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Protected edit request on 24 October 2015

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Please edit this page to redirect directly to List of characters in the Percy Jackson and the Olympians series and the Heroes of Olympus series#Annabeth Chase, to avoid a double redirect. Thank you! —Granger (talk · contribs) 19:10, 24 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]

DoneMr. Stradivarius ♪ talk ♪ 05:52, 25 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
The target should be List of characters in mythology novels by Rick Riordan#Annabeth Chase. --P64 (talk) 03:15, 25 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Good point—accordingly, I've reactivated the edit request. Maybe it would be easiest to reduce the page to semi-protection so that the bot can deal with this in the future. —Granger (talk · contribs) 03:48, 25 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Done Sarah-Jane (talk) 18:19, 26 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Protected edit request on 26 November 2015

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There is currently a double redirect from this page to List of characters in mythology novels by Rick Riordan#Annabeth Chase --MrLinkinPark333 (talk) 01:29, 26 November 2015 (UTC) MrLinkinPark333 (talk) 01:29, 26 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Done Sarah-Jane (talk) 18:16, 26 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Protected edit request on 15 February 2018

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Change redirect to disambig page (there is somebody with the same name in Close to Home (2005 TV series)) Apokrif (talk) 23:54, 15 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

There isn't a page for the other Annabeth Chase. Plus, this one is probably the WP:PTOPIC. There is the {{about}} template which could go at the top of the section. Bellezzasolo Discuss 11:50, 17 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]
 Not done: I don't believe it is appropriate for a dab page to link only to redirects. I suggest writing the article in question first, if it meets inclusion criteria. — Martin (MSGJ · talk) 22:06, 18 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Protected edit request on 26 September 2020

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Hello everyone! Annabeth Chase has grown into enough popularity as the deuteragonist of the Percy Jackson and the Olympians series and one of the protagonists of the Heroes of Olympus series, that she is deserving of a page in her own right. Even the Simple English Wikipedia has a page for her and they are supposed to have less pages than normal Wikipedia! So, here is my proposal. It is an edited version of the one on Simple English Wikipedia, fixing some typos and inaccuracies. I am a bit new to Wikipedia, so I'm not sure if this is the right way to submit the proposal so please be lenient with me. Sorry for any errors that may cause.

Extended content
Annabeth Chase
Percy Jackson & the Olympians and Heroes of Olympus character
First appearanceThe Lightning Thief
Last appearanceThe Ship of the Dead
Created byRick Riordan
In-universe information
NicknameWise Girl (by Percy)
Princess (by Clarisse)
Annie Bell (by Mr.D)
SpeciesHalf-blood
GenderFemale
TitleArchitect of Olympus
OccupationArchitect of Olympus, Smart Aleck of the Demigods, The Brains of the Argo II
FamilyAthena (mother)
Frederick Chase (father)
Mrs. Chase (stepmother)
Daedalus (half-brother)
Bobby Chase (half-brother)
Matthew Chase (half-brother)
Malcolm Pace (half-brother) Athena Cabin (half-siblings) Magnus Chase (paternal cousin)

Annabeth Chase is a fictional character in Rick Riordan's Percy Jackson and Heroes of Olympus series. She is a demigod; half-mortal and half goddess. Her father is the mortal Frederick Chase and her mother is Athena, the goddess of wisdom, crafts, arts, and battle strategy, and first cousins with Magnus Chase, whose mother is her paternal aunt. She appears first in the first novel of the series, The Lightning Thief and throughout the series becomes close friends with Percy Jackson, later becoming his main love interest and girlfriend. In The Last Olympian she also becomes the architect of Olympus and one of the leaders in Camp Half Blood for half bloods/demigods.

Development

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The writer of the books, Rick Riordan, was asked in an interview, "Do you feel those who said the main characters, such as Grover and Annabeth, are heroes in their own right?". He answered, "Annabeth is Percy's rational side. She can think through things and look at options that sometimes evade Percy in his moments of battle panic." This means she can think even when there is a fight going on, unlike Percy, and can find solutions to problems. That is also why Annabeth is a daughter of Athena because she is the goddess of wisdom and battle strategy.[1]

Fictional biography

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Annabeth Chase is the half-blood daughter of the goddess Athena[2][3][4] and the mortal man Frederick Chase. She was born July 12, 1993. Being a daughter of Athena, who is a virgin, she was not physically born, but is a literal 'brain child'; she was born as a gift to the man her mother loved. When she was seven, she ran away from home. On her journey, she met Luke Castellan, Thalia Grace, and Grover Underwood. Together, they traveled to Camp Half-Blood, running from and fighting hordes of monsters. When they got to the borders of Camp half blood,Thalia made her final stand fighting monsters so that Luke, Grover and Annabeth could safely get into camp. Thalia's father, Zeus, changes her into a pine tree on top of a hill that comes to be known as Thalia's Pine Tree. Annabeth lived at Camp Half-Blood for five years prior to Percy Jackson's arrival.

