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Victoria Kamāmalu

Victoria Kamāmalu Kaʻahumanu IV (November 1, 1838 – May 29, 1866) was Kuhina Nui of Hawaii and its crown princess. Named Wikolia Kamehamalu Keawenui Kaʻahumanu-a-Kekūanaōʻa[4] and also named Kalehelani Kiheahealani,[4] she was mainly referred to as Victoria Kamāmalu or Kaʻahumanu IV, when addressing her as the Kuhina Nui. In her role of Kuhina Nui, she acted as Regent between the death of the King in 1863 until the election of a new King the same year.

Victoria Kamāmalu
Crown Princess of the Hawaiian Islands and Kuhina Nui of the Hawaiian Islands
Kuhina Nui of the Hawaiian Islands
ReignJanuary 16, 1855 – December 21, 1863
PredecessorKeoni Ana
SuccessorKekūanāoʻa
MonarchKamehameha IV
Kamehameha V
Born(1838-11-01)November 1, 1838
Honolulu Fort, Honolulu, Oʻahu
DiedMay 29, 1866(1866-05-29) (aged 27)
Papakanene, Honolulu, Oʻahu
BurialJune 30, 1866[1][2][3]
Names
Wikolia Kamehamalu Keawenui Kaʻahumanu-a-Kekūanaōʻa, Victoria Kamāmalu Kaʻahumanu IV
HouseHouse of Kamehameha
FatherKekūanāoʻa
MotherKīnaʻu
Signature

Family

Born at the Honolulu Fort, on November 1, 1838, she was the only daughter of Elizabeth Kīnaʻu (Kaʻahumanu II) and her third husband Mataio Kekūanāoʻa. Through her mother she was granddaughter of King Kamehameha I, founder of the united Hawaiian Kingdom. Her two brothers would later become kings of Hawaii as Kamehameha IV and Kamehameha V. She was named after her maternal aunt Queen Kamāmalu, the consort of Kamehameha II, who died in London from the measles. The Christian name Victoria was after Queen Victoria and signified the close friendship of the British monarchs and the Hawaiian monarchs.[5][6][7] Having given away her previous four sons, Kīnaʻu refused to give her only remaining daughter in hānai to John Adams Kuakini who wanted to take her to be raised on the Big Island. Kīnaʻu defied the customs of the time and personally nursed her daughter.[8] Kīnaʻu died from the mumps a few months after Victoria's birth. She would become the highest female chief in Hawaii at the time. Her kahu (attendants) were John Papa ʻĪʻī and his wife Sarai. They later accompanied Victoria to school due to her age.[5][9]

Early life

 
Victoria Kamāmalu and her father Kekūanāoʻa

Victoria was educated at Chiefs' Children's School (later renamed Royal School) along with all her cousins and brothers.[10] Along with her other classmates, she was chosen by Kamehameha III to be eligible for the throne of the Kingdom of Hawaii.[11][12] She was expected from birth to one day succeed to the position of Kuhina Nui if not the office of monarch, so she was educated by the Cookes with full attention to what political roles she might play in the near future. In the school, the students were permitted to visit with relatives from time to time. When the students fell ill, their kahu and families went to the school and stayed for a while to attend to them. Victoria's kahu, John Papa ʻĪʻī, was eventually appointed kahu for all of the students at the Chief's Children's School and visited in that capacity, though his political services were in such demand by the court that he was often absent.

Victoria's father Kekūanāoʻa raised her. He was the royal governor of Oahu. In Honolulu her father built her a Greek-revival mansion which was the largest house in the town of Honolulu, or anywhere in Hawaii, at the time. Her father was in debt to foreigners, however, so Kamehameha III bought the palace from him. He made it his royal palace and called it Hale Aliʻi (House of the Chiefs) and it was the first ʻIolani Palace.

