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House of Kamehameha

The House of Kamehameha (Hale O Kamehameha), or the Kamehameha dynasty, was the reigning royal family of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi, beginning with its founding by Kamehameha I in 1795 and ending with the death of Kamehameha V in 1872 and Lunalilo in 1874.[1] The kingdom continued for another 21 years, until its overthrow in 1893 with the fall of the House of Kalakaua.[2]

Kamehameha
Parent houseHouse of Keoua
CountryKingdom of Hawai‘i
Founded1795
FounderKamehameha I
Current headSurvives only through collateral lines
Final rulerKamehameha V
TitlesKing of Hawai‘i
King of the Hawaiian Islands
Joint King of Hawai'i
Kuhina Nui

Origins of the Kamehameha dynasty edit

Originating lines edit

 
The god Kū-ka-ili-moku was left to Kamehameha I by his uncle Kalaniʻōpuʻu

The origins of the House of Kamehameha stems from the progenitor, Keōua Kalanikupuapa`ikalaninui who was the sacred father of Kamehameha I and by the royal court of his brother Kalaniʻōpuʻu[3] who later became king and gave his war god Kuka'ilimoku to Kamehameha I and he became the king by conquest, uniting all the Hawaiian islands into one kingdom under his undivided rule. Kalaniʻōpuʻu's father was Kalaninuiʻīamamao and Keōua's father was Kalanikeʻeaumoku, both were sons of Keaweʻīkekahialiʻiokamoku.[3] They shared a common mother, Kamakaʻīmoku. Both brothers served Alapaʻinui, the ruling King of Hawaiʻi island at the time.[3] Contemporary Hawaiian genealogy notes that Keōua may not have been Kamehameha's biological father, and that Kahekili II might have been the figure's real father.[3][4] But official genealogies of the chiefs[5] as well as the rulers[6] confirm that Keoua was the true father. Kamehameha I's mother was Kekuʻiapoiwa II, a granddaughter of Keawe.

The traditional mele chant of Keaka, wife of Alapainui, indicates that Kamehameha I was born in the month of ikuwā (winter) or around November.[7] Alapai had given the child, Kamehameha to his wife Keaka and her sister Hākau to care for after the ruler discovered the boy had lived.[8][9] Samuel Kamakau, in his newspaper article writes "It was during the time of the warfare among the chiefs of [the island of] Hawaii which followed the death of Keawe, chief over the whole island (Ke-awe-i-kekahi-aliʻi-o-ka-moku) that Kamehameha I was born". However, his general dating has been challenged.[10] Abraham Fornander writes in his publication, "An Account of the Polynesian Race: Its Origins and Migrations": "when Kamehameha died in 1819 he was past eighty years old. His birth would thus fall between 1736 and 1740, probably nearer the former than the latter".[11] "A brief history of the Hawaiian people" By William De Witt Alexander lists the birth date in the Chronological Table of Events of Hawaiian History" as 1736.[12] He would be named Paiea but would take the name Kamehameha, meaning "The lonely one" or "The one who has been set apart".[13][14]

Kalaniʻōpuʻu, the young Kamehameha's uncle, would raise him after his father's death. Kalaniʻōpuʻu ruled Hawaiʻi as did his grandfather Keawe. He had a number of advisors and priests. When word reached the ruler that chiefs were planning to murder the boy, he told Kamehameha:

"My child, I have heard the secret complaints of the chiefs and their mutterings that they will take you and kill you, perhaps soon. While I am alive they are afraid, but when I die they will take you and kill you. I advise you to go back to Kohala." "I have left you the god; there is your wealth."[3]

Cook's arrival and death edit

 
The feathered cloak of King Kalaniʻōpuʻu

In 1778 Captain James Cook visited the Hawaiian Islands and returned in 1779.[15]: 41–  When his ship, Resolution broke a foremast as they were leaving, he was forced to turn back and return to Kealakekua Bay.[16] A fight and theft of blacksmith tools led to a situation on shore where a Hawaiian canoe was confiscated, even after the tools were recovered.[17] Tensions were high with the Hawaiian population and one of Cook's small boats was taken.[18] In retaliation, Cook decided to kidnap King Kalaniʻōpuʻu. As he was being led away from his royal enclosure, his favorite wife, Kānekapōlei began to shout to the townspeople to get their attention.[19]: 18 [20] Two chiefs, Kalaimanokahoowaha[nb 1]: 55-  (also known as Kanaina nui) and a royal attendant named Nuaa, saw her pleading as the King was being led away with his two sons following.[22][23] As they reached the beach Kanaina, Kānekapōlei and Nuaa were able to convince Kalaniʻōpuʻu to stop and he sat where he stood.[19]: 18 [24] The crowd began to become aggressive and a rock was thrown and hit Cook. He took out his sword and struck Kanaina broadside without injury, but the chief reacted and immediately seized Cook and held him in his grip[25] when the king's attendant, Nuaa[nb 2] stabbed him from behind.[20][27][28] Before the remains of Cook were returned, the bones of the man were boiled down to strip off the flesh then given to chiefs. Kamehameha received Captain Cook's hair.[29]

Kamehameha I, founder of the Kingdom of Hawaii edit

 
Kamehameha I, founder of the Kingdom of Hawaii.

After Kalaniʻōpuʻu's death, Kīwalaʻō would take his father's place as first born and rule the island while Kamehameha would have religious authority. A number of chiefs supported Kamehameha and war soon broke out to overthrow Kīwalaʻō. After a number of battles the king was killed and envoys sent for the last two brothers to meet with Kamehameha. Keōua and Kaōleiokū arrived in separate canoes. Keōua came to shore first where a fight broke out and he and all aboard were killed. Before the same could happen to the second canoe, Kamehameha intervened. By 1795, Kamehameha would conquer all but one of the islands.

For his first royal residence, the new King built the first western-style structure built in the Hawaiian Islands, known as the "Brick Palace".[30] The king commissioned the structure to be built at Keawa'iki point in Lahaina, Maui.[31] Two foreign, ex-convicts from Australia's Botany Bay penal colony built the home.[32] It was begun in 1798 and was completed after 4 years in 1802.[33][34] The house was intended for Kaʻahumanu,[35] but she refused to live in the structure and resided instead in a traditional Hawaiian-styled home only feet away.[31]

Kamehameha I had many wives but held two the most high regard. Keōpūolani was the highest ranking aliʻi of her time[15]: 69-  and mother to his sons, Liholiho and Kauikeaouli. Kaʻahumanu was his favorite. Kamehameha I died in 1819 and his son, Liholiho would become the next king.[36]

New king and form of government edit

Kamehameha II, and the new office of Kuhina Nui edit

 
Kamehameha II in England with Queen and entourage

After Kamehameha I's death, his first born son Liholiho left Kailua for a week and returned to be crowned king. At the lavish ceremony attended by commoners and nobles of the kingdom he approached the circle of chiefs, as Kaʻahumanu, the central figure in the group and Dowager Queen, spoke: "Hear me O Divine one, for I make known to you the will of your father. Behold these chiefs and the men of your father, and these your guns, and this your land, but you and I shall share the realm together" Liholiho agreed officially, which began a unique system of dual-government consisting of a King and co-ruler similar to a co-regent.[19]: 64-  The new Kamehameha II would share his rule with his stepmother, Kaʻahumanu. She would defy Hawaiian kapu by dining with the young king, violating the law separating genders during meals and leading to the destruction of the old Hawaiian religion. Kamehameha II died, along with his wife, Queen Kamāmalu in 1824 on a state visit to England where they succumbed to measles. He was King for only 5 years.[36]

When Kamehameha II and his queen died in England, the remains of the couple were returned to Hawaii by Boki. On board the ship, "The Blond" his wife Liliha and Kekūanaōʻa would be baptized as Christians. Kaʻahumanu would also convert and become a heavy Christian influence on Hawaiian society until her death in 1832.[37] Since the new king was only 12 years old, Kaʻahumanu was now senior ruler and named Boki as her Kuhina Nui.

