X-Mansion
{{Short description|Fictional mansion in the X-Men comics}}
{{redirect|Xavier Institute||List of schools named after Francis Xavier}}
{{Infobox fictional location
| name = X-Mansion
| image = Xmansion.jpg
| image_size =
| caption = The Xavier Institute for Higher Learning
| blank_label = Publisher
| blank_data = Marvel Comics
|source = Marvel Comics
| first = The X-Men #1 (September 1963)
| creator = Stan Lee
Jack Kirby
| type =
| people = X-Men
Xavier Institute's Students & Faculties
| races =
| located_in= Salem Center, New York
}}
X-Mansion and Xavier Institute are the common names for a mansion and research institute appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The mansion is depicted as the private estate of Charles Francis Xavier and serves as the base of operations and training site of the X-Men. It is also the location of an accredited private school for mutant children, teenagers, and sometimes older aged mutants, the Xavier Institute for Higher Learning, formerly the Xavier School for Gifted Youngsters.{{cite book |author=Gina Misiroglu |title=The Superhero Book |publisher=Visible Ink Press |url=https://archive.org/details/superherobookult0000unse |url-access=registration|year=2004|isbn=1-57859-154-6|page=[https://archive.org/details/superherobookult0000unse/page/507 507] |quote="Few heroes enjoy such elaborate bases of operations as Batman and Superman, although the X-Men headquarters is a site to be reckoned with. Marvel Comic's mutant band of superheroes spend most of their time at their mentor Professor X's mansion, located in Westchester County, New York. Xavier's estate houses the X-Men's training facility, which fronts as an Ivy League-like school."}} The X-Mansion is also the worldwide headquarters of the X-Corporation.
The X-Mansion's address is 1407 Graymalkin Lane, Salem Center, located in Westchester County, New York.{{cite book|last = Sanderson|first = Peter|title = The Marvel Comics Guide to New York City|publisher = Pocket Books|year = 2007|location = New York City|pages = 214|isbn = 978-1-4165-3141-8}} The school's motto is mutatis mutandis. In a 2011 edition of the comic, Wolverine re-opens the school, at the same address, under the name of the Jean Grey School for Higher Learning.Wolverine and the X-Men #1 (2011) After the Terrigen Mist Cloud becomes toxic enough to mutants that they die from M-Pox, Storm has the mansion (renamed X-Haven) moved to Limbo to keep mutants safe from the Terrigen while a cure is sought.Extraordinary X-Men #1 After Medusa destroys the Terrigen Cloud so the mutants could survive, Kitty Pryde moves the mansion from Limbo to Central Park, New York,X-Men Prime #1 and renames it the Xavier Institute for Mutant Education and Outreach.X-Men Gold #1 Following the end of the Krakoan Age, the X-Mansion has been converted into a prison to house the mysterious Inmate-X, later revealed to be Charles Xavier himself, forcing the remaining members of the X-Men to forge a newly acquired base of their own.
History
The X-Mansion is the inherited property of Charles Xavier (Professor X) and has been in the Xavier family for ten generations including two known mutants in the lineage, both becoming detached from the family. Little else is known about them or their mutations.
As Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters, the X-Mansion was the training site of the first two generations of teenage X-Men:
- The X-Men: 1st Class – Cyclops, Iceman, Angel, Beast, Jean Grey (Marvel Girl), Havok, Lorna Dane (Polaris) and then later Mimic and Changeling will join the team as well.
- The original New Mutants – Cannonball, Wolfsbane, Mirage, Karma, Sunspot, Cypher, Magma, Magik, and Warlock along with Shadowcat, a contemporary member of the original New Mutants who was their classmate but was a member of the adult X-Men team instead.
In X-Men vol. 2 #38 (Nov. 1994), the X-Mansion was renamed from Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters to the Xavier Institute for Higher Learning, as most of the X-Men were adults rather than teenagers by this time. Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters was relocated to the Massachusetts Academy in Western Massachusetts (a Marvel created town or region called Snow Valley somewhere in The Berkshires), which served as the training site of the third generation of teenage X-Men beginning in Generation X #1 (Nov. 1994).