Victoria was two months younger than the future queen Liliʻuokalani. At her birth, the High Chiefess Laura Kōnia went to Kīnaʻu with her adoptive daughter Liliʻu. Kīnaʻu would nurse Liliʻu while handing her own daughter to a nurse.[13] Both girls were baptized on December 23, 1838, by American missionary Levi Chamberlain.[14] According to Liliʻuokalani, they would share everything from a young age and when Victoria visited her aunt Kekāuluohi, Liliʻuokalani would be invited too. Victoria was destined from a young age to become a sovereign like her siblings, but it would be Liliʻuokalani who would later become the first Queen of Hawaii due to Victoria's early death.[13]

Bernice Pauahi Bishop, another classmate at the Royal School, was hānai to Kīnaʻu and Kekūanāoʻa. Originally betrothed to Victoria's brother Lot, Pauahi married American businessman Charles Reed Bishop on May 4, 1850, against the wishes of her biological parents Pākī and Kōnia and Victoria's father. A year later, in August 1851, the twelve year-old Victoria helped reconciled Pauahi with her parents and Kekūanāoʻa.[10][15]

Kuhina Nui

 
Personal Flag of Princess Victoria Kamāmalu as Kuhina Nui

It was intended that Victoria would succeed her mother Kīnaʻu in the position of Kuhina Nui (premier), but her mother died while she was still an infant. Her aunt Kekāuluohi became a place-holder for her niece using the name Kaʻahumanu III, but she died when Victoria was seven. Subsequently, her uncle Kamehameha III appointed John Kalaipaihala Young II, also known as Keoni Ana, the son of John Young, as Kuhina Nui.[16][17] Princess Victoria Kamāmalu was appointed as Heiress Presumptive to the title of Kuhina Nui in 1850, to be the successor to Keoni Ana. Since 1845, by legislative act, the office of Kuhina Nui had been joined with that of the Minister of the Interior. Given her young age, it was clear to the King, Privy Council, and Legislative Council that Victoria was not suited to be Minister of the Interior. Therefore, on January 6, 1855, an act was passed to repeal the earlier legislation.[18]

In 1854, her uncle Kamehameha III died and her brother Alexander Liholiho succeeded him as King Kamehameha IV. According to Robert Crichton Wyllie, the Minister of Foreign Affairs and a trusted friend of the royal family, opponents of the new king were planning to overthrow him and place his sister Princess Victoria on the throne instead. However, the conspiracy never culminated in anything.[19] She became Kuhina Nui in 1855 mainly due to her brother's ascension to the throne after the death of her uncle. It is probable that Kamehameha III had meant for Keoni Ana to hold the office until his death; Keoni Ana did retain the role of Minister of the Interior. Victoria presided over the King's Privy Council.

In 1862, Victoria and her brother Lot were officially added to the line of succession in an amendment to the 1852 Constitution of the Kingdom of Hawaii. Lot and his heirs, follow by Princess Victoria and her heirs, would succeed in the case their brother died without any legitimate heirs.[20] The change was made shortly before the death of Prince Albert Kamehameha, the only son of Kamehameha IV, on August 23, 1862.[21]

Victoria constitutionally assumed the power of state for a day when her brother Kamehameha IV died leaving no designated heirs in 1863. Section II Article 47 of the 1852 Constitution of the Hawaiian Kingdom provided that the Kuhina Nui (Premier), in absence of a monarch, would fill the vacant office.

Whenever the throne shall become vacant by reason of the King's death, or otherwise, and during the minority of any heir to the throne, the Kuhina Nui, for the time being, shall, during such vacancy or minority, perform all the duties incumbent on the King, and shall have and exercise all the powers, which by this Constitution are vested in the King.

After consulting with the Privy Councilors, she proclaimed in front the Legislature:

It having pleased Almighty God to close the earthly career of King Kamehameha IV, at a quarter past 9 o'clock this morning, I, as Kuhina Nui, by and with the advice of the Privy Council of State hereby proclaim Prince Lot Kamehameha, King of Hawaii, under the style and title of Kamehameha V. God preserve the King![22]

Betrothal

 
Princess Victoria (right) socializing with other members of the royal court.