Boki would leave Hawaii on a fatal trip to find sandlewood to cover a debt and would be lost at sea. His wife, Liliha would be left the governorship of Maui and would unsuccessfully attempt to whip up revolt against Kaʻahumanu, who, upon Boki's departure, had installed Kīnaʻu as a co-governor.[37]

Kaʻahumanu edit

 
Kaʻahumanu with Charles Kanaʻina

Kaʻahumanu was born on Maui around 1777. Her parents were aliʻi chiefs of a lower ranking line. She became Kamehameha's consort when she was fourteen. George Vancouver states: "[O]ne of the finest woman we had yet seen on any of the islands".[38] To wed the young woman, Kamehameha had to consent to make Kaʻahumanu's children his heirs to the Kingdom although, in the end, she produced no issue.[39]

Before his death, Kamehameha selected Kaʻahumanu to rule along with his son. Kaʻahumanu had also adopted the boy.[40] She had the highest political clout in the islands. A portrait artist remarked of her: "This Old Dame is the most proud, unbending Lady in the whole island. As the widow of [Kamehameha], she possesses unbound authority and respect, not any of which she is inclined to lay aside on any occasion whatsoever".[41] She is one of the most influential leaders in Hawaii's history.[42]: 68– 

Kamehameha III, Kaʻahumanu II, III, moi kuʻi, au-puni kuʻi and the Great Māhele edit

 
Kauikeaouli at the age of 18

Liholiho's death elevated his younger brother, Kauikeaouli to the throne, styled as Kamehameha III at the age of twelve.[43] When Kaʻahumanu died Kauikeaouli was 18.

With the death of the Kuhina Nui, the young king demanded to come into the possession of his full inheritance.[44] He immediately rebelled against the Christian church and suspended all laws except murder and theft, which was a common tradition after the death of a chief. Distilleries were re-opened and the ban of alcohol lifted as was the ban on Hula. For his co-ruler, Kamehameha chose his aikāne (same sex partner), Kaomi.[nb 3]: 201  a young, half Tahitian man who had helped to heal the king and had been a close relationship for years.[46][47] The church was outraged.[48] Kaomi was granted true authority which he yielded. Eventually Kamehameha III, under pressure from the church, would remove the young man and would name Liliha to be the next Kuhina Nui. In November 1833, Hoapili (Liliha's father), Kekūanaōʻa, Kanaina and Kīnaʻu, along with armed royal attendants, including Kilinahe, went to the king's home to persuade him not to pick Liliha as Kuhina Nui. Hoapili begged the king to kill him if he should choose his daughter so the people would not blame him for her elevation. They pleaded with the king to choose Kinau as a true daughter of the House of Kamehameha. The King agreed and when he sent for Liliha to tell her the news, she was found drunk at home.[49]

 
"The Kamehameha Royal Family." Kamehameha III (center) and his wife, Queen Kalama (left); Kamehameha IV (left rear), Kamehameha V (right rear) and their sister, Victoria Kamāmalu (right)

Kīnaʻu would be succeeded by Kekāuluohi as Kuhina Nui, acting for the true heir to the position, Victoria Kamāmalu, Kīnaʻu's infant daughter. Kekāuluohi would be styled as Kaʻahumanu III.[50] After Kekāuluohi died in 1845, the next Kuhina Nui would be Keoni Ana, the son of John Young, one of Kamehameha I's important foreign advisors.[45]: 208  Kauikeaouli named an heir, his nephew, Alexander ʻIolani Liholiho who took the throne styled as Kamehameha IV in 1855.[36] The third Kamehameha instituted the Great Mahele, which gave up millions of acres of land passed from his brother, who inherited it from Kamehameha I, leaving all to him as the ruler of the kingdom.[36] Kamehameha III had illegitimate twin sons by Jane Lahilahi named Kīwalaʻō (died young) and Albert Kūnuiākea (1851–1903).[51][52]

Kamehameha IV and Queen Emma edit

Alexander ʻIolani Liholiho was the nephew of Kamehameha II and grandson of Kamehameha I. He reigned as Kamehameha IV. Along with his wife Queen Emma, Kamehameha IV would establish the Queen's Medical Center.[53][54] He was the son of Kīnaʻu, daughter of Kamehameha I and Kekūanaōʻa, a high ranking warrior chief from the conquest of the islands who became Governor of Oahu.[55][56] He ascended the throne at the age of 21. He was a tall man often described as handsome.[56] His wife was, Emma Naea Rooke, granddaughter of John Young.[57] The couple had one child, a son named Albert Edward Kauikeaouli who died at the age of 4 years old leaving the throne to pass to his uncle.[36]

Kamehameha V and the last Kamehameha king edit

Lot Kapuāiwa became king in 1863 styled as Kamehameha V. Lot was a bachelor up to his death in 1872 bringing to an end the Kamehameha Dynasty.[36][58]: 269–  However, Lot had an illegitimate daughter Keanolani by his classmate Abigail Maheha at the Chiefs' Children's School.[59][60][61][62]

On his deathbed, before his passing, he offered the throne to Elizabeth Keka'aniau and Bernice Pauahi Bishop but they both refused it. Finally, Kamehameha V stated: "The throne belongs to Lunalilo; I will not appoint him, because I consider him unworthy of the position. The constitution, in case I make no nomination, provides for the election of the next King; let it be so." He would die the following morning.[63] This enabled an election from the original stock of ali'i who were groomed for the position to rule by royal decree of King Kamehameha III. The Princes and Chiefs of rank, eligible to be rulers who were groomed at the original Chiefs' Children's School.

Lunalilo edit

William Charles Lunalilo was the highest chief in the Hawaiian Kingdom of his time.[64] He became the first elected monarch of the Hawaiian Kingdom[58]: 270–  and would be the last of the Kamehameha dynasty.[64] Lunalilo was the son of Charles Kanaʻina and Miriam Auhea Kekauluohi, a niece of Kamehameha I through her father Kalaimamahu, Kamehameha I's half-brother. However, she was a formal member of the House of Kamehameha as a wife of the founding monarch in his last years. Lunalilo was also a member of the House of Keōua[65] and the House of Moana.[21]: 64  His mother was taken by Kamehameha, after her birth and given to Kaʻahumanu because she could not conceive. Kekauluohi was a punalua child, having dual parentage. Lunalilo was the last Kamehameha monarch.[66]

Family tree edit

Key- (k)= Kane (male/husband)
(w)= wahine (female/wife)
Subjects with bold titles, lavender highlighted, bold box= Direct bloodline
Bold title, bold, grey box= Aunts, uncles, cousins line
Bold title, bold white box= European or American (raised to aliʻi status by marriage or monarch's decree)
Regular name and box= makaʻāinana or untitled foreign subject

Kāneikaiwilani (k)Kanalohanaui (k)Keakealani (w)Ahu-a-ʻI (k)Piʻilani (w) IIMoana (k)
Lonoikahaupu (k)Kalanikauleleiaiwi (w)Kauauaʻamahi (k)Keawe II (k)Lonomaʻaikanaka (w)Kauhiahaki (k)Iliki-a-Moana (w)
Keawepoepoe (k)Kanoena (w)Haʻaeamahi (k)Kekelakekeokalani (w)Alapainui (k)Keaka (w)Keeaumoku Nui (k)Kamakaimoku (w)Kaeamamao (k)[i]Kaolanialiʻi (w)[i]
Kameʻeiamoku (k)
 
Kamakaʻeheikuli (w)Keōua (k)Kahekili II (k)Kekuiapoiwa II (w)Ikuaʻana (w)Heulu (k)Moana (w)Keaweʻopala (k)Nohomualani (k)
Keaweaheulu (k)Ululani (w)Hakau (w)Kanaʻina (k)Kauwa (w)Eia (k)
Kepoʻokalani (k)[i]Alapai (w)[i]Keohohiwa (w)Keōpūolani (w)Kamehameha I
 
Kalaniʻōpuʻu (k)Kānekapōlei (w)Kiʻilaweau (k)Nāhiʻōleʻa (k)Kahoʻowaha II (w)Inaina (w)
Hao (K)Kailipakalua (w)
Kamanawa II (k)[i]Kamokuiki (w)[i]ʻAikanaka (k)Kamaeokalani (w)Kaōleiokū (k)Keoua (w)Luahine (w)KalaʻimamahuKaheiheimālie
Kamehameha II
 
Kamehameha III
 
Kekūanaōʻa (k)Kahalaiʻa
Luanuʻu (k)
Pauahi (w)Kīnaʻu (w)Pākī (k)Kōnia (w)Kanaʻina IIKaʻahumanu III
Kapaʻakea
(1815–1866)[i]
Keohokālole
(1816–1869)[i]
Keʻelikōlani (w)Kamehameha IV
 
Kamehameha V
 
Kaʻahumanu IV
 
Pauahi Bishop (w)Bishop (k)Lunalilo (k)
 
Kaliokalani
(1835–1852)[i]
Kalākaua
(1836–1891)[i]
 
Kapiʻolani
(1834–1899)
 
Liliʻuokalani
(1838–1917)[i]
 
Dominis
(1832–1891)
Kaʻiulani
(1842–?)[i]
Kaʻiminaʻauao
(1845–1848)[i]
Cleghorn
(1835–1910)
Likelike
(1851–1887)[i]
Leleiohoku II
(1854–1877)[i]
Kaʻiulani
(1875–1899)[i]

Notes:

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Genealogy of Liliuokalani, page 400, appendix B, No. 2 Queen of Hawaii, Liliuokalani (1898). Hawaii's Story by Hawaii's Queen. University of Hawaii Press. p. 400. Retrieved 29 September 2016. Kapaakea genealogy.