The Massachusetts Academy closes permanently in Generation X #75 (June 2001). Shortly thereafter, the school for young mutants is reopened at the X-Mansion, but the name remains "The Xavier Institute for Higher Learning" despite the younger student body. The fourth generation of mutant teenagers, featured in Grant Morrison's New X-Men (2001–2004) and in New Mutants (2003–2004; relaunched as New X-Men: Academy X, July 2004–Feb. 2008), study at the mansion until it is destroyed during the 2007–2008 story "Messiah Complex" and the X-Men subsequently disband and close the institute.
Though protected by high-tech defenses, the X-Mansion has often been breached by the supervillains and evil mutants faced by the X-Men. Indeed, the X-Mansion has been destroyed and rebuilt several times. It was demolished in a battle with the Sidri in The Uncanny X-Men #154 (Feb. 1982) and atomized by Mister Sinister in The Uncanny X-Men #243 (April 1989). It was rebuilt by a future Franklin Richards in moments but reverted to its destroyed state after the time-traveler became confused.The New Mutants Annual #6 (1990)
Certain portions of the mansion, such as extensive sub-basements, survived both demolitions. When Onslaught revealed himself and fought the X-Men (X-Men #54 (June 1996) and Onslaught: X-Men), the mansion took heavy damage, though was quickly repaired in-between issues after the "Onslaught" storyline. In "Operation: Zero Tolerance", Bastion forced Jubilee to reveal the mansion's defenses. He then stripped down the mansion, having everything inside the mansion removed. After defeating Bastion, the X-Men moved back into the mansion, as detailed in X-Men #70 (Nov. 1997). The X-Mansion survived an assault by the Shi'ar in New X-Men #122–126 (March–July 2002) as well as a riot by students led by Quentin Quire in New X-Men #134–138 (Jan.–May 2003). In the "Planet X" storyline of New X-Men #146–150, the X-Mansion was destroyed; the rebuilding process could be seen in New X-Men #155–156 (June 2004). In the wake of M-Day, the mansion was infiltrated by followers of William Stryker in an attempt to wipe out the students, resulting in some structural damage and several casualties. Then the mansion was severely damaged when the Danger Room became sentient and summoned local machinery to attack the structure. The mansion was also damaged when Mr. Sinister's new team of Marauders attacked the mansion. A fight between the Hulk and several mutants heavily damaged the mansion. In the "Messiah Complex" storyline, the mansion is destroyed by Sentinels.
Unlike past times, the mansion was not rebuilt for a considerable length of time.X-Men Legacy Annual #1 (2012) Rather, the X-Men and their students relocated to a new base of operations in San Francisco. Under the name Graymalkin Industries, the new X-base is not run as a school, but rather as a sort of community center for mutants who wish to develop their powers.
=Faculty (pre-Messiah Complex)=
{{main|List of Xavier Institute students and staff}}
- Shadowcat teaches computer science classes and, in addition to being a member of the senior staff, acts as a student advisor and liaison for the senior staff.
- Karma teaches French and is in charge of those students who are too young to join the training squads. She also oversees the library.
- Nightcrawler teaches music, art, life sciences, and drama.
- Beast teaches science and mathematics and is part of the senior staff, presumably overseeing the curriculum.
- Emma Frost, besides being the headmistress of the Xavier Institute, also teaches English, business, and ethics, much to the horror of Kitty Pryde. She also presides over the new team of X-Men, teaching them to work as a team, with some assistance from the senior staff, such as Colossus.
- Wolverine teaches close quarters combat.
- Cyclops, besides being the headmaster of the Xavier Institute, also teaches the elective leadership and tactics.
- Northstar, before his death (and later resurrection), taught business and consumer law classes, as well as a flying class for those students with flight powers. He also mentored the Alpha Squadron training squad.
- Iceman, being a Certified Public Accountant, teaches classes in mathematics, finance, and accounting.
- Gambit teaches a target practice class for students with projectile-based powers. He also mentors the Chevaliers training squad.
- Wolfsbane, in addition to mentoring the Paragons, is a teaching assistant in Beast's science class.