Victoria was betrothed to William Charles Lunalilo. Their parents had planned out their marriage from infancy and it was popular among the Hawaiians. The date was set, but they were forbidden to marry by her brothers Kamehameha IV and Kamehameha V, and the wedding was cancelled.[23][24] The reason was because the children of Victoria and Lunalilo would have a higher rank or mana than the brothers' own lines. In fact Kamehameha IV had tried to split them apart by engaging Victoria to David Kalākaua, and Lunalilo to Lydia Kamakaʻeha.[25][13]

Scandal

In 1857, a scandal involved Victoria and Marcus Cummins Monsarrat (1828–1871), a married English auctioneer. Monsarrat had been a friend to her two brothers and was a frequent dinner guest. One night, on January 15, 1857, Prince Lot was informed that Monsarrat was in the princess' bedroom. He immediately went to her room and caught Victoria in a compromising position and Monsarrat in the act of "arranging his pantaloons". The enraged Prince told him to leave or he would kill him. When Kamehameha IV found out about the incident, he blamed Lot for not "shooting Monsarrat down like a dog."[26]

Kamehameha IV subsequently banished Monsarrat from Hawaiʻi on May 20, 1857:

Whereas, Marcus C. Monsarrat, a naturalized subject of this Kingdom, is guilty of having perpetuated a grievous injury to Ourselves and to Our Royal family, And Whereas, such injury is of such a character as in Our judgement, to authorize and require the expulsion of the said M. C. Monsarrat from Our Dominions...Now, therefore, know that We, in the exercise of the Power vested in Us by virtue of Our office as Sovereign of this Kingdom...do hereby order that the said Marcus C. Monsarrat be forthwith expelled from this Kingdom; and he is hereby strictly prohibited forever, from returning to any part of Our Dominions, under penalty of Death.[27]

Monsarrat did, in fact, return and the King had him imprisoned and exiled again. Often accounted as Princess Victoria Kamāmalu's misbehavior and a love affair between the two, the contemporaneous Charles de Varigny defended the princess by saying Monsarrat's "insolence reached a point at which the princess was obliged to cry for help".[28]

Her brothers were in the process of marrying her to Kalākaua around 1857. The Monsarrat scandal either ended this arrangement[26][29] or was arranged to cover up the scandal.[24] In her memoir, Liliʻuokalani wrote, "I received a letter from my brother Kalākaua, telling me that he was engaged to the Princess Victoria, and asking me to come to Honolulu...[B]ut upon my arrival I found that the engagement was broken, for the Princess Victoria had gone to Wailua, and my brother had heard nothing from her for a fortnight."[30] Liliʻuokalani, remaining silent on the royal scandal, mentioned that the match was ultimately terminated when the princess decided to renew her on-and-off betrothal to Lunalilo.[31][32] Historian Kīhei de Silva noted that Kalākaua was willing in the union, but Kamāmalu refused the match.[24]

For the last few years of her life, she was rarely seen in public.[33] She remained a spinster for the remaining part of her life.[24]

Crown Princess

 
Princess Victoria in 1865, photographed by Charles L. Weed

Victoria was an expected heir to the throne throughout her life because both her brothers were unable to leave surviving issue of their own. In fact, she was appointed as Heiress Apparent and crown princess by her brother King Kamehameha V in 1863. She would have become queen of Hawaii upon her brother's death, but she predeceased him.

Considered pro-American, the princess had a close friendship with the American missionaries. Musically gifted, she was an accomplished pianist and vocalist, and she sat at the melodeon and led the choir of Kawaiahao Church for many years. The Minister of Foreign Affairs, Robert Crichton Wyllie, considered it improper that a royal princess would sing in a choir and tried to convince her to stop, but she stayed loyal to the American missionaries at Kawaiahao. When the royal family switched from the Congregational Calvinist faith to the Anglican Church of Hawaii (originally known as the Hawaiian Reformed Catholic Church), Victoria refused to abandon her previous faith.[34][35] She was also a poet and chanter and composed chants and mele in the traditional Hawaiian style including many on her nephew Prince Albert Kamehameha.[36][37]