Legacy edit

The British name of the "Sandwich Islands" was replaced with "Hawaiʻi" due to the influence of the House of Kamehameha.[67]

A good portion of the legacy of the Kamehamehas' lies in the lands and fortunes passed down to Bernice Pauahi Bishop.[68] After her death in 1884, her husband, Charles Bishop, acting as one of five trustees and a co-executer of Pauahi's will, began the process of establishing the Kamehameha Schools which was founded in 1887.[69] Charles Bishop would serve as president of the Board of trustees for the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Estate, a perpetual trust with Kamehameha Schools the sole beneficiary, and gave back to the estate all lands deeded to him during his life and helped fund the first structures of the school out of his own money. In 1889, the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum was founded and endowed by Charles Bishop as a repository for the priceless Hawaiian artifacts from Pauahi's family.[69] Princess Ruth Ke'elikōlani was the daughter of Pauahi and Mataio Kekūanaōʻa, and a governess of the Big Island of Hawai'i.[70]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Kalaimanokahoowaha was a grandson of Alapaʻinui however, because of his father's defeat and his mother's chiefly server line, he became a Kaukau aliʻi and served the ruling chief, Kalaniʻōpuʻu.[21]
  2. ^ It was Nuaa who stabbed Cook.[26]
  3. ^ Kaomi was Kamehameha III's male lover. Possibly the best example of an aikāne.[42]: 69-  He was made the "engrafted king",[45]

Citations edit

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  2. ^ Siler 2012, p. 220.
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  4. ^ Dibble 1843, p. 54.
  5. ^ "Ke Kumu Hawaii 19 August 1835 — Papakilo Database". www.papakilodatabase.com. Retrieved 2019-05-13.
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  7. ^ Hawaiian Historical Society 1936, p. 15.
  8. ^ Federal Highway Administration 1973, p. 483.
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References edit

