Ronald's Room
Tiny sloping-ceiling bedroom plastered in orange Chudley Cannons posters, orange bedspread, cluttered with spellbooks, comics, frogspawn tank, rat.
Ronald's Room in the Burrow is a quintessential reflection of Ron Weasley's boyish passions, debuting in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets as a cramped, sloping-ceilinged haven plastered with Chudley Cannons posters and cluttered with spellbooks, comics, a frogspawn tank, and his pet rat Scabbers. Though it appears only in Book 2, it vividly captures Ron's wizarding childhood amid the Weasley family's chaotic warmth, serving as Harry's first glimpse into the Burrow's magic during the summer escape from Privet Drive. Across the series, while the room itself does not undergo significant physical changes in later books, it symbolizes Ron's unchanging loyalty and fandom, with Scabbers' later revelation as Pettigrew adding retrospective intrigue to its clutter.
History
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
Tiny sloping-ceiling bedroom plastered in orange Chudley Cannons posters, orange bedspread, cluttered with spellbooks, comics, frogspawn tank, rat.
Book Appearances
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
First appears Ch 2