Fowl family
The Fowl Family is a criminal family in the fictional teen series Artemis Fowl by Eoin Colfer. It currently consists of Artemis Fowl I, his wife Angeline Fowl, twins Myles and Beckett and the main character of the Artemis Fowl series, Artemis Fowl II.
Fowl Family | |
---|---|
Artemis Fowl character | |
First appearance | Artemis Fowl |
Created by | Eoin Colfer |
In-universe information | |
Species | Human |
Parents | Artemis Fowl I, Angeline Fowl |
Children | Artemis Fowl II, Myles Fowl, Beckett Fowl |
The family motto of the Fowl family is Aurum Potestas Est (Gold is Power), or sometimes known as Aurum Est Potestas.
Members
Artemis Fowl I
Artemis Fowl I is the patriarch of the Irish Fowl family, the husband of Angeline Fowl and the father of Artemis Fowl II. He is a former crime lord, but some time before the start of the first book, he decided to move all of the family's assets into legitimate enterprises. After the fall of the Soviet Union, he attempts to create trade connections with Russia. He takes the family ship, the Fowl Star, loaded with 250 thousand cans of cola from Ireland to Russia, but he is intercepted and kidnapped by the Russian Mafiya near Murmansk, Russia.[1] When the Mafiya find him after the explosion, his leg is missing.[2] After over a year of not being found, he is declared legally dead by the courts. The fact that the family lost much money over his death motivated his son Artemis Fowl II to take on the exploits that occur in the first book.[2] Much of the money accumulated in this and other ventures is spent directly on financing unsuccessful rescue expeditions in the Arctic. In the second book, The Arctic Incident, Artemis Fowl receives a message from the Russian mafia that they have his father, and sets out to rescue the man while helping save "The People" from the Goblin Revolution by defeating the masterminds.
Artemis Fowl II
Artemis Fowl II is the main character of the Artemis Fowl series. He is the son of Artemis Fowl I and Angeline Fowl. He is commonly referred to as simply "Artemis". Artemis is often called by his mother's pet name Arty. He is extremely intelligent, having contributed to the fictional scientific journal The Psychologist's Journal under a pseudonym,[3] Dr. F. Roy Dean Schlippe, and having the "highest tested IQ in Europe".[4] He thinks puberty is somewhat a pain. After the fifth book, it is known that he now has a hazel eye (courtesy of Captain Holly Short) and his index and middle fingers have switched places during a little time travel. He is possibly the only person who understands Foaly's little gizmos. Artemis is known now to also have a bit of magic in him, although his theft leads him to develop Atlantis Complex. He later has it treated.
Angeline Fowl
Angeline Fowl is the wife of Artemis Fowl I and the mother of Artemis Fowl II. After the disappearance of her husband, she goes into a state of insanity and depression. She is described by a school counselor as having no control over Artemis's behavior, allowing Artemis to engage in the illegitimate money-making enterprises in and before the first book. She calls Artemis "Arty", as his father does. Her name is also often used for Artemis' faux letters, emails and phone calls.
Beckett Fowl
Beckett Fowl is mentioned briefly in the Artemis Fowl books Artemis Fowl and the Time Paradox and Artemis Fowl and the Atlantis Complex. He is the younger of the pair of twins. He seems to have average intelligence and is fond of pointing at himself and speaking of himself in the third person, but is also quite resourceful. Beckett doesn't seem to realise what certain words mean, as he refers to himself more than once as a 'simple-toon'. He has a taste for odd foods, which includes a mix of espresso and treacle, and hamsters,
After getting a taste of Artemis's hamster, Artemis put a lock on his lab. While Beckett's twin Myles cracked the code after several days, Beckett dug a bear trap for Myles and swapped the code for a ladder. In Artemis Fowl and the Last Guardian, Beckett is shown to be unique amongst the Fowl brothers in being as co-ordinated as his brothers are not, as he attacks a gnome serving Opal Koboi. This strength and resilience in the face of danger attracts the attention of Oro, leader of the Berzerkers, who chooses to possess Beckett. Beckett only surfaces briefly when Koboi has allows him to regain control, expecting. intelligent conversation from a Fowl, and is therefore surprised when Beckett reacts with enough speed to punch her. At the end of the novel, Oro is partly freed from the thrall so the spirit of warlock Bruin Fadda, the final seal on a spell that could destroy humanity, can converse freely regarding Koboi's plan. This act ultimately causes Opal's death, as when she orders Oro to kill her clone following her failure, Oro uses Beckett's body to stab Koboi.