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  • Siler, Julia Flynn (2012). Lost Kingdom: Hawaii's Last Queen, the Sugar Kings and America's First Imperial Adventure. Atlantic Monthly Press. ISBN 978-0-8021-2001-4.
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house, kamehameha, hale, kamehameha, kamehameha, dynasty, reigning, royal, family, kingdom, hawaiʻi, beginning, with, founding, kamehameha, 1795, ending, with, death, kamehameha, 1872, lunalilo, 1874, kingdom, continued, another, years, until, overthrow, 1893,. The House of Kamehameha Hale O Kamehameha or the Kamehameha dynasty was the reigning royal family of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi beginning with its founding by Kamehameha I in 1795 and ending with the death of Kamehameha V in 1872 and Lunalilo in 1874 1 The kingdom continued for another 21 years until its overthrow in 1893 with the fall of the House of Kalakaua 2 KamehamehaParent houseHouse of KeouaCountryKingdom of Hawai iFounded1795FounderKamehameha ICurrent headSurvives only through collateral linesFinal rulerKamehameha VTitlesKing of Hawai iKing of the Hawaiian IslandsJoint King of Hawai iKuhina Nui Contents 1 Origins of the Kamehameha dynasty 1 1 Originating lines 1 2 Cook s arrival and death 1 3 Kamehameha I founder of the Kingdom of Hawaii 2 New king and form of government 2 1 Kamehameha II and the new office of Kuhina Nui 2 2 Kaʻahumanu 3 Kamehameha III Kaʻahumanu II III moi kuʻi au puni kuʻi and the Great Mahele 4 Kamehameha IV and Queen Emma 5 Kamehameha V and the last Kamehameha king 6 Lunalilo 7 Family tree 8 Legacy 9 Notes 10 Citations 11 ReferencesOrigins of the Kamehameha dynasty editOriginating lines edit nbsp The god Ku ka ili moku was left to Kamehameha I by his uncle KalaniʻōpuʻuThe origins of the House of Kamehameha stems from the progenitor Keōua Kalanikupuapa ikalaninui who was the sacred father of Kamehameha I and by the royal court of his brother Kalaniʻōpuʻu 3 who later became king and gave his war god Kuka ilimoku to Kamehameha I and he became the king by conquest uniting all the Hawaiian islands into one kingdom under his undivided rule Kalaniʻōpuʻu s father was Kalaninuiʻiamamao and Keōua s father was Kalanikeʻeaumoku both were sons of Keaweʻikekahialiʻiokamoku 3 They shared a common mother Kamakaʻimoku Both brothers served Alapaʻinui the ruling King of Hawaiʻi island at the time 3 Contemporary Hawaiian genealogy notes that Keōua may not have been Kamehameha s biological father and that Kahekili II might have been the figure s real father 3 4 But official genealogies of the chiefs 5 as well as the rulers 6 confirm that Keoua was the true father Kamehameha I s mother was Kekuʻiapoiwa II a granddaughter of Keawe The traditional mele chant of Keaka wife of Alapainui indicates that Kamehameha I was born in the month of ikuwa winter or around November 7 Alapai had given the child Kamehameha to his wife Keaka and her sister Hakau to care for after the ruler discovered the boy had lived 8 9 Samuel Kamakau in his newspaper article writes It was during the time of the warfare among the chiefs of the island of Hawaii which followed the death of Keawe chief over the whole island Ke awe i kekahi aliʻi o ka moku that Kamehameha I was born However his general dating has been challenged 10 Abraham Fornander writes in his publication An Account of the Polynesian Race Its Origins and Migrations when Kamehameha died in 1819 he was past eighty years old His birth would thus fall between 1736 and 1740 probably nearer the former than the latter 11 A brief history of the Hawaiian people By William De Witt Alexander lists the birth date in the Chronological Table of Events of Hawaiian History as 1736 12 He would be named Paiea but would take the name Kamehameha meaning The lonely one or The one who has been set apart 13 14 Kalaniʻōpuʻu the young Kamehameha s uncle would raise him after his father s death Kalaniʻōpuʻu ruled Hawaiʻi as did his grandfather Keawe He had a number of advisors and priests When word reached the ruler that chiefs were planning to murder the boy he told Kamehameha My child I have heard the secret complaints of the chiefs and their mutterings that they will take you and kill you perhaps soon While I am alive they are afraid but when I die they will take you and kill you I advise you to go back to Kohala I have left you the god there is your wealth 3 Cook s arrival and death edit Main article Death of James Cook nbsp The feathered cloak of King KalaniʻōpuʻuIn 1778 Captain James Cook visited the Hawaiian Islands and returned in 1779 15 41 When his ship Resolution broke a foremast as they were leaving he was forced to turn back and return to Kealakekua Bay 16 A fight and theft of blacksmith tools led to a situation on shore where a Hawaiian canoe was confiscated even after the tools were recovered 17 Tensions were high with the Hawaiian population and one of Cook s small boats was taken 18 In retaliation Cook decided to kidnap King Kalaniʻōpuʻu As he was being led away from his royal enclosure his favorite wife Kanekapōlei began to shout to the townspeople to get their attention 19 18 20 Two chiefs Kalaimanokahoowaha nb 1 55 also known as Kanaina nui and a royal attendant named Nuaa saw her pleading as the King was being led away with his two sons following 22 23 As they reached the beach Kanaina Kanekapōlei and Nuaa were able to convince Kalaniʻōpuʻu to stop and he sat where he stood 19 18 24 The crowd began to become aggressive and a rock was thrown and hit Cook He took out his sword and struck Kanaina broadside without injury but the chief reacted and immediately seized Cook and held him in his grip 25 when the king s attendant Nuaa nb 2 stabbed him from behind 20 27 28 Before the remains of Cook were returned the bones of the man were boiled down to strip off the flesh then given to chiefs Kamehameha received Captain Cook s hair 29 Kamehameha I founder of the Kingdom of Hawaii edit nbsp Kamehameha I founder of the Kingdom of Hawaii After Kalaniʻōpuʻu s death Kiwalaʻō would take his father s place as first born and rule the island while Kamehameha would have religious authority A number of chiefs supported Kamehameha and war soon broke out to overthrow Kiwalaʻō After a number of battles the king was killed and envoys sent for the last two brothers to meet with Kamehameha Keōua and Kaōleioku arrived in separate canoes Keōua came to shore first where a fight broke out and he and all aboard were killed Before the same could happen to the second canoe Kamehameha intervened By 1795 Kamehameha would conquer all but one of the islands For his first royal residence the new King built the first western style structure built in the Hawaiian Islands known as the Brick Palace 30 The king commissioned the structure to be built at Keawa iki point in Lahaina Maui 31 Two foreign ex convicts from Australia s Botany Bay penal colony built the home 32 It was begun in 1798 and was completed after 4 years in 1802 33 34 The house was intended for Kaʻahumanu 35 but she refused to live in the structure and resided instead in a traditional Hawaiian styled home only feet away 31 Kamehameha I had many wives but held two the most high regard Keōpuolani was the highest ranking aliʻi of her time 15 69 and mother to his sons Liholiho and Kauikeaouli Kaʻahumanu was his favorite Kamehameha I died in 1819 and his son Liholiho would become the next king 36 New king and form of government editKamehameha II and the new office of Kuhina Nui edit nbsp Kamehameha II in England with Queen and entourageAfter Kamehameha I s death his first born son Liholiho left Kailua for a week and returned to be crowned king At the lavish ceremony attended by commoners and nobles of the kingdom he approached the circle of chiefs as Kaʻahumanu the central figure in the group and Dowager Queen spoke Hear me O Divine one for I make known to you the will of your father Behold these chiefs and the men of your father and these your guns and this your land but you and I shall share the realm together Liholiho agreed officially which began a unique system of dual government consisting of a King and co ruler similar to a co regent 19 64 The new Kamehameha II would share his rule with his stepmother Kaʻahumanu She would defy Hawaiian kapu by dining with the young king violating the law separating genders during meals and leading to the destruction of the old Hawaiian religion Kamehameha II died along with his wife Queen Kamamalu in 1824 on a state visit to England where they succumbed to measles He was King for only 5 years 36 When Kamehameha II and his queen died in England the remains of the couple were returned to Hawaii by Boki On board the ship The Blond his wife Liliha and Kekuanaōʻa would be baptized as Christians Kaʻahumanu would also convert and become a heavy Christian influence on Hawaiian society until her death in 1832 37 Since the new king was only 12 years old Kaʻahumanu was now senior ruler and named Boki as her Kuhina Nui Boki would leave Hawaii on a fatal trip to find sandlewood to cover a debt and would be lost at sea His wife Liliha would be left the governorship of Maui and would unsuccessfully attempt to whip up revolt against Kaʻahumanu who upon Boki s departure had installed Kinaʻu as a co governor 37 Kaʻahumanu edit nbsp Kaʻahumanu with Charles KanaʻinaKaʻahumanu was born on Maui around 1777 Her parents were aliʻi chiefs of a lower ranking