Medea killed her children to 'protect' them from being killed out of revenge for what she did to the princess.
Answer 2:
Or rather to get her revenge on Jason.
In the play Medea rushes offstage with a knife to kill her children and also in Eugène Delacroix's painting "Medea about to Kill Her Children painting" she is also holding a knife
Medea kills all her children, her ex-husband Jason and his wife Glauce because Medea is angry at her ex-husband. Interestingly, Medea is seen by some as the first 'Feminist' work.
Jason leaves Medea for the princess, so Medea takes revenge on Jason by poisoning his bride-to-be, and the King who tries to save his dying daughter. Medea then proceeds to slaughtering the children that she and Jason given birth to, and rides off in a dragon-pulled chariot with the corpses of her sons.
Medea at one point was married to Jason, but when Jason would have set her aside, killed her children by him and fled.Another myth calls her a lover or wife of Aegeus (father of Theseus), or beloved of Sisyphus or Heracles.Achilles, she married after his death.That is at least thrice.
Medea, written by Euripides, is the story of Medea's revenge for the infidelity of Jason, the hero of the Argonauts. This ancient tragedy is one Euripides' earliest works.
In the play Medea rushes offstage with a knife to kill her children and also in Eugène Delacroix's painting "Medea about to Kill Her Children painting" she is also holding a knife
Medea kills her own children.
No, Medea did not kill her father, King Aeëtes. In fact, when her uncle took the throne from him, Medea killed her uncle.
Medea kills her children in order to deny Jason his legacy. Jason sought immortality; the continuity of his memory and deeds by means of his sons.
Medea kills her children using a poisoned robe and crown as a way to seek revenge against her husband, Jason. She gives the gifts to Jason's new wife, who then unknowingly passes them on to the children, resulting in their deaths.
No
Medea indirectly killed King Creon. He died of poison as he desperately attempts to save his daughter from Medea's burning poison.
An example of dramatic irony in the play "Medea" is when Jason is manipulated by Medea to bring her children back to Corinth, not knowing that she plans to kill them as well. The audience knows of Medea's plan while Jason remains ignorant, creating tension and anticipation knowing the tragic outcome that awaits.
She kills his new bride, Glauce, and then her (Medea's) own and Jason's children, Mermerus and Pheres.
Medea kills all her children, her ex-husband Jason and his wife Glauce because Medea is angry at her ex-husband. Interestingly, Medea is seen by some as the first 'Feminist' work.
Medea has two children with Jason, both of whom she murders. In the course of the play, Medea also causes the deaths of Glauce, Jason's new bride, and Creon, the King of Corinth. These deaths are all parts of Medea's quest for vengeance against Jason's betrayal, and, by extension, society's callousness towards women and foreigners.
Mermerus and Pheres.