In 1863, Victoria founded the Kaʻahumanu Society, an organization concerned with the welfare of the ill and elderly Hawaiians, originally to nurse the victims of the smallpox epidemic.[38][39][40]

Death

Kamāmalu became ill during a party given at the Bishop's residence in Haleākala, Honolulu, in February 1866. The illness continued and resulted in paralysis in early May.[39] She became bedridden for the last three weeks of her life. The physicians Seth Porter Ford and Ferdinand William Hutchison were consulted although not much hope was given to her recovery. Her brother Lot wrote to Queen Emma who was abroad in Europe at the time, "But thanks to a vigorous constitution and still young, she has rallied", and he wished Emma would see Victoria alive when she returned. The princess was suffering from much pain, swelling in the body, and was unable to move without assistance. She was nursed by her ladies-in-waiting Nancy Sumner and Liliʻuokalani.[41] The Honolulu English language newspaper The Pacific Commercial Advertiser reported, "On Sunday she was better, but her disease took an unfavorable turn soon after".[33] Kamāmalu did not recover and died at 10 a.m. on May 29, 1866, at Papakanene house at Mokuʻaikaua, at the age of 27.[24][33]

The exact illness that caused her death has never been discussed in detail. The official statement was that she died "imprudently bathing while heated".[42][43] Mark Twain was in Honolulu at the time and wrote favorably of her in his public correspondence to the Sacramento Daily Union. However, privately in his notebook, he wrote, "Pr. V. died in forcing abortion — kept half a dozen bucks to do her washing, & has suffered 7 abortions" and later described how she kept a harem of "thirty-six splendidly built young native men" who were present at her funeral.[42][44]

Victoria's childless death left her brother the king without obvious heirs.[45] Her brother, a bachelor throughout his life, had intended that she should be his heir. Her death left her brother without an obvious successor. After his brother's death in 1872 an election was held between Kalākaua and Lunalilo, both former suitors of the princess. Lunalilo easily won the election, yet his reign lasted less than a year.

Victoria died without a written will, so her vast landholdings, including much of the original private lands of her mother and Queen Kaʻahumanu, were inherited by her father and eventually passed to her half-sister Keʻelikōlani who willed them to Bernice Pauahi Bishop and from whence they became part of the Kamehameha Schools. The Kaʻahumanu Society went to the wayside after her death, but Lucy Kaopaulu Peabody reorganized the club in 1905, and it continues to this day.

Funeral

 
Illustrations of Hawaiian funeral rites during Princess' lifetime, from Roughing It, a book chronicling Twain's travels.

The Legislature had to raise $6,000 for her funeral expenses including a coffin made from fine kou and koa wood.[46] Her funeral ceremony also revived many funeral rites of the Native Hawaiians including the kanikau (grief wailing) and public hula performances.[47] The wailing lasted for weeks. Many loyal Hawaiians walked as far as 50 miles to pay their last respects to their princess. Writing in high revolutionary fervor of the days immediately following the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii, Professor William DeWitt Alexander remarked:

It is true that the germs of many evils of Kalakaua's reign may be traced to the reign of Kamehameha V. The reactionary policy of that monarch is well known. Under him the "recrudescence" of heathenism commenced, as evidenced by the Pagan orgies at the funeral of his sister Victoria Kamāmalu, in June, 1866, and his encouragement of lascivious hula hula dancers and the pernicious class of Kahunas or sorcerers. Closely connected with this reaction was a growing jealousy and hatred of foreigners.[48]

Mark Twain, a spectator to the events, also labeled the acts of the grieving Hawaiians as "pagan orgies." Twain had his letters sent to his newspaper in Sacramento and he later published his observations in the book Roughing It. He didn't understand that for the last years of the Princess' life, she had become disillusioned with Western modernization and retreated to the ancient Hawaiian traditions, and the funeral ceremonies were her brother's way of honoring her dying wishes.[48]