line She became Kamehameha s consort when she was fourteen George Vancouver states O ne of the finest woman we had yet seen on any of the islands 38 To wed the young woman Kamehameha had to consent to make Kaʻahumanu s children his heirs to the Kingdom although in the end she produced no issue 39 Before his death Kamehameha selected Kaʻahumanu to rule along with his son Kaʻahumanu had also adopted the boy 40 She had the highest political clout in the islands A portrait artist remarked of her This Old Dame is the most proud unbending Lady in the whole island As the widow of Kamehameha she possesses unbound authority and respect not any of which she is inclined to lay aside on any occasion whatsoever 41 She is one of the most influential leaders in Hawaii s history 42 68 Kamehameha III Kaʻahumanu II III moi kuʻi au puni kuʻi and the Great Mahele edit nbsp Kauikeaouli at the age of 18Liholiho s death elevated his younger brother Kauikeaouli to the throne styled as Kamehameha III at the age of twelve 43 When Kaʻahumanu died Kauikeaouli was 18 With the death of the Kuhina Nui the young king demanded to come into the possession of his full inheritance 44 He immediately rebelled against the Christian church and suspended all laws except murder and theft which was a common tradition after the death of a chief Distilleries were re opened and the ban of alcohol lifted as was the ban on Hula For his co ruler Kamehameha chose his aikane same sex partner Kaomi nb 3 201 a young half Tahitian man who had helped to heal the king and had been a close relationship for years 46 47 The church was outraged 48 Kaomi was granted true authority which he yielded Eventually Kamehameha III under pressure from the church would remove the young man and would name Liliha to be the next Kuhina Nui In November 1833 Hoapili Liliha s father Kekuanaōʻa Kanaina and Kinaʻu along with armed royal attendants including Kilinahe went to the king s home to persuade him not to pick Liliha as Kuhina Nui Hoapili begged the king to kill him if he should choose his daughter so the people would not blame him for her elevation They pleaded with the king to choose Kinau as a true daughter of the House of Kamehameha The King agreed and when he sent for Liliha to tell her the news she was found drunk at home 49 nbsp The Kamehameha Royal Family Kamehameha III center and his wife Queen Kalama left Kamehameha IV left rear Kamehameha V right rear and their sister Victoria Kamamalu right Kinaʻu would be succeeded by Kekauluohi as Kuhina Nui acting for the true heir to the position Victoria Kamamalu Kinaʻu s infant daughter Kekauluohi would be styled as Kaʻahumanu III 50 After Kekauluohi died in 1845 the next Kuhina Nui would be Keoni Ana the son of John Young one of Kamehameha I s important foreign advisors 45 208 Kauikeaouli named an heir his nephew Alexander ʻIolani Liholiho who took the throne styled as Kamehameha IV in 1855 36 The third Kamehameha instituted the Great Mahele which gave up millions of acres of land passed from his brother who inherited it from Kamehameha I leaving all to him as the ruler of the kingdom 36 Kamehameha III had illegitimate twin sons by Jane Lahilahi named Kiwalaʻō died young and Albert Kunuiakea 1851 1903 51 52 Kamehameha IV and Queen Emma editAlexander ʻIolani Liholiho was the nephew of Kamehameha II and grandson of Kamehameha I He reigned as Kamehameha IV Along with his wife Queen Emma Kamehameha IV would establish the Queen s Medical Center 53 54 He was the son of Kinaʻu daughter of Kamehameha I and Kekuanaōʻa a high ranking warrior chief from the conquest of the islands who became Governor of Oahu 55 56 He ascended the throne at the age of 21 He was a tall man often described as handsome 56 His wife was Emma Naea Rooke granddaughter of John Young 57 The couple had one child a son named Albert Edward Kauikeaouli who died at the age of 4 years old leaving the throne to pass to his uncle 36 Kamehameha V and the last Kamehameha king editLot Kapuaiwa became king in 1863 styled as Kamehameha V Lot was a bachelor up to his death in 1872 bringing to an end the Kamehameha Dynasty 36 58 269 However Lot had an illegitimate daughter Keanolani by his classmate Abigail Maheha at the Chiefs Children s School 59 60 61 62 On his deathbed before his passing he offered the throne to Elizabeth Keka aniau and Bernice Pauahi Bishop but they both refused it Finally Kamehameha V stated The throne belongs to Lunalilo I will not appoint him because I consider him unworthy of the position The constitution in case I make no nomination provides for the election of the next King let it be so He would die the following morning 63 This enabled an election from the original stock of ali i who were groomed for the position to rule by royal decree of King Kamehameha III The Princes and Chiefs of rank eligible to be rulers who were groomed at the original Chiefs Children s School Lunalilo editWilliam Charles Lunalilo was the highest chief in the Hawaiian Kingdom of his time 64 He became the first elected monarch of the Hawaiian Kingdom 58 270 and would be the last of the Kamehameha dynasty 64 Lunalilo was the son of Charles Kanaʻina and Miriam Auhea Kekauluohi a niece of Kamehameha I through her father Kalaimamahu Kamehameha I s half brother However she was a formal member of the House of Kamehameha as a wife of the founding monarch in his last years Lunalilo was also a member of the House of Keōua 65 and the House of Moana 21 64 His mother was taken by Kamehameha after her birth and given to Kaʻahumanu because she could not conceive Kekauluohi was a punalua child having dual parentage Lunalilo was the last Kamehameha monarch 66 Family tree editvteKalaniʻōpuʻu Kamehameha Kanekapōlei and Peleuli family treeFamily tree based on Abraham Fornander s An Account of the Polynesian Race and other works from the author Queen Liliuokalani s Hawaii s Story by Hawaii s Queen Samuel Manaiakalani Kamakau s Ruling Chiefs of Hawaii and other works by the author John Papa ʻiʻi s Fragments of Hawaiian History Edith Kawelohea McKinzie s Hawaiian Genealogies Extracted from Hawaiian Language Newspapers Vol I amp II Kanalu G Terry Young s Rethinking the Native Hawaiian Past Charles Ahlo Jerry Walker and Rubellite Kawena Johnson s Kamehameha s Children Today The Hawaiian Historical Society Reports the genealogies of the Hawaiian Royal families in Kingdom of Hawaii probate the works of Sheldon Dibble and David Malo as well as the Hawaii State Archive genealogy books Pinea w Liloa k i Akahiakuleana w i Laielohelohe w ii Piʻilani k ii Kunuunuiakapokii w ii Hakau k Kapukinialiloa w iii ʻUmi a Liloa k i iv iii Piʻikea w ii Ohenahenalani w iv iii Kihapiʻilani k ii Kumaka w Lonoapiʻi k ii Kealanaawaauli w Keli iokaloa k iv Makuahineapalaka w Koihalawai w v Keawenuiaʻumi k iii v Kamolanuiaumi w iv iii Hoopiliahae W v Kaakaupea w Nihokela k ii Kukailani k Kaohukiokalani w Makuaakumalae k Kapohelemai w v ʻUmiokalani k v Piʻimauilani w v Kamalalawalu k Piʻilaniwahine I w Kanaloakuaʻana k vi Kaikilani w vi Ikanaka k Kawalu w Kanaloauoo k vii Hoolaaikaiwi w vii Kauhiakama k Kapukini III w Keakealanikane k vi Kealiʻiokalani w v Makakaualiʻi k viii Kapukamola w viii Mahiolole k vii Kanekukailani w Kalanikaumakaowakea k ix Kaneakauhi w ix Keakamahana w x xi Iwikauikaua k viii x xi Ikuaana w xii Ku a Nuʻuanu k xiii ʻUmiʻulaakaʻahumanu w xii Ahu a ʻI k ix Piʻilaniwahine II w ix Lonohonuakini k ix Kalanikauanakinilani w ix Kaneikaiwilani k xi Keakealaniwahine w xi Kanaloakapulehu k xi Lonomakaihonua k ix xiv Kapoohiwi w xiv Kauaua a Mahi k xv Lonoikahaupu k xvi Kalanikauleleiaiwi w xvi xi xvii xviii Keaweʻikekahialiʻiokamoku k xviii xix xvii Lonomaʻaikanaka w xviii ʻUmiaemoku w xii xx Kauakahiakua k xx xxi Kekuiapoiwa I w xxi Haʻae a Mahi k xxii xv Kekelakekeokalani w xxii xv Keawepoepoe k xvi Kanoena w Kalanikeeaumoku k xviii xvii Kalaninuiamamao k xviii xvii Kamakaimoku w xxii xiii xvii Kekuʻiapoiwa II w xxii xv Keōua k xxii xvii nbsp Kalaniʻōpuʻu k xxii xvii Mahihelelima k nbsp Kanekapōlei w xii xx Kamanawa k xvi xxi Kekelaokalani w xxi nbsp Kamehameha I xxii xvii xv nbsp Peleuli w xxi Explanatory notes and reference sourcesNotes a b c The mother of Umi was named Akahiakuleana and though in humble life she was a lineal descendant in the sixth generation from Kalahari moku the son of Kanipahu with Hualani of the Nanaulu Maweke line and half brother to Kalapana the direct ancestor of Liloa When parting from Akahiakuleana Liloa gave her the ivory clasp Palaoa of his necklace his feather wreath Lei hulu and his Malo or waist cloth and told her that when the child was grown up if it was a boy to send him with these tokens to Waipio and he would acknowledge him The boy grew up with his mother and her husband a fine hearty well developed lad foremost in all sports and athletic games of the time but too idle and lazy in works of husbandry to suit his plodding stepfather When Umi was nearly a full grown young man his stepfather once threatened to strike him as punishment for his continued idleness when the mother averted the blow and told her husband Do not strike him he is not your son he is your chief and she then revealed the secret of his birth and produced from their hiding place the keepsakes which Liloa had left with her a a b c d e f g Fornander 1880 p 87 Piilani s children with Laielohelohe were Lono a Pii who succeeded him as Moi of Maui Kiha a Piilani who was