Oberon is the king of Faerie, based on Shakespeare's king of the same name from A Midsummer's Night Dream. He is more than 4000 years old and is married to
Oberon (/ˈoʊbərɒn/) is a king of the fairies in medieval and Renaissance literature. He is best known as a character in William Shakespeare's play A Midsummer Night's Dream, in which he is King of the Fairies and spouse of Titania, Queen of the Fairies.
Oberon is King of the Fairies and is married to Titania. Bottom is a weaver in Athens. He is rehearsing to be in a play for the Duke's wedding celebrations. Puck, also called Robin Goodfellow, is a fairy and Oberon's servant.
Oberon is the fairy king in "A Midsummer's Night Dream." He plays a major role in many of the antics shown in the story by using a magic love potion to alter the minds of several characters. He is the partner to the fairy queen, Titania, and the master to his righthand man, Puck.
Oberon, French Alberon, German Alberich, king of the elves, or of the “faerie,” in the French medieval poem Huon de Bordeaux. In this poem Oberon is a dwarf-king, living in the woodland, who by magic powers helps the hero to accomplish a seemingly impossible task.
The name Oberon is primarily a gender-neutral name of German origin that means Noble Bear.
Merlin, the halfling son of Oberon, was one of the greatest wizards of all time, while Fox, the halfling daughter of Titania, has virtually no Third Race magic in her due to her having been raised strictly as a human (only using her powers once, under uttermost stress, to strike out at Oberon when he attempted to ...
Oberon and Titania are the fairy king and queen in A Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare. In their first scene together, it is clear that they are fighting: Oberon accuses Titania of having an affair with Theseus and Titania says that Oberon has had an affair with Hippolyta.
Oberon and Puck generally have a good relationship with one another; even when Puck messes up his orders from Oberon, it does not lead to serious problems between the two.
Oberon claims to want the boy to become his attendant, but in reality, he is just jealous of all the time Titania is spending with the boy, ''crowns him with flowers and makes him all her joy. '' But his real problem is that Titania is not spending enough time with him, causing him to get Puck to put a spell on her.
At one point, Light's Oberon seizes and manhandles Puck into a kiss.
The name Oberon comes only from Proper Human History. The physical embodiment of Faerie Britain's will to destroy itself, as it is a land that was built on the sins of fairies and should not exist. His name in Faerie Britain is Vortigern.
As a benevolent ruler of the spirit world, he also brings blessing of peace and health to the future families of the newlyweds. But his personality is not all kindness; Oberon shows a more malicious side in his dealings with Titania.
Oberon has been arguing with Titania for a long time. Oberon is jealous that Titania is giving the changeling boy more attention than him.
How Oberon Got its Name. Named by Herschel's son John in early 19th century for the king of the fairies in Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream."
Oberon is powerful, but Titania appears to be just as headstrong, and they seem equally matched.
Titania accuses Oberon of loving Hippolyta and of thus wishing to bless the marriage; Oberon accuses Titania of loving Theseus.
Based on the Puck of English mythology and the púca of Celtic mythology, Puck is a mischievous fairy, sprite, or jester. He is the first of the main fairy characters to appear, and he significantly influences events in the play.
Titania refuses to let the boy go because his mother was a close friend of hers, and when she died in childbirth, Titania agreed to raise her son. Hatching a plan to win the Indian boy, Oberon sends Puck in search of a flower called love-in-idleness.
Oberon wants Titania's changeling child to serve him in his court instead of hers. He also wants to satisfy his own jealousy, as Titania and Oberon have accused each other of romantic dalliances with mortals: Titania with Theseus and Oberon with Hippolyta.
Tie up my love's tongue. Bring him silently. You know this idea of capture we've been talking about throughout the play, here yet again Titania's way of keeping hold of the thing that she loves, having power over the thing that she loves is by capture, is by tying him up and bringing him silently.
Wilkinson wrote storybooks for his daughters which mentioned Titania and her prince consort, Oberon; in this private mythology they had seven children. The four girls were Iris (the oldest), Ruby, Daphne and Pearl, and the boys were Zephyr, Noel, and baby Crystal.
Oberon is still popular because people always remember their first craft beer, or what they did the summer they first tried it. "For some people, their lupulin threshold has shifted, because hoppier beers have created palate changes.
Titania is the fairy queen from Shakespeare's play A Midsummer Night's Dream. In the Sisters Grimm series, she is revealed to be the Queen of Faerie. She is married to Oberon, the King, and has two sons by him called Puck - her eldest son and also the heir to the throne of Faerie, and Mustardseed.