It has been shown that Annabeth does not get along with her father and step-family. According to her, her father was not very happy when she first appeared and tends to look at her as a nuisance. Her step-siblings appear to dislike her and feel afraid of her. Her stepmother seems to hate her and feel that she endangers the family by being only half-mortal. At the end of The Lightning Thief, Annabeth returns to her family to see if she can get along with them. She is able to stay with them for approximately a year, but it is unknown if her feeling towards her family have changed; however, in The Titan's Curse, her father and stepmother seem to care for her deeply, and her father helps fight off Kronos's army to save Annabeth.

Annabeth is a good fighter, and has been shown to be able to think on her feet in very hard situations. Despite this, Annabeth dreams of being an architect (building things), and the story has made many references to this. In The Lightning Thief, she enjoys and quickly becomes addicted to the 3-D holographic SimCity-esque game at the Lotus Hotel and Casino, and in The Sea of Monsters, it was shown that Annabeth’s greatest dream is to redesign the whole world to make it better, make Luke good again, and be accepted by her mother and father. In The Last Olympian, she is granted the status of being the architect of Olympus.

Hubris, or deadly pride, is Annabeth's fatal flaw. Annabeth thinks that she is able to do anything: get her parents back together, build great monuments, and save Luke, as shown in the second book. She sometimes even thinks she can rebuild the world into an even better place than the immortals did. She also has a deep fear of spiders, (arachnophobia), due to the contest between Athena and Arachne.

Annabeth is described as being athletic and having curly blond hair (like a princess's), tan skin, and stormy gray eyes. Percy Jackson describes her as "cute" at first but eventually she becomes "seriously beautiful."

Story

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The Lightning Thief

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Annabeth first appears in The Lightning Thief and is twelve years old. She was nicknamed "Wise Girl" by Percy, in a spat of insults. The name was meant as an insult but, now it's an affectionate pet name.

She first meets Percy Jackson after he was attacked by the Minotaur and makes his way into Half-Blood Hill. When he first saw her, Percy described Annabeth as "pretty" with blond hair curled "like Cinderella's" After Percy heals from the Minotaur attack, Annabeth hears that he is to go on a quest (search) and she wants to go along, thinking Percy is "the one" from The Great Prophecy. Together, she, Percy, and Grover go searching for Zeus's stolen lightning bolt. Throughout the book, Annabeth shows her unique intelligence, which she inherited from her mother, and also her arachnophobia (fear of spiders) that she shares with all her siblings on her mother's side (originating from the story of Arachne and Athena)[5]

The Sea of Monsters

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Annabeth, Percy and Tyson, having not been allowed to go on the quest for the Golden Fleece to save Thalia's Pine Tree and find Grover by Chiron's temporary replacement, sneak out of Camp Half-Blood to do so. During the book it is revealed that Annabeth's greatest dream is to redesign the whole world to improve it, save Luke (from himself), and be accepted by her mother and father. After getting stranded on the island of the Queen-Witch Circe, Annabeth saves Percy after he is turned into a Guinea Pig using the multivitamins given to them by Hermes. During the fight with Polyphemus Annabeth (while invisible with the use of her Yankee's Cap) pretends to be Nobody and distracts him long enough for Percy to vanquish him. Annabeth is injured fatally during the fight but is healed with the help of the Golden Fleece.

The Titan's Curse

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Annabeth is kidnapped along with the goddess Artemis and has to be saved by Percy, Thalia, Grover, and the huntresses Zoë Nightshade and Bianca di Angelo. In a dream Percy has, Annabeth is on a mountain, and she sees Luke holding up a black roof (unknown to Percy, it is the sky). Annabeth helps him hold it, and then Luke slips out from underneath, making Annabeth hold it. This is later used to trick Artemis into holding the sky, as Artemis would not be able to resist helping a maiden. Unlike the other books, Annabeth's role is quite small. It is hinted in this book that there will be a romantic future for her and Percy. Aphrodite, the goddess of love, also convinced Percy about his feelings for Annabeth, though she also made it even harder for them to fall in love. In the end, Percy saves both Annabeth and Artemis, while Thalia is fighting Luke until he falls off a cliff.[6]

The Battle of the Labyrinth

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By this book, Annabeth is fourteen. Percy and Annabeth find an entrance into the Labyrinth. She realizes that Luke may try to use this entrance to invade Camp.