brought up to the age of manhood among his mother s relatives on Oahu the daughter Piikea just referred to and another daughter Kalaaiheana of whom no further mention occurs With another wife named Moku aHualeiakea a Hawaii chiefess of the Ehu family he had a daughter Kauhiiliula a Piilani who married Laninui akaihupee chief of Koolau Oahu and lineal descendant of Maweke through his son Kalehenui And with still another wife named Kunuunui a kapokii whose pedigree has not been preserved he had a son Nihokela whose eighth descendant was Kauwa grandmother of the late King Lunalio on his father s side b a b c d e Fornander 1880 p 103 In the domestic relations of Umi though blessed with a number of wives He is known to have had at least six wives viz 1 Kulamea whose family and descent are not reported and who was the mother of Napunanahunui a Umi a daughter 2 Makaalua whose family has not been remembered and who was the mother of Nohowaa a Umi a daughter 3 Kapukini a halfsister of Umi and daughter of Liloa with Pinea and who was the mother of Kealiiokaloa a son Kapulani or Kapukini a daughter and Keawenui a Umi a son 4 Piikea the daughter of Piilani the Moi of Maui and who was the mother of Aihakoko a daughter and Kumalae a son 5 Mokuahualeiakea descended from the great Ehu family in Kona and who previously is said to have been the wife of Piilani of Maui She was the mother of Akahiilikapu a daughter 6 Henahena said to be descended from Kahoukapu of Hawaii She was the mother of Kamolanui a Umi a daughter There is one legend which mentions a seventh wife named Haua but her descent and her children are unknown and her name is not mentioned on any of the genealogies that I possess Of these eight children of Umi Kealiiokaloa first and Keawenui a Umi afterwards succeeded their father as sovereigns of Hawaii g a b c d Fornander 1880 p 228 There is not a commoner of Hawaii who would say that Umi a Liloa was not an ancestor of his and a man who declines to acknowledge it does so for lack of information Kapukini a Liloa was a royal consort of Umi a Liloa and by whom Umi begat Keliiokaloa a male Kapulani a female and Keawenuiaumi a male child Piikea was a princess being the daughter of Piilani king of Maui with Queen Laieloheloheikawai and they Piikea and Umi a Liloa begat two male children Kumalaenuiaumi and Aihakoko Moku a Hualeiakea was also a princess among the grandchildren of Ehunuikaimalino of Kona and she had a daughter Akahiilikapu by Umi a Liloa He also had Ohenahenalani as wife and begat Kamolanuiaumi and with the first children by the common women made Umi a Liloa the father of many children d a b c d e f g Fornander 1880 p 113 Keawenui a Umi H is five wives all of whom were of high and undoubted aristocratic families These five wives were i Koihalawai or Koihalauwailaua daughter of his sister Akahiilikapu and Kahakuma Kaliua one of the tabu chiefs of Kauai With this wife Keawenui had four children three sons and a daughter Kanaloakuaana Kanaloakuakawaiea Kanaloakapulehu and Keakalavlani 2 Haokalani of the Kalona iki family on Oahu or from the great Ehu family on Hawaii through Hao a kapokii the fourth in descent from Uhunui Kaimalino the fact is not very clearly stated though the presumption from allusions in the legends is in favour of the former Her son was the celebrated Lonoikamakakiki 3 Hoopiliahae whose parentage is not stated 1 but whose son Umiokalani allied himself to the Maui chiefess Pii maui lani and was the father of Hoolaaikaiwi mother of the widely known and powerful Mahi family on Hawaii 4 Kamola nui a Umi the half sister of Keawenui Her daughter was Kapohelemai who became the wife of her cousin Makua and mother of I from whom the present reigning family descends 5 Hakaukalalapuakea the granddaughter of Hakau the brother of Umi Her daughter was lliilikikuahine through whom more than one family now living claims connection with the line of Liloa All the legends mention a son of Keawenui named Pupuakea who was endowed with lands in Kau but none of the legends that I possess mention who his mother was He remained true to Lonoikamakahiki when all the world forsook him and was treated by Lono as a younger brother or very near kindred 1 Author s note I have but one genealogy in which her parentage is referred to and there she is said to be a descendant of Huanuikalalailai through his son Kuhelaui the brother of the Maui Paumakua e a b c The children of KaikUani Alii Wahine o Puna with Kanaloakuaana were a son Keakealanikane and two daughters Kealiiokalani and Kalani o Umi She had no children with Lonoikamahiki as previously stated With his other wife Kaikilanimaipanio Lono had two sons one called Keawehanauikawalu and the other Kaihikapumahana from both of whom her Highness Ruth Keelikolani is the descendant on her father s and mother s sides z a b c Kanaloauoo was the ruling chief the Alii ai moku he took for wife Hoolaaikaiwi a daughter of Umiokalani and Piimauilani and granddaughter of Keawenui a Umi With this last wife he had the two sons Mahiolole and Mahihukui 8 a b c To this period of Lono s reign belongs the episode of Iwikauikaua another knight errant of this stirring time Iwikauikaua was the son of Makakaualii who was the younger and only brother of Kaikilani A Hi Wahine o Puna His mother was Kapukamola h a b c d e f g Kalanikaumakaowakea had two wives Kaneakauhi or as she was also called Kaneakalau With her he had a son Lonohonuakini who succeeded him as Moi and a daughter Piilaniwahine who became the wife of Ahu a I of the great I family on Hawaii and mother of Lonomaaikanaka the wife of Keaweikekahialiiokamoku and mother of Kalaninuiamamao Lonohonuakini s wife was Kalanikauanakinilani with whom he had the following children Kaulahea a son who succeeded his father in the government Lonomakaihonua who was grandfather to the celebrated bard Keaulumoku Kalaniomaiheuila mother of Kalanikahimakeialii the wife of Kualii of Oahu and through her daughter Kaionuilalahai grandmother of Kahahana the last independent king of Oahu of the Oahu race of chiefs who lost his life and his kingdom in the war with Maui in 1783 i a b During the time of the revolt of Kanaloakuaana and the Hawaii chiefs against Lonoikamakahiki it would appear that Iwikauikaua was already a grown up young man for he is reported as having espoused the cause of Lono and his aunt Kaikilani After this narrow escape Iwikauikaua went to Oahu and there became the husband of Kauakahikuaanauakane daughter of Kakuhihewa s son Kaihikapu He is next heard of in the legends as having visited Maui where one of his sisters Kapukini was the wife of the Moi Kauhi a Kama and another sister Pueopokii was the wife of Kaaoao the son of Makakukalani and head of the Kaupo chief families who descended from Koo and Kaiuli He finally returns to Hawaii where he becomes the husband of Keakamahana the daughter of his cousins Keakealanikane and Kealiiokalani and who at their death became the Moi of Hawaii When Lonoikamakahiki and Kaikilani his wife died they were succeeded as Moi of Hawaii by Kaikilani s son Keakealanikane k a b c d e f The only husband known of Keakamahana was Iwikauikaua above referred to and with him she had a daughter called Keakealaniwahine who succeeded her mother as Moi of Hawaii With his other wife the Oahu chiefess Kauakahi kuaanaauakane Iwikauikaua had a son Kaneikaiwilani who became one of the husbands of his half sister Keakealaniwahine Keakealaniwahine had two husbands The first was Kanaloaikaivrilewa or as he is called in some genealogies Kanaloakapulehu His pedigree is not given in any genealogy or legend that I have met with but he was probably a descendant of Lonoikamakahiki s brother with the same name The other husband was Kaneikaiwilani who was the son of Iwikauikaua and Kaukahikuaanaauakane With the first Keakealani had a son named Keawe with the second she had a daughter named Kalanikauleleiaiwi n a b c d Three sisters Ikuaana Umiulaakaahumanu and Umiaemoku were ancestors of King Kamehameha I and two families on the maternal side of Queen Liliuokalani The youngest sister Umiaenaku was an ancestor of both Princess Ruth and Mrs Bishop through Kanekapolei l a b Kamakaimoku s mother was Umiula a kaahumanu a daughter of Mahiolole Her father was Kuanuuanu an Oahu chief and in her childhood and youth she was brought up by her father on Oahu her mother having gone back to Hawaii and espoused Kapahi a Ahu Kane the son of Ahu a I and a younger brother of Lonomaaikanaka the wife of Keawe With Kuanuuanu Umiulaakaahumanu had another child a son named Naili who remained on Oahu and followed his father as chief over the Waianae district m a b In her book Hawaiian Genealogies Extracted from Hawaiian Language Newspapers Volume 2 Edith Kawelohea McKinzie states that the DeFries genealogy to Kauakahiakua was not supported by any accepted genealogy recorded and the correct parents were Lonomakaihonua and Kapoohiwi 3 a b c d e W hen Kamehameha died in 1819 he was past eighty years old His birth would thus fall between 1736 and 1740 probably nearer the former than the latter His father was Kalanikupua keoua the half brother of Kalaniopuu above referred to and grandson of Keawe his mother was Kekuiapoiwa II a daughter of Kekelakekeokalani a keawe and Haae the son of Kalanikauleleiaiwi and Kauaua aMahi and brother to Alapainui y a b c d Whether Lonoikahaupu stopped on Oahu or Maui or if so what befell him there is not