=Post X-Men: Schism=
After the events of X-Men: Schism, Wolverine and half of the X-Men return to Westchester, New York and the X-Mansion. The name of the school is now the Jean Grey School for Higher Learning. Its grounds are a spawn of the living island Krakoa. In the first issue of Wolverine and the X-Men an entirely new school is built on the grounds. It is funded mainly with scientific advancements by the students and diamonds from Krakoa.Wolverine and the X-Men #20 (2012)
- Storm – Headmistress
- Beast – Vice-Principal
- Rogue – Senior Staff
- Iceman – Senior Staff
- Rachel Summers – Senior Staff
- Northstar – Senior Staff
- Firestar – Senior Staff
- Chamber – Junior Staff
- Frenzy – Junior Staff
- Karma – Junior Staff
- Husk – Junior Staff
- Warbird – Junior Staff
- Deathlok – Adjunct Staff/Campus Guard
- Doop – Adjunct Staff
- Spider-Man – Adjunct Staff/Guidance Counselor
- Angel – Graduate Assistant/Recruiter
- Cecilia Reyes – Resident Physician
- Kavita Rao – Resident Doctor
- Jubilee – Resident/Member
- Armor – Member
- Pixie – Member
- Kid Omega – Member
- Nightcrawler – Member
- Colossus – Member
After Wolverine dies in the "Death of Wolverine" storyline, Spider-Man becomes a guidance counselor in the series Spider-Man and the X-Men.
=X-Haven=
Under the All-New, All-Different Marvel re-branding, X-Haven was a sanctuary founded by Storm and her Extraordinary X-Men to protect mutants from the Terrigen Mist. The Jean Grey School for Higher Learning was temporarily teleported to a pocket dimension within Limbo with the help of Doctor Strange, Scarlet Witch, and Wiccan. It also has magical defenses created by Magik to repel demons.
=The Xavier Institute for Mutant Education and Outreach=
Following the War between the Inhumans and mutants which resulted in the destruction of the remaining Terrigen Cloud, Kitty Pryde, now the new Headmistress of the Jean Grey School for Higher Learning had Magik teleport the school back to Earth, more precisely to Central Park, New York CityX-Men: Prime #1 and renames it as the Xavier Institute for Mutant Education and Outreach. It was demolished after the events of Extermination.The Uncanny X-Men vol. 5 #11
=Post-Krakoan Age: From the Ashes=
As a result of Professor X betraying mutantkind and turning himself into the authorities, the X-mansion undergoes renovations by the US government to be converted into a correction facility known as Graymalkin Prison. Led by Dr. Corina Ellis, Graymalkin Prison not only captured mutants, but tortured and weaponized them too. Ellis unleashed these mutants, known as the Graymalkin Trustees, to do her bidding.
- Graymalkin Prison
- Corina Ellis (Warden)
- Sentry
- Scurvy (Phillip)
- Larry Trask (Sentinel program director)
- Inmates:
- Inmate X
- Charles Xavier
- Siryn
- Blob
- Wild Child
- Omega Red
- Sebastian Shaw
- Hag
- Former inmates:
- Beast
- Jubilee
- Calico
Layout
In the middle of the main courtyard is the Phoenix Memorial Statue, dedicated to the memory of Jean Grey. Notable rooms include the Danger Room and a room containing Cerebro. The Headmasters Office of Cyclops and Emma Frost is on the top floor.
The basketball court is a popular hang-out. It was the site of a basketball game in X-Men #4 (Jan. 1992) in which the X-Men used their mutant powers. Directly below the basketball court is the hangar, which houses many transportation vehicles, as well as aircraft such as the X-Men Blackbird.
There is also a cemetery with memorials for deceased X-Men like Thunderbird and others.
Other versions
=Age of Apocalypse=
In the Age of Apocalypse reality, the remains of the X-Mansion were the headquarters for a mutant resistance cell against Apocalypse – a mutant that had conquered North America. The Mansion survives, and many new mutants come to the School in hope of shelter.Astonishing X-Men #1–4 (1995–1996)
=Mutant X=
In the darker continuity of Mutant X, the X-Mansion is run by Magneto, who had long ago taken up Professor X's dream. The mansion is vaporized in a nuclear explosion.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=May 2009}}
=''Predator vs. Wolverine''=
In the Predator vs. Wolverine miniseries, which takes place in an alternate reality, the X-Mansion was damaged in an attack by a Predator in order to lure out Wolverine, whom it was hunting.