Honours

References

  1. ^ Rose, Conant & Kjellgren 1993, pp. 278–279.
  2. ^ Forbes 2001, p. 426.
  3. ^ Kam 2017, pp. 80–82.
  4. ^ a b "United States: Hawaii: Heads of State: 1810–1898 – Archontology.org". Archontology.org. from the original on May 13, 2008. Retrieved December 2, 2014.
  5. ^ a b Ii, Pukui & Barrère 1983, p. 161.
  6. ^ "Hanau o Kamamalu Pikolia". Ke Kumu Hawaii. Vol. IV, no. 12. Honolulu. November 7, 1838. p. 47.
  7. ^ "Royal Family of Hawaii". The Hawaiian Gazette. Honolulu. April 1, 1874. p. 3. from the original on October 31, 2016. Retrieved November 19, 2016.
  8. ^ Katharine Luomala, University of Hawaii (1987). "Reality and Fantasy: The Foster Child in Hawaiian Myths and Customs". . Brigham Young University Hawaii Campus. pp. 28–29. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016.
  9. ^ Pratt 1920, p. 53.
  10. ^ a b Cooke & Cooke 1937, p. vi.
  11. ^ "Princes and Chiefs eligible to be Rulers". The Polynesian. Vol. 1, no. 9. Honolulu. July 20, 1844. p. 1. from the original on December 22, 2015. Retrieved August 22, 2018.
  12. ^ Van Dyke 2008, p. 364.
  13. ^ a b c Liliuokalani 1898, pp. 10–15.
  14. ^ Chamberlain, Levi (October 1, 1838 – July 21, 1842). "Journal of Levi Chamberlain" (PDF). 23. Retrieved November 18, 2021. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  15. ^ Kanahele 2002, p. 55–78.
  16. ^ Kuykendall 1965, pp. 166, 267.
  17. ^ Kuykendall 1953, p. 36.
  18. ^ "Victoria Kamāmalu". Hawaii State government archives web site. from the original on June 27, 2009. Retrieved October 1, 2009.
  19. ^ Taylor 1929, pp. 24, 29.
  20. ^ "Articles of Amendment of the Constitution, proposed and passed pursuant to the 105th Article of the Constitution". The Polynesian. Honolulu. August 16, 1862. p. 3.
  21. ^ Kanahele 1999, p. 139.
  22. ^ Comeau 1996, p. 27.
  23. ^ "Alekoki". Huapala.org. from the original on February 6, 2015. Retrieved December 2, 2014.
  24. ^ a b c d e Silva
  25. ^ Allen 1982, pp. 81–90.
  26. ^ a b Kanahele 1999, p. 79.
  27. ^ Forbes 2001, pp. 198–199.
  28. ^ Varigny 1874, p. 86; Varigny 1981, p. 64
  29. ^ Haley 2014, p. 197.
  30. ^ Liliuokalani 1898, pp. 13–14.
  31. ^ Allen 1995, pp. 33–34.
  32. ^ Liliuokalani 1898, pp. 12–15.
  33. ^ a b c The Pacific Commercial Advertiser 1866.
  34. ^ Twain 1938, pp. 96–97.
  35. ^ Tranquada & King 2012, p. 30.
  36. ^ Peterson 1984, p. 193.
  37. ^ Cracroft, Franklin & Queen Emma 1958, pp. 302–303.
  38. ^ Kanahele 1999, p. 188.
  39. ^ a b Peterson 1984, p. 194.
  40. ^ Allen 1982, pp. 98–99.
  41. ^ Topolinski 1975, pp. 51–52.
  42. ^ a b Scharnhorst 2018, pp. 341–342.
  43. ^ The New York Herald 1866.
  44. ^ Twain 1975, p. 129.
  45. ^ Kuykendall 1953, pp. 239–242.
  46. ^ Twain 1938, pp. 100–101.
  47. ^ Silva 2000, pp. 43–44.
  48. ^ a b "HAWAII : Monarchy In Hawaii – Part 2". Janesoceania.com. from the original on November 21, 2008. Retrieved December 2, 2014.