known but on arriving at Hawaii he found that the court of Keaweikekahialiiokamoku the Moi of Hawaii was at the time residing in Kau Eepairing thither he was hospitably received and his entertainment was correspondingly cordial as well as sumptuous The gay and volatile Kalanikauleleiaiwi the imperious and high born wife of Keawe the Moi became enamoured of the young Kauai chief and after a while he was duly recognised as one of her husbands From this union was born a son called Keawepoepoe who became the father of those eminent Hawaii chiefs Keeaumokupapaiahiahi Kameeiamoku and Kamanawa who placed Kamehameha I on the throne of Hawaii o a b c d e f g h When grown up Kamakaimoku was seen by Kalaninuiamamao on his visit to Oahu and sent for to be his wife Living with him at the court of Keawe she bore him a son Kalaniopuu who afterwards became the Moi of Hawaii This union was not of long duration for within a year or two she left Kalaninuiamamao and became the wife of his brother Kalanikeeaumoku and to him she bore another son Kalanikupuapaikalaninui Keoua the father of Kamehameha I t a b c d e Keawe s wives were 1 Lonomaaikanaka a daughter of Ahu a I and of Piilaniwahine The former belonged to the powerful and widely spread I family of Hilo the latter was the daughter of Kalanikaumakaowakea the Moi of Maui With her Keawe had two sons Kalaninuiomamao and Kekohimoku 2 Kalanikauleleiaiwi his half sister as before stated With her he had Kalanikeeaumoku a son and Kekelakekeokalani a daughter 3 Kanealae a daughter of Lae chief of the eastern parts of p Keawe surnamed ikekahialiiokamoku succeeded his mother Keakealaniwahine as the Moi of Hawaii He is said to have been an enterprising and stirring chief who travelled all over the group and obtained a reputation for bravery and prudent management of his island It appears that in some manner he composed the troubles that had disturbed the peace during his mother s time It was not by force or by conquest for in that case and so near to our own times some traces of it would certainly have been preserved on the legends He probably accomplished the tranquillity of the island by diplomacy as he himself married Lonomaaikanaka the daughter of Ahua I and he afterwards married his son Kalaninuiomamao to Ahia the granddaughter of Kuaana a I and cousin to Kuahuia s son Mokulani and thus by this double marriage securing the peace and allegiance of the Hilo chiefs r a b c Kanekapolei is claimed by some to have been the daughter of Kauakahiakua of the Maui royal family and his wife Umiaemoku by others she is said to have been of the Kau race of chiefs s a b c d e Up to this period Kamehameha had had but two recognised wives One was Kalola referred to on page 201 the other was Peleuli Her parents were Kamanawa and Kekelaokalani The former a son of Keawepoepoe and grandson of Kalanikauleleiaiwi of the royal Hawaii family and the latter a daughter of Kauakahiakua and Kekuiapoiwa Nui both of the royal Maui family With this Peleuli Kamehameha had four children 1 Maheha Kapulikoliko a daughter of whom nothing more is known a Kahoanoku Kinau a son whose wife was Kahakuhaakoi a daughter of Kekuamanoha of the Maui royal family with whom he had a daughter Keahikuni Kekauonohi who died in 1847 3 Kaikookalani a son whose wife was Haaheo a niece of Keawemauhili by his sister Akahi and who afterwards became the wife of Kuakini one of the brothers of Kaahumanu 4 Kiliwehi a daughter who became the wife of Kamehamehakauokoa f a b c d e f g Kamakau 1992 p 68 His mother was Ke kuʻi apo iwa daughter of Kekela and Haʻae both of whom belonged to families of chiefs His father was Keoua younger brother of Ka lani ʻopuʻu Ka makaʻi moku being the mother of both x Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company p 74 Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company p 87 ISBN 978 1148488134 Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company p 103 ISBN 978 1148488134 Abraham Fornander 1916 Fornander Collection of Hawaiian Antiquities and Folk lore Kraus Reprint p 228 ISBN 978 1331907701 Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company p 113 ISBN 978 1148488134 Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company p 125 ISBN 978 1148488134 Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company p 125 ISBN 978 1148488134 Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company pp 127 128 ISBN 978 1148488134 Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company pp 209 210 ISBN 978 1148488134 Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company pp 126 127 Liliuokalani Queen of Hawaii 1898 Hawaii s Story Lee and Shepard pp 401 409 ISBN 978 0935180855 Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company pp 134 135 ISBN 978 1148488134 Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company pp 128 129 ISBN 978 1148488134 Edith Kawelohea McKinzie 1986 Hawaiian Genealogies Volume II Institute for Polynesian Studies Brigham Young University Hawaii Campus p 133 ISBN 978 0 939154 37 1 Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company pp 296 297 Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company p 130 ISBN 978 1148488134 Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company p 129 ISBN 978 1148488134 Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company p 205 ISBN 978 1148488134 Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company p 135 ISBN 978 1148488134 Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company p 136 ISBN 978 1148488134 Abraham Fornander 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Trubner amp Company p 320 ISBN 978 1148488134 Samuel Manaiakalani Kamakau 1992 Ruling Chiefs of Hawaii PDF Kamehameha Schools Press p 68 ISBN 978 0 87336 014 2 vteKalakaua family treeKey k Kane male husband w wahine female wife Subjects with bold titles lavender highlighted bold box Direct bloodlineBold title bold grey box Aunts uncles cousins lineBold title bold white box European or American raised to aliʻi status by marriage or monarch s decree Regular name and box makaʻainana or untitled foreign subject Kaneikaiwilani k Kanalohanaui k Keakealani w Ahu a ʻI k Piʻilani w IIMoana k Lonoikahaupu k Kalanikauleleiaiwi w Kauauaʻamahi k Keawe II k Lonomaʻaikanaka w Kauhiahaki k Iliki a Moana w Keawepoepoe k Kanoena w Haʻaeamahi k Kekelakekeokalani w Alapainui k Keaka w Keeaumoku Nui k Kamakaimoku w Kaeamamao k i Kaolanialiʻi w i Kameʻeiamoku k nbsp Kamakaʻeheikuli w Keōua k Kahekili II k Kekuiapoiwa II w Ikuaʻana w Heulu k Moana w Keaweʻopala k Nohomualani k Keaweaheulu k Ululani w Hakau w Kanaʻina k Kauwa w Eia k Kepoʻokalani k i Alapai w i Keohohiwa w Keōpuolani w Kamehameha I nbsp Kalaniʻōpuʻu k Kanekapōlei w Kiʻilaweau k Nahiʻōleʻa k Kahoʻowaha II w Inaina w Hao K Kailipakalua w Kamanawa II k i Kamokuiki w i ʻAikanaka k Kamaeokalani w Kaōleioku k Keoua w Luahine w KalaʻimamahuKaheiheimalieKamehameha II nbsp Kamehameha III nbsp Kekuanaōʻa k KahalaiʻaLuanuʻu k Pauahi w Kinaʻu w Paki k Kōnia w Kanaʻina IIKaʻahumanu IIIKapaʻakea 1815 1866 i Keohokalole 1816 1869 i Keʻelikōlani w Kamehameha IV nbsp Kamehameha V nbsp Kaʻahumanu IV nbsp Pauahi Bishop w Bishop k Lunalilo k nbsp Kaliokalani 1835 1852 i Kalakaua 1836 1891 i nbsp Kapiʻolani 1834 1899 nbsp Liliʻuokalani 1838 1917 i nbsp Dominis 1832 1891 Kaʻiulani 1842 i Kaʻiminaʻauao 1845 1848 i Cleghorn 1835 1910 Likelike 1851 1887 i Leleiohoku II 1854 1877 i Kaʻiulani 1875 1899 i Notes a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Genealogy of Liliuokalani page 400 appendix B No 2 Queen of Hawaii Liliuokalani 1898 Hawaii s Story by Hawaii s Queen University of Hawaii Press p 400 Retrieved 29 September 2016 Kapaakea genealogy Legacy editThe British name of the Sandwich Islands was replaced with Hawaiʻi due to the influence of the House of Kamehameha 67 A good portion of the legacy of the Kamehamehas lies in the lands and fortunes passed down to Bernice Pauahi Bishop 68 After her death in 1884 her husband Charles Bishop acting as one of five trustees and a co executer of Pauahi s will began the process of establishing the Kamehameha Schools which was founded in 1887 69 Charles Bishop would serve as president of the Board of trustees for the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Estate a perpetual trust with Kamehameha Schools the sole beneficiary and gave back to the estate all lands deeded to him during his life and helped fund the first structures of the school out of his own money In 1889 the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum was founded and endowed by Charles Bishop as a repository for the priceless Hawaiian artifacts from Pauahi s family 69 Princess Ruth Ke elikōlani was the daughter of Pauahi and Mataio Kekuanaōʻa and a governess of the Big Island of Hawai i 70 Notes edit Kalaimanokahoowaha was a grandson of Alapaʻinui however because of his father s defeat and his mother s chiefly server line he became a Kaukau aliʻi and served the ruling chief Kalaniʻōpuʻu 21 It was Nuaa who stabbed Cook 26 Kaomi was Kamehameha III s male lover Possibly the best example of an aikane 42 69 He was made the engrafted king 45 Citations edit Homans amp Munich 1997 p 47 Siler 2012 p 220 a b c d e Kanahele amp Kanahele 1986 p 54 Dibble 1843 p 54 Ke Kumu Hawaii 19 August 1835 Papakilo Database www papakilodatabase com Retrieved 2019 05 13 Hawaii s Story by Hawaii s Queen digital library upenn