Titania and Oberon fight all the time because they are both the kind of person who wants to get their own way all of the time. When two people like this are married, you can expect a turbulent marriage.
Oberon and Titania are fighting in "A Midsummer Night's Dream" because Titania refuses to give up a young Indian prince to Oberon. Oberon wants to use the boy as his henchman, but Titania has grown attached to him and refuses to part with the child. Their argument causes chaos in the natural world, leading to further complications in the play.
Oberon wants to bring the boy into his fold to be his "henchman", but Titania does not want that.
For the same reason Titania tries to control Oberon. They are both strong-willed people (although they are not really people) and like getting their own way.
in a midsummer nights dream Titania's husband is Oberon
King Oberon and Queen Titania are fairies in A Midsummer's Night Dream by Shakespeare. Titania is fighting with Oberon about an Indian boy who they are both trying to put in their possession.
Oberon and Titania got into an argument over the possession of the Indian Prince which caused for Oberon to devise a plan that will embarrass Titania.
Titania and Oberon have a heated argument.
Titania is the Fairy Queen, who withholds the Indian changling boy from Oberon.
Oberon is the king and Titania is the queen.
They are two characters in Shakespeare's play A Midsummer Night's Dream. They are fairies--Oberon is the king of the fairies and Titania is the queen.
Oberon and Titania come from Midsummer Nights Dream. Ariel and Miranda come from The Tempest. Umbriel does not come from Shakespeare at all, but from Alexander Pope's Rape of the Lock. All of them except Miranda are fairies or spirits.
in A Midsummer Night's Dream, Titania and Oberon are fighting over an Indian 'changeling' child who is not named. the child's mother was "a votaress" (religious worshiper or follower) of Titania, and they were friends. the child's mother died in childbirth, and for her sake, Titania is raising the boy. (Oberon, the Fairy King, is trying to take the boy away from Titania, and this creates much of the conflict between Titania and Oberon) I once played Titania in a college production of Midsummer it's a fantastic play!
Oberon wants Titania to fall in love with some vile thing so she will have no afection for the boy stolen from the Indian King anymore. This way, he can take the boy as a servant and won't have Titania in the way. Later Oberon plans to cure the love spell from the Queen using a herb.
Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream"
Titania is a fictional character in the play, A Midsummer Night's Dream, written by William Shakespeare. In the play, Titania is the queen of the fairies. She was the partner of Oberon, king of the fairies.