=Prelude to Deadpool Corps=
In issue #2, the X-Mansion is shown to be an orphanage for troubled kids that is run by Professor X and the teachers include Storm and Beast. Some of the orphans include child versions of Deadpool, Scott Summers, Wolverine, Angel, and Colossus."Prelude to Deadpool Corps" #2 (May 2010)
=Ultimate Marvel=
In the Ultimate Marvel universe, the X-Mansion does not differ much. However, it is not entirely funded by inheritance. Though the school originally was funded from Magneto's inheritance,{{Citation needed|date=May 2009}} allowing them to neither accept nor seek out donations. Its policies have since changed after Magneto's departure and Xavier's subsequent control over the facility.{{Citation needed|date=May 2009}} Later, the students question and ridicule the unlikeliness of the facility simply being funded by inheritance.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=May 2009}} It is then revealed that numerous donors fund Xavier's projects and remain anonymous due to heavy anti-mutant sentiments present in public opinion.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=May 2009}} One of the biggest donors was the Hellfire Club, who were revealed to have an ulterior motive for doing so.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=May 2009}} In Xavier's conversation with Lilandra Neramani, it's discovered that S.H.I.E.L.D. were former financiers before their falling out with Xavier; it is unknown what their intentions were.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=May 2009}} The Church of the Shi'ar have become major investors.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=May 2009}}
The school's location is concealed by a projected image of a Jehovah's Witness chapter, as revealed in Ultimate X-Men #1.
The mansion is purposely demolished by Iceman in "Ultimate Requiem" following the events of the "Ultimatum" storyline. This is because the team had been devastated by Magneto's attack and the survivors were going on the run.
In other media
=Television=
- The X-Mansion appears in Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends.
- The X-Mansion appears in X-Men: Pryde of the X-Men.
- The X-Mansion appears in X-Men: The Animated Series.
- The X-Mansion appears in the two-part Spider-Man: The Animated Series episode "The Mutant Agenda" and "Mutants' Revenge".
- The X-Mansion appears in X-Men: Evolution. This version is located in Bayville, New York.Episode 18: "Beast of Bayville" Season 2
- The X-Mansion appears in Wolverine and the X-Men.
- The X-Mansion appears in The Super Hero Squad Show.
- The X-Mansion appears in X-Men '97.
=Film=
- The X-Mansion appears in Generation X.
- The X-Mansion is featured prominently in the X-Men film series.
- In X-Men (2000), the exterior of the X-Mansion was filmed at the Casa Loma, Toronto, and the Parkwood Estate at Oshawa, Ontario, Canada.{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0120903/locations|title=X-Men (2000)|via=www.imdb.com}}
- In X2, X-Men: The Last Stand, Deadpool, and Deadpool 2, the X-Mansion is portrayed by Hatley Castle in Victoria, British Columbia.{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0290334/locations|title=X-Men 2 (2003)|via=www.imdb.com}}{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0376994/locations|title=X-Men: The Last Stand (2006)|via=www.imdb.com}} Elements of Hatley Castle's exterior influenced the new versions of the X-Mansion in X-Men: Days of Future Past, X-Men: Apocalypse, and Dark Phoenix.{{Cite web|title=X-Men Dark Phoenix: What We Learned From The Director Commentary|url=https://www.gamespot.com/gallery/x-men-dark-phoenix-what-we-learned-from-the-direct/2900-3049/#1|access-date=2021-07-20|website=GameSpot|language=en-US}}
- In X-Men: First Class (2011), the X-Mansion is portrayed by the Englefield House, an Elizabethan manor in Berkshire, England.{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1270798/locations|title=X-Men: First Class (2011)|via=www.imdb.com}}
- An alternate universe version of the X-Mansion appears in the mid-credits scene of The Marvels.
=Video games=
- The X-Mansion appears in X-Men: Next Dimension.
- The X-Mansion appears as a hub area in X-Men Legends.
- The X-Mansion appears in X-Men Legends II: Rise of Apocalypse.
- The X-Mansion appears as a hub area in Marvel Heroes.
- The X-Mansion appears in Lego Marvel Super Heroes. This version is located in Inwood, Manhattan.
=Miscellaneous=
See also
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- https://uncannyxmen.net/x-marks-the-spot/xavier-institute
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20120206094004/http://www.hatleypark.ca/Filming.htm Hatley Castle – The actual house used in the X-Men movies.]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20071214030006/http://xmenfilms.net/xmansion.html Xavier Mansion Tour: Join Storm For A Tour Of The Mansion!]
{{X-Men}}
{{Stan Lee}}
{{Jack Kirby}}
Category:Fictional elements introduced in 1963
Category:Fiction about superhero schools
Category:Marvel Comics locations