edu Retrieved 2019 05 13 Hawaiian Historical Society 1936 p 15 Federal Highway Administration 1973 p 483 Taylor 1922 p 79 Kamakau 1992 p 66 Fornander 1880 p 136 Alexander 1891 p 324 Morrison amp Kiefer 2003 p 11 Jake Goldberg Joyce Hart 2007 Hawai i Marshall Cavendish pp 128 ISBN 978 0 7614 2349 2 a b Helen Wong Ann Rayson 1987 Hawaii s Royal History Bess Press ISBN 978 0 935848 48 9 Michael Perkins 1 October 2006 Surviving Paradise Lulu com pp 320 ISBN 978 1 84728 935 3 Jack Kelly 7 April 2011 The True Story of the Death of Captain James Cook Jack Kelly pp 2 ISBN 978 1 4524 4257 0 Phillip Jones Mariners Merchants And The Military Too Lulu com pp 34 ISBN 978 0 9565549 4 9 a b c Ralph Simpson Kuykendall 1 January 1938 The Hawaiian Kingdom University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 87022 431 7 a b Abraham Fornander John F G Stokes 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Its Origins and Migrations and the Ancient History of the Hawaiian People to the Times of Kamehameha I Trubner amp Company pp 193 a b Kanalu G Terry Young 25 February 2014 Rethinking the Native Hawaiian Past Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 77669 7 John Meares 1791 Hawaiian Historical Society Reprints 1787 1788 and 1789 pp 76 Daniel O Sullivan 30 March 2008 In Search of Captain Cook Exploring the Man Through His Own Words I B Tauris pp 223 ISBN 978 0 85771 350 6 Gavan Daws 1968 Shoal of Time A History of the Hawaiian Islands University of Hawaii Press pp 20 ISBN 978 0 8248 0324 7 David Kalakaua King of Hawaii 1888 The legends and myths of Hawaii The fables and folk lore of a strange people C L Webster amp Company pp 391 Arthur Grove Day Carl Stroven 1966 True tales of the South Seas Appleton Century p 318 Sheldon Dibble 1839 History and general views of the Sandwich Islands mission Taylor amp Dodd pp 30 Janet Susan Holman 23 May 2008 The Enlightenment and Captain James Cook The Lono Cook Kirk Regenesis AuthorHouse pp 173 ISBN 978 1 4685 3337 8 King David Kalakaua 13 December 2013 The Legends and Myths of Hawaii Tuttle Publishing pp 350 ISBN 978 1 4629 0704 5 Lonely Planet Sara Benson Amy C Balfour Adam Karlin Adam Skolnick Paul Stiles Ryan Ver Berkmoes 1 August 2013 Lonely Planet Hawaii Lonely Planet Publications pp 732 ISBN 978 1 74321 788 7 a b Lahaina Watershed Flood Control Project Environmental Impact Statement 2004 p 214 Rich Budnick 1 January 2005 Hawaii s Forgotten History 1900 1999 The Good The Bad The Embarrassing Aloha Press p 154 ISBN 978 0 944081 04 4 Jeanette Foster 17 July 2012 Frommer s Maui 2013 John Wiley amp Sons pp 144 ISBN 978 1 118 33145 3 Patrick Vinton Kirch 1 January 1997 Feathered Gods and Fishhooks An Introduction to Hawaiian Archaeology and Prehistory University of Hawaii Press pp 318 ISBN 978 0 8248 1938 5 David Thompson Lesa M Griffith Joan Conrow 14 July 2006 Pauline Frommer s Hawaii John Wiley amp Sons pp 284 ISBN 978 0 470 06984 4 a b c d e f Rita Ariyoshi 2009 Hawaii National Geographic Books pp 29 35 ISBN 978 1 4262 0388 6 a b John Garrett 1 January 1982 To Live Among the Stars Christian Origins in Oceania editorips usp ac fj pp 52 ISBN 978 2 8254 0692 2 Edward Joesting 1 February 1988 Kauai The Separate Kingdom University of Hawaii Press pp 97 ISBN 978 0 8248 1162 4 David Kalakaua King of Hawaii 1888 The legends and myths of Hawaii The fables and folk lore of a strange people C L Webster amp Company pp 399 Sherry B Ortner 1997 Making Gender The Politics and Erotics of Culture Beacon Press pp 163 ISBN 978 0 8070 4633 3 Sarah Vowell 22 March 2011 Unfamiliar Fishes Penguin Group US pp 32 ISBN 978 1 101 48645 0 a b Alan Robert Akana 18 March 2014 The Volcano Is Our Home Balboa Press ISBN 978 1 4525 8753 0 Monica Nucciarone 2009 Alexander Cartwright The Life Behind the Baseball Legend U of Nebraska Press pp 46 ISBN 978 0 8032 3353 9 Pan Pacific Research Institution 1913 The Mid Pacific Magazine T H A H Ford pp 341 a b Robert Borofsky 2000 Remembrance of Pacific Pasts An Invitation to Remake History University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2301 6 Noenoe K Silva 7 September 2004 Aloha Betrayed Native Hawaiian Resistance to American Colonialism Duke University Press pp 61 ISBN 0 8223 3349 X Malama Meleisea 25 March 2004 The Cambridge History of the Pacific Islanders Cambridge University Press pp 213 ISBN 978 0 521 00354 4 Susan Y Najita 22 September 2006 Decolonizing Culture in Pacific Literature Reading History and Trauma in Contemporary Fiction Routledge pp 44 ISBN 978 1 134 21172 2 Samuel Manaiakalani Kamakau 1961 Ruling chiefs of Hawaii Kamehameha Schools Press Kirch amp Sahlins 1994 p 119 McKinzie Edith Kawelohea 1983 Stagner Ishmael W ed Hawaiian Genealogies Extracted from Hawaiian Language Newspapers Vol 1 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press p 95 ISBN 0 939154 28 5 OCLC 12555087 Klieger P Christiaan 1998 Mokuʻula Maui s Sacred Island Honolulu Bishop Museum Press p 53 ISBN 978 1 58178 002 4 OCLC 40142899 Kamehameha IV Facts amp Summary HISTORY com HISTORY com Retrieved 2017 07 31 Ann Rayson Helen Bauer 1997 Hawaiʻi the Pacific State Bess Press pp 47 ISBN 978 1 57306 062 2 The Gentleman s Magazine F Jefferies 1864 pp 522 a b Ralph Simpson Kuykendall 1953 The Hawaiian Kingdom 1854 1874 twenty critical years University of Hawaii Press pp 33 ISBN 978 0 87022 432 4 Stephen Dando Collins 1 April 2014 Taking Hawaii How Thirteen Honolulu Businessmen Overthrew the Queen of Hawaii in 1893 With a Bluff Open Road Media pp 15 ISBN 978 1 4976 1429 1 a b Daniel S Murphree January 2012 Native America A State by State Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 38126 3 Kam Ralph Thomas 2017 Death Rites and Hawaiian Royalty Funerary Practices in the Kamehameha and Kalakaua Dynasties 1819 1953 S I McFarland Incorporated Publishers pp 70 72 ISBN 978 1 4766 6846 8 OCLC 966566652 Kaomea Julie 2014 Education for Elimination in Nineteenth Century Hawaiʻi Settler Colonialism and the Native Hawaiian Chiefs Children s Boarding School History of Education Quarterly New York History of Education Society 54 2 123 144 doi 10 1111 hoeq 12054 ISSN 0018 2680 OCLC 5571935029 Keanu Dies On The Sea Shore The Pacific Commercial Advertiser Honolulu July 1 1902 p 2 Keanu Dies On The Sea Shore The Hawaiian Gazette Honolulu July 1 1902 p 4 Death Of A Chiefess Reputed Daughter Of Kamehameha Dead The Hawaiian Star Honolulu June 30 1902 p 1 Keawe J H July 31 1903 He Kamehameha Oiaio Oia Ka Nupepa Kuokoa Vol XLI no 31 Honolulu p 1 Retrieved July 15 2018 United States Department of State 1895 Foreign Relations of the United States U S Government Printing Office pp 986 a b Jean Hobbs 1935 Hawaii A Pageant of the Soil Stanford University Press pp 71 ISBN 978 0 8047 0990 3 Elizabeth Kekaaniauokalani Kalaninuiohilaukapu Pratt 1920 History of Keoua Kalanikupuapa i nui Father of Hawaii Kings and His Descendants with Notes on Kamehameha I First King of All Hawaii T H pp 34 Jon Kamakawiwoʻole Osorio January 2002 Dismembering L hui A History of the Hawaiian Nation to 1887 University of Hawaii Press pp 147 ISBN 978 0 8248 2549 2 Steven Roger Fischer 15 February 2013 Islands From Atlantis to Zanzibar Reaktion Books pp 284 ISBN 978 1 78023 053 5 Samuel P King Randall W Roth 1 January 2006 Broken Trust Greed Mismanagement And Political Manipulation at America s Largest Charitable Trust University of Hawaii Press pp 188 ISBN 978 0 8248 3044 1 a b Robert T Grimm 2002 Notable American Philanthropists Biographies of Giving and Volunteering Greenwood Publishing Group pp 37 ISBN 978 1 57356 340 6 KamehamehaChart www keouanui org Retrieved 2017 07 31 References editAlexander William De Witt 1891 A Brief History of the Hawaiian People American Book Company p 324 ASIN B008X9THFE Federal Highway Administration 1973 I H3 Halawa Interchange to Halekou Interchange Honolulu Environmental Impact Statement Dibble Sheldon 1843 History of the Sandwich Islands Press of the Mission Seminary p 54 ISBN 978 1230437361 Fornander Abraham 1880 An Account of the Polynesian Race Its Origins and Migrations and the Ancient History of the Hawaiian People to the Times of Kamehameha I Trubner amp Company ISBN 978 1330057216 Hawaiian Historical Society 1936 Annual Report of the Hawaiian Historical Society The Society Homans Margaret Munich Adrienne 2 October 1997 Remaking Queen Victoria Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 57485 3 Kamakau Samuel Manaiakalani 1992 Ruling Chiefs of Hawaii Kamehameha Schools Press ISBN 978 0 87336 014 2 Morrison Susan Kiefer Karen 2003 Kamehameha The Warrior King of Hawai i University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2700 7 Kanahele George H Kanahele George S 1986 Pauahi The Kamehameha Legacy Kamehameha Schools Press ISBN 978 0 87336 005 0 Kirch Patrick Vinton Sahlins Marshall July 1994 Anahulu The Anthropology of History in the Kingdom of Hawaii Volume 1 Historical Ethnography University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 73365 4 Siler Julia Flynn 2012 Lost Kingdom Hawaii s Last Queen the Sugar Kings and America s First Imperial Adventure Atlantic Monthly Press ISBN 978 0 8021 2001 4 Taylor Albert Pierce 1922 Under Hawaiian Skies Honolulu Advertiser Publishing p 79 ASIN B000GNVTZG Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title House of Kamehameha amp oldid 1176906848, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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