This is organized by the standard chapter structure found in most editions. I have included a brief summary for each chapter to act as a guide to the narrative flow.
Since its publication in 1950, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe has served as the gateway into C.S. Lewis’s timeless realm of Narnia. For decades, readers, scholars, and filmmakers have sought a comprehensive way to catalog its characters, chapters, themes, and hidden details. The search query "index of the chronicles of narnia the lion the witch and the wardrobe new" reflects a growing demand for a fresh, updated guide—one that respects the original text while incorporating modern scholarship, recent annotated editions, and the legacy of the 2005 film adaptation. This is organized by the standard chapter structure
This article provides exactly that: a meticulously organized, new index covering every facet of the book. Whether you are a student writing a paper, a parent reading aloud, or a fan revisiting the wardrobe, this index will serve as your definitive reference. Part 3: Character Index (Alphabetical – New Annotations)
This is the core of your new index. Each entry includes the character’s first appearance (by chapter) and significant updates from modern scholarship. Aslan (Chapter 7) – The Great Lion, son
Deep Magic from the Dawn of Time –
Chapters: XIII, XIV.
New thematic entry: Modern legal scholars have compared the Deep Magic to natural law. The New Narnia Reader (2023) includes an essay titled “The Witch’s Legal Loophole and Aslan’s Deeper Magic.”
Dwarf (General Otmin in film) – In the book, simply “the dwarf” (Chapter IV).
New annotation: The 2005 film gave him the name “Ginarrbrik.” The new index distinguishes book-dwarf from film-dwarf.