Annabeth leads the quest into the Labyrinth, fulfilling one of her ambitions. She goes into the Labyrinth with Percy, Grover, and Tyson to find a way to stop Kronos's evil forces from entering the borders of Camp Half-Blood by searching for the Labyrinth's inventor, Daedalus. The prophecy the Oracle gave her appears to have scared her and she refuses to say the last line. As they go into the Labyrinth, they face many hardships. Annabeth faces a Sphinx and finds the riddles (which are actually factual questions) not challenging and an insult to her intellect. They escape the claws of the Sphinx and continue on to find Hephaestus so he can tell them about where to find Daedalus.

As they head towards Hephaestus' forge in Mount St. Helens, they find telekhines there making a weapon for Kronos. Percy tells Annabeth to escape while she can. She kisses him for luck and they part ways. Annabeth believes that he dies when Mount St. Helens erupts, but this is not the case. Percy fell onto the island Ogygia, prison of the nymph Calypso, a daughter of Atlas. When Percy comes back to camp, Annabeth is performing a funeral ritual for him. When she notices him, she hugs him, making a scene. However, when she finds out about Calypso, she is very jealous. Percy then asks a mortal girl, Rachel Elizabeth Dare, to help them on their way through the Labyrinth (Rachel has a rare ability to see through the Mist). Annabeth becomes very jealous at how close Percy and Rachel are getting. The three of them discover Luke, who has become Kronos's vessel. After a battle, Luke is forced back into the Labyrinth, leaving two casualties. Annabeth refuses to believe that Luke is all bad, and gets quite mad at Percy for saying otherwise.

After they fulfilled their mission, Annabeth and Percy are standing on Half-Blood Hill, and are matching their goals with the prophecy, Annabeth reveals the last line of her prophecy, "To lose a love to worse than death" and is confused, not sure about her feelings for Luke, or a secret love for Percy. At the end she leaves with her dad to go to a private school in San Francisco.

The Last Olympian

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In the final book, Annabeth first appears when Percy returns from blowing up Kronos's ship, the Princess Andromeda. Following his arrival, Annabeth helps Percy hear the Great Prophecy. Percy bathes in the River Styx (he narrowly escapes by imagining Annabeth pulling him out of the river) and calls Annabeth, telling her to meet him in front of the Empire State Building with all the demigods from Camp Half Blood. When Annabeth and Percy go to Olympus, they meet Hermes, to whom Annabeth tries to apologize about Luke turning into Kronos. Hermes becomes angry at her and blames her for not saving Luke. Hermes leaves, and they return to the other campers to defend Manhattan and Mount Olympus. In battle, Ethan Nakamura attempts to stab Percy in the small of his back, his Achilles spot, and Annabeth jumps in front of him, taking the knife. After a few hours of rest, Annabeth, though still weak from poison, goes back into battle. Kronos goes to Olympus, and Grover, Thalia, Percy, and Annabeth follow him. Kronos attacks Percy, and Annabeth joins the fight, but is knocked out of the fight when Kronos slams her into Athena's throne. In the end, she saves Percy and Olympus by finally realizing the prophecy's true meaning. She convinces Percy to give Luke her knife (which was given to her by Luke when she was seven) so he can stab himself, killing himself and banishing Kronos to Tartarus yet again. She is rewarded by the gods, who allow her to use her talents as an architect to rebuild Mount Olympus. Percy Jackson refuses immortality because of his feelings for Annabeth. At Camp Half-Blood in the dining hall later that day, Annabeth kisses Percy after he admits his feelings for her. She warns him that she will never make things easy for him. After this, they kiss underwater after eavesdropers dump them into the canoe lake.

Magnus Chase And The Gods Of Asgard

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The Sword of Summer

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Annabeth appears in this book searching, with her dad, for cousin Magnus.

The Hammer of Thor

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Percy appears at the end of the book when Magnus Chase learns that he needs to go somewhere called the "Ship of Dead". He goes to ask Annabeth for tips, in which Annabeth quotes "I don't know much about the sea, but my boyfriend does." "It's time you met Percy..."

The Ship of the Dead

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In the beginning of the book the first chapter is called "Percy Jackson Does His Level Best to Kill Me". Annabeth and Percy give tips about the sea get kind've itchy because Magnus sucks at everything that came to the ocean, nearly getting himself killed.

Romance

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A key subplot in the series is the relationship between Annabeth, Percy, and Luke. Luke is Annabeth's hero and one of her first half-blood friends. Annabeth likes Percy, which she hints at, but she still has feelings towards Luke. At the end of The Last Olympian, Luke shows slight feelings for her, sort of like an older brother. These feeling are present despite the fact that Luke and Percy are arch enemies and he has attempted to kill Percy many times. In The Sea of Monsters, it is shown that one of her life's wishes is to save Luke from Kronos.