Myles Fowl
Myles Fowl is the elder and more obviously intelligent of the Fowl twins, Myles is much like Artemis. He potty trained himself at fourteen months, building a ladder of encyclopedias to reach the toilet. In Artemis Fowl and the Last Guardian it is mentioned he is a decade above his age.
In Artemis Fowl and the Atlantis Complex it is mentioned that Myles contaminated one of Artemis's Petri dishes when he wanted a sample for his own experiments. After Artemis put a lock on his lab door, Myles stayed at the door for three days trying to crack the combination, he used several rolls of toilet paper writing down the possibilities. The combination was given to Beckett when Myles fell in a hole Beckett dug in the Fowl garden and swapped the combination in return for a ladder.
In Artemis Fowl and the Last Guardian Myles is taken over by the Berserkers, spirits that are sworn to kill humans. Myles resists and is freed by Artemis. He gives Artemis all the information that he knows about the Berserkers but thinks that Artemis can not lose, even though Artemis was having doubts himself.
Lord Hugh Fowl
Lord Hugh Fowl (né Hugo de Folé) was the original owner of Fowl Manor and the principal of Virgil Butler, being the first Fowl to have a Butler apprenticed to him during the Norman conquest of England.
Peg O'Connor Fowl
Peg O'Connor Fowl, often and quite rudely referred to as Pirate Peg, and by her great-grandson Myles Fowl as Peg the Information Corsair, was a Fowl who during a period in which the Fowl family in its entirety had been briefly outlawed by the governments of Germany, Switzerland and Austria, had paid the Compagnie Internationale de Wagons-Lits an extortionate amount of gold to engineer a secret cabin in the rear car of the Orient Express that would be made available exclusively and in perpetuity to the Fowl family to allow them access to the entirety of Continental Europe.
History
In the Artemis Fowl series, the members of the Fowl family are infamous in the criminal underworld,[1] also having an Interpol file the size of a small library. Over the years, various Fowls attempted to gain enough money to become legitimate, then decided such business wasn't to their liking and almost immediately returned to crime.[5] The Fowl's billionaire status was put into jeopardy after the latest legitimate venture by Artemis Fowl I. Having previously controlled a criminal empire extending from the Dublin dockyards to Tokyo, he was partly influenced by his wife Angeline to move out of crime, and attempted to export cola to Russia aboard the Fowl Star, just after the Soviet Union had collapsed. However, the Russian Mafiya sunk the Fowl Star, wiping out a large chunk of the family finances. This prompted the 12-year-old prodigy Artemis Fowl II to start a two-year crime spree to secure the family fortune, which eventually led him to discover the People, becoming the first human in history to extort fairy gold from the LEP, surviving the deadly combination of a bio-bomb and a time-stop along the way.
Text
References
- Colfer, Eoin (6 May 2002). Artemis Fowl: The Arctic Incident. Artemis Fowl series. Hyperion Books. pp. 1–7. ISBN 0-786808551. OCLC 49778083.
- Colfer, Eoin (26 April 2001). Artemis Fowl. Artemis Fowl series. Viking Press. p. 28. ISBN 0-670899623. OCLC 46493219.
- Artemis Fowl and the Arctic Incident pg. 11
- Eoin Colfer (2001). Artemię Fowl. Artemis Fowl. Hyperion Books. pp. 1. ISBN 0-7868-1707-0.
- Artemis Fowl pg. 124