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  • Cooke, Amos Starr; Cooke, Juliette Montague (1937). Richards, Mary Atherton (ed.). The Chiefs' Children School: A Record Compiled from the Diary and Letters of Amos Starr Cooke and Juliette Montague Cooke, by Their Granddaughter Mary Atherton Richards. Honolulu: Honolulu Star-Bulletin. OCLC 1972890.
  • Cracroft, Sophia; Franklin, Jane; Queen Emma (1958). Korn, Alfons L. (ed.). The Victorian Visitors: An Account of the Hawaiian Kingdom, 1861–1866, Including the Journal Letters of Sophia Cracroft: Extracts from the Journals of Lady Franklin, and Diaries and Letters of Queen Emma of Hawaii. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. hdl:10125/39981. ISBN 978-0-87022-421-8. OCLC 8989368.
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Newspapers and online sources
  • "La Hanai O Ke Kama Alii Wahine". Ka Nupepa Kuokoa. Vol. 3, no. 45. Honolulu. November 5, 1864. p. 2. Retrieved June 2, 2014.
  • "Ka Make ana o Ka Mea Kiekie Ke Kama Aliiwahine Victoria Kamamalu Kaahumanu". Ka Nupepa Kuokoa. Vol. 5, no. 22. Honolulu. June 2, 1866. p. 2. Retrieved June 2, 2014.
  • "Death of the Heir Apparent". The Pacific Commercial Advertiser. Honolulu. June 2, 1866. p. 2. from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved June 2, 2014.
  • "Hawaiian Legislature". The Pacific Commercial Advertiser. Honolulu. June 2, 1866. p. 1. Retrieved June 2, 2014.
  • "Hawaiian Legislature". The Pacific Commercial Advertiser. Honolulu. June 9, 1866. p. 1. Retrieved June 2, 2014.
  • "Programme Of The Funeral Of Her Later Royal Highness the Princess Victoria Kamamalu Kaahumanu". The Pacific Commercial Advertiser. Honolulu. June 30, 1866. p. 2. Retrieved June 2, 2014.
  • "A Novel Recreation". The Pacific Commercial Advertiser. Honolulu. June 30, 1866. p. 3. Retrieved June 2, 2014.
  • "Miscellaneous". The New York Herald. Honolulu. July 30, 1866. p. 4. Retrieved June 2, 2014.
  • Silva, Kīhei de. "ʻAlekoki Revisited". Kaleinamanu Library Archives, Kamehameha Schools. from the original on March 24, 2012. Retrieved September 3, 2011.

External links

  • March 27, 1855. New York Times article on her
  • Mark Twain in Sacramento Union – #14
  • Victoria Kamamalu on a Stamp
  • Hawai'i's Lost Princess: Princess Victoria Kamāmalu Ka'ahumanu IV
  • Victoria Kamamalu "A Worthy Successor" by Julie Stewart Williams
Preceded by Kuhina Nui of the Hawaiian Islands
January 16, 1855 – December 21, 1863
Succeeded by

victoria, kamāmalu, kaʻahumanu, november, 1838, 1866, kuhina, hawaii, crown, princess, named, wikolia, kamehamalu, keawenui, kaʻahumanu, kekūanaōʻa, also, named, kalehelani, kiheahealani, mainly, referred, kaʻahumanu, when, addressing, kuhina, role, kuhina, ac. Victoria Kamamalu Kaʻahumanu IV November 1 1838 May 29 1866 was Kuhina Nui of Hawaii and its crown princess Named Wikolia Kamehamalu Keawenui Kaʻahumanu a Kekuanaōʻa 4 and also named Kalehelani Kiheahealani 4 she was mainly referred to as Victoria Kamamalu or Kaʻahumanu IV when addressing her as the Kuhina Nui In her role of Kuhina Nui she acted as Regent between the death of the King in 1863 until the election of a new King the same year Victoria KamamaluCrown Princess of the Hawaiian Islands and Kuhina Nui of the Hawaiian IslandsKuhina Nui of the Hawaiian IslandsReignJanuary 16 1855 December 21 1863PredecessorKeoni AnaSuccessorKekuanaoʻaMonarchKamehameha IVKamehameha VBorn 1838 11 01 November 1 1838Honolulu Fort Honolulu OʻahuDiedMay 29 1866 1866 05 29 aged 27 Papakanene Honolulu OʻahuBurialJune 30 1866 1 2 3 Mauna ʻAla Royal MausoleumNamesWikolia Kamehamalu Keawenui Kaʻahumanu a Kekuanaōʻa Victoria Kamamalu Kaʻahumanu IVHouseHouse of KamehamehaFatherKekuanaoʻaMotherKinaʻuSignature Contents 1 Family 2 Early life 3 Kuhina Nui 4 Betrothal 5 Scandal 6 Crown Princess 7 Death 8 Funeral 9 Honours 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksFamily EditBorn at the Honolulu Fort on November 1 1838 she was the only daughter of Elizabeth Kinaʻu Kaʻahumanu II and her third husband Mataio Kekuanaoʻa Through her mother she was granddaughter of King Kamehameha I founder of the united Hawaiian Kingdom Her two brothers would later become kings of Hawaii as Kamehameha IV and Kamehameha V She was named after her maternal aunt Queen Kamamalu the consort of Kamehameha II who died in London from the measles The Christian name Victoria was after Queen Victoria and signified the close friendship of the British monarchs and the Hawaiian monarchs 5 6 7 Having given away her previous four sons Kinaʻu refused to give her only remaining daughter in hanai to John Adams Kuakini who wanted to take her to be raised on the Big Island Kinaʻu defied the customs of the time and personally nursed her daughter 8 Kinaʻu died from the mumps a few months after Victoria s birth She would become the highest female chief in Hawaii at the time Her kahu attendants were John Papa ʻiʻi and his wife Sarai They later accompanied Victoria to school due to her age 5 9 Early life Edit Victoria Kamamalu and her father Kekuanaoʻa Victoria was educated at Chiefs Children s School later renamed Royal School along with all her cousins and brothers 10 Along with her other classmates she was chosen by Kamehameha III to be eligible for the throne of the Kingdom of Hawaii 11 12 She was expected from birth to one day succeed to the position of Kuhina Nui if not the office of monarch so she was educated by the Cookes with full attention to what political roles she might play in the near future In the school the students were permitted to visit with relatives from time to time When the students fell ill their kahu and families went to the school and stayed for a while to attend to them Victoria s kahu John Papa ʻiʻi was eventually appointed kahu for all of the students at the Chief s Children s School and visited in that capacity though his political services were in such demand by the court that he was often absent Victoria s father Kekuanaoʻa raised her He was the royal governor of Oahu In Honolulu her father built her a Greek revival mansion which was the largest house in the town of Honolulu or anywhere in Hawaii at the time Her father was in debt to foreigners however so Kamehameha III bought the palace from him He made it his royal palace and called it Hale Aliʻi House of the Chiefs and it was the first ʻIolani Palace Victoria was two months younger than the future queen Liliʻuokalani At her birth the High Chiefess Laura Kōnia went to Kinaʻu with her adoptive daughter Liliʻu Kinaʻu would nurse Liliʻu while handing her own daughter to a nurse 13 Both girls were baptized on December 23 1838 by American missionary Levi Chamberlain 14 According to Liliʻuokalani they would share everything from a young age and when Victoria visited her aunt Kekauluohi Liliʻuokalani would be invited too Victoria was destined from a young age to become a sovereign like her siblings but it would be Liliʻuokalani who would later become the first Queen of Hawaii due to Victoria s early death 13 Bernice Pauahi Bishop another classmate at the Royal School was hanai to Kinaʻu and Kekuanaoʻa Originally betrothed to Victoria s brother Lot Pauahi married American businessman Charles Reed Bishop on May 4 1850 against the wishes of her biological parents Paki and Kōnia and Victoria s father A year later in August 1851 the twelve year old Victoria helped reconciled Pauahi with her parents and Kekuanaoʻa 10 15 Kuhina Nui Edit Personal Flag of Princess Victoria Kamamalu as Kuhina Nui It was intended that Victoria would succeed her mother Kinaʻu in the position of Kuhina Nui premier but her mother died while she was still an infant Her aunt Kekauluohi became a place holder for her niece using the name Kaʻahumanu III but she died when Victoria was seven Subsequently her uncle Kamehameha III appointed John Kalaipaihala Young II also known as Keoni Ana the son of John Young as Kuhina Nui 16 17 Princess Victoria Kamamalu was appointed as Heiress Presumptive to the title of Kuhina Nui in 1850 to be the successor to Keoni Ana Since 1845 by legislative act the office of Kuhina Nui had been joined with that of the Minister of the Interior Given her young age it was clear to the King Privy Council and Legislative Council that Victoria was not suited to be Minister of the Interior Therefore on January 6 1855 an act was passed to repeal the earlier legislation 18 In 1854 her uncle Kamehameha III died and her brother Alexander Liholiho succeeded him as King Kamehameha IV According to Robert Crichton Wyllie the Minister of Foreign Affairs and a trusted friend of the royal family opponents of the new king were planning to overthrow him and place his sister Princess Victoria on the throne instead However the conspiracy never culminated in anything 19 She became Kuhina Nui in 1855 mainly due to her brother s ascension to the throne after the death of her uncle It is probable that Kamehameha III had meant for Keoni Ana to hold the office until his death Keoni Ana did retain the role of Minister of the Interior Victoria presided over the King s Privy Council In 1862 Victoria and her brother Lot were officially added to the line of succession in an amendment to the 1852 Constitution of the Kingdom of Hawaii Lot and his heirs follow by Princess Victoria and her heirs would succeed in the case their brother died without any legitimate heirs 20 The change was made shortly before the death of Prince Albert Kamehameha the only son of Kamehameha IV on August 23 1862 21 Victoria constitutionally assumed the power of state for a day when her brother Kamehameha IV died leaving no designated heirs in 1863 Section II Article 47 of the 1852 Constitution of the Hawaiian Kingdom provided that the Kuhina Nui Premier in absence of a monarch would fill the vacant office Whenever the throne shall become vacant by reason of the King s death or otherwise and during the minority of any heir to the throne the Kuhina Nui for the time being shall during such vacancy or minority perform all the duties incumbent on the King and shall have and exercise all the powers which by this Constitution are vested in the King After consulting with the Privy Councilors she proclaimed in front the Legislature It having pleased Almighty God to close the earthly career of King Kamehameha IV at a quarter past 9 o clock this morning I as Kuhina Nui by and with the advice of the Privy Council of State hereby proclaim Prince Lot Kamehameha King of Hawaii under the style and title of Kamehameha V God preserve the King 22 Betrothal Edit Princess Victoria right socializing with other members of the royal court Victoria was betrothed to William Charles Lunalilo Their parents had planned out their marriage from infancy and it was popular among the Hawaiians The date was set but they were forbidden to marry by her brothers Kamehameha IV and Kamehameha V and the wedding was cancelled 23 24 The reason was because the children of Victoria and Lunalilo would have a higher rank or mana than the brothers own lines In fact Kamehameha IV had tried to split them apart by engaging Victoria to David Kalakaua and Lunalilo to Lydia Kamakaʻeha 25 13 Scandal EditIn 1857 a scandal involved Victoria and Marcus Cummins Monsarrat 1828 1871 a married English auctioneer Monsarrat had been a friend to her two brothers and was a frequent dinner guest One night on January 15 1857 Prince Lot was informed that Monsarrat was in the princess bedroom He immediately went to her room and caught Victoria in a compromising position and Monsarrat in the act of arranging his pantaloons The enraged Prince told him to leave or he would kill him When Kamehameha IV found out about the incident he blamed Lot for not shooting Monsarrat down like a dog 26 Kamehameha IV subsequently banished Monsarrat from Hawaiʻi on May 20 1857 Whereas Marcus C Monsarrat a naturalized subject