In the beginning of The Lightning Thief, Annabeth is shown to dislike Percy when she finds out that Percy is the hero of the prophecy. She thinks he is weak, and is influenced by the rivalry between her mother, Athena, and Percy's father, Poseidon. But while they are on their quest, they have to ride a truck to get to their destination. This is the first time they actually talk. In The Mark of Athena, Annabeth says that's when she chose to "like" him. At the very end of The Sea of Monsters Annabeth kisses Percy on the cheek after winning the chariot race. In The Titan's Curse, there are suggestions of some romance between Annabeth and Percy, although this is complicated by her lingering feelings towards Luke and the fact that her mother, Athena, disapproves of her "friendship" with Percy. In The Battle of the Labyrinth, Annabeth finally expresses her feelings for Percy by kissing him good luck before vanishing using her Yankee's cap. When Percy returns, she is highly jealous, because she knows he has been with the sad but seductive Calypso. It is implied that Percy is trying to tell Annabeth about his feelings, but Annabeth remains distant,still due to her lingering feelings towards Luke.

In The Last Olympian, after the defeat of Kronos and the saving of Luke's soul, the romantic relationship between Percy and Annabeth is solidified. Annabeth also states Percy looks 'cute when he's worried' when he first checks on her after she took a knife that was meant for him. Annabeth tells Luke as he dies that she always saw him as a brother, but never loved him. Later, she and Percy share their second kiss after she tells him that she will never, ever make things easy for him. He describes it as if his brain felt it was melting through his body. But nosy campers snoop on this and throw them into the camp lake. Then comes a third kiss underwater in an air bubble made by Percy. They are together at the end of the series. It is hinted that they might be married one day in the future, as Annabeth said she wanted "to build something permanent," and Percy states that maybe they were "getting a good start together.”

Powers and abilities

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General

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  • Like other half-bloods, Annabeth has ADHD, which increases battle awareness.
  • Also like most other half-bloods, she has dyslexia, because her brain is 'hard-wired' from birth to read Ancient Greek.
  • Annabeth is trained in hand-to-hand combat during her stays at Camp Half-Blood.
  • Wields a knife in battle as opposed to a sword through all of Percy Jackson & the Olympians
  • She uses her intelligence in her fights.
  • Wants to be an architect
  • Is Percy's love interest and later becomes his girlfriend.

Knowledge capabilities

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  • Annabeth knows a lot about architecture, history, and Greek myths.
  • Annabeth is a master strategist.
  • Annabeth is extremely intelligent, wise, and clever.
  • Annabeth is good at arts and crafts because of her mother.
  • Annabeth never forgets what she had heard.
  • Annabeth can read faces, and is able to have a good sense of what one is thinking, as revealed in “The Mark Of Athena.”

Magical Items

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  • A magical Yankees cap that turns her invisible, which was a gift from her mother (Athena).
  • A celestial bronze knife, given to her by Luke when she was only 7, that she uses as a weapon. Celestial bronze is designed metal to wound immortals and monsters without injuring mortals. It is the metal favored by many demigods for their weapons. Also the drakon bone sword the giant Damasen gave to her in Tartarus
  • A laptop with ideas and information from Daedalus (creator of the great Maze in Crete).

Reception

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In the books

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B. Allison Gray praises how in Battle of the Labyrinth: Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Book 4, Riordan "successfully conveys Annabeth's emotions."[7]

References

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  1. ^ As quoted in "Interview: Rick Riordan," BriMeetsBooks.com (July 22, 2007).
  2. ^ Anita L. Burkham, "Review of The Lightning Thief: Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Book One," Horn Book Magazine July/August 2005, Vol. 81 Issue 4, 479.
  3. ^ "Book review: Percy Jackson and the Battle of the Labyrinth". BBC. September 16, 2008. Retrieved 2009-05-09.
  4. ^ MacPherson, Karen (May 10, 2009). "My Generation: Percy Jackson's adventures continue in Labyrinth". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 2009-05-09.
  5. ^ Riordan, Rick (28 June 2005). The Lightning Thief. Percy Jackson and the Olympians. Hyperion Books. p. 384. ISBN 0786856297. OCLC 60786141. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  6. ^ Riordan, Rick (1 April 2007). The Titan's Curse. Percy Jackson and the Olympians. Hyperion Books for Children. p. 312. ISBN 9781423101451. OCLC 76863948. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  7. ^ B. Allison Gray, "Review of Battle of the Labyrinth: Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Book 4," School Library Journal, 03628930, September 2008, Vol. 54, Issue 9.

Other websites

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Category:Percy Jackson and the Olympians characters

— Preceding unsigned comment added by Cseyrafi (talkcontribs) 13:13, 26 September 2020 (UTC)[reply]

 Not done: Per our expectations for writing about fiction. Izno (talk) 00:53, 17 June 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Protected edit request on 6 June 2023

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+cat Category:Fictional characters with dyslexia jlwoodwa (talk) 19:36, 6 June 2023 (UTC)[reply]

 Done Izno (talk) 00:54, 17 June 2023 (UTC)[reply]