where magic is not an innate trait, the scarcity of these strange books may be a facet of the story; in Poul Anderson's A Midsummer Tempest, Prince Rupert seeks out the books of the magician Prospero to learn magic. The same occurs in the Dungeons and Dragons-based novel series Dragonlance Chronicles, wherein Raistlin Majere seeks out the books of the sorcerer Fistandantilus. In JK Rowling's Harry Potter series, wizards already have skills of magic but they need to practise magic in Wizarding Schools in order to be able to use it properly.

Some magicians, even after training, continue their education by learning more spells, inventing new ones (and new magical objects), or rediscovering ancient spells, beings, or objects. For example, Dr. Strange from the Marvel Universe continues to learn about magic even after being named Sorcerer Supreme. He often encounters creatures that have not been seen for centuries or more. In the same universe, Dr. Doom continues to pursue magical knowledge after mastering it by combining magic with science. Fred and George Weasley from Harry Potter invent new magical items and sell them as legitimate defense items, new spells and potions can be made in the Harry Potter Universe; Severus Snape invented a variety of jinxes and hexes as well as substantial improvements in the process of making potions; Albus Dumbledore, along with Nicolas Flamel, is credited with discovering the twelve uses of dragon's blood.

Limits on magic

To introduce conflict, writers of fantasy fiction often place limits on the magical abilities of magicians to prevent them from solving problems too easily.

A common motif in fiction is that the ability to use magic is innate and often rare, or gained through a large amount of study and practice. In J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth, it is mostly limited to non-humans, such as the Istari (more commonly known as wizards), or elves crafting magical items. In many writers' works, it is reserved for a select group of humans, such as in Katherine Kurtz's Deryni novels, JK Rowling's Harry Potter novels or Randall Garrett's Lord Darcy universe.

A common limit invented by Jack Vance in his The Dying Earth series, and later popularized in role-playing games is that a wizard can only cast a specific number of spells in a day. In Larry Niven's The Magic Goes Away, once an area's mana is exhausted, no one can use magic.

The extent of a magician's knowledge is limited to which spells a wizard knows and can cast. Magic may also be limited by its danger; if a powerful spell can cause grave harm if miscast, magicians are likely to be wary of using it. Other forms of magic are limited by consequences that, while not inherently dangerous, are at least undesirable. In A Wizard of Earthsea, every act of magic distorts the equilibrium of the world, which in turn has far-reaching consequences that can affect the entire world and everything in it. As a result, competent wizards do not use their magic frivolously.

In Terry Pratchett's Discworld series, the Law of Conservation of Reality is a principle imposed by forces wanting wizards to not destroy the world, and works to limit how much power it is humanly possible to wield. Whatever your means, the effort put into reaching the ends stays the same. For example, when the wizards of Unseen University are chasing the hapless wizard Rincewind in the forest of Skund, the wizards send out search teams to go and find him on foot. The Archchancellor beats them to it by using a powerful spell from his own office, and while he gets there first by clever use of his spell, he has used no less effort than the others.

Magic may require rare and precious materials, such as rare herbs or flowers (often selected by prescribed rituals), minerals or metals such as mercury, parts of creatures such as the eye of a newt, or even fantastic ingredients like the cool of a soft breeze on a summer's day. Even if the magician lacks scruples, obtaining the materials in question may be difficult. This can vary by fantasy work. Many magicians require no materials at all; or those that do may require only simple and easily obtained materials. Role-playing games are more likely to require such materials for at least some spells for game balance reasons.

Use of magic in society

Nevertheless, many magicians live in pseudo-medieval settings in which their magic is not put to practical use in society; they may serve as mentors, act as quest companions, or even go on a quest themselves, but their magic does not build roads or buildings, provide immunizations, construct indoor plumbing, or do any of the other functions served by machinery; their worlds remain at a medieval level of technology.

Sometimes this is justified by having the negative effects of magic outweigh the positive possibilities. In Barbara Hambley's Windrose Chronicles, wizards are precisely pledged not to interfere because of the terrible damage they can do. In Discworld, the importance of wizards is that they actively do not do magic, because when wizards have access to sufficient "thaumaturgic energy", they develop many psychotic attributes and may eventually destroy the world. This may be a direct effect or the result of a miscast spell wreaking terrible havoc.

In other works, developing magic is difficult. In Rick Cook's Wizardry series, the extreme danger presented by magic and the difficulty of analyzing the magic have stymied magic and left humanity at the mercy of the dangerous elves until a wizard summons a computer programmer from a parallel world — ours — to apply the skills he learned in our world to magic.

At other times, magic and technology do develop in tandem; this is most common in the alternate history genre. Patricia Wrede's Regency fantasies include a Royal Society of Wizards and a technological level equivalent to the actual Regency; Randall Garrett's Lord Darcy series, Robert A. Heinlein's Magic, Incorporated, and Poul Anderson's Operation Chaos all depict modern societies with magic equivalent to twentieth-century technology. In Harry Potter, wizards have magical equivalents to non-magical inventions; sometimes they duplicate them, as with the Hogwarts Express train.

The powers ascribed to magicians often affect their roles in society. In practical terms, their powers may give them authority; magicians may advise kings, such as Gandalf in The Lord of the Rings and Belgarath and Polgara the Sorceress in David Eddings's The Belgariad. They may be rulers themselves, as in E.R. Eddison's The Worm Ouroboros, where both the heroes and the villains, although kings and lords, supplement their physical power with magical knowledge, or as in Jonathan Stroud's Bartimaeus Trilogy, where magicians are the governing class. On the other hand, magicians often live like hermits, isolated in their towers and often in the wilderness, bringing no change to society. In some works, such as many of Barbara Hambly's, they are despised and outcast specifically because of their knowledge and powers.

In the magic-noir world of the Dresden Files, wizards generally keep a low profile, though there is no explicit prohibition against interacting openly with non-magical humanity. The protagonist of the series, Harry Dresden, openly advertises in the Yellow Pages under the heading "Wizard" and maintains a business office, though other wizards tend to resent him for practicing his craft openly. Dresden primarily uses his magic to make a living finding lost items and people, performing exorcisms, and providing protection against the supernatural.

In the series Sorcerous Stabber Orphen, human forms of life should have only been capable of acquiring divine magic powers through individual spiritual development, whereas the race of human magicians with inborn magical ability ended in conflict with pureblood human society, because this race appeared as a result of an experiment of mixing humans with non-human sentient Heavenly Beings that acquired magic powers not through spiritual development, but through deep studying of laws of nature and by falsely causing the world's laws to react to actions of the Heavenly Beings as to actions of Divinities. In the Harry Potter series, the Wizarding World hides themselves from the rest of the non-magic world, because, as described by Hagrid simply, "Why? Blimey, Harry, everyone’d be wantin’ magic solutions to their problems. Nah, we’re best left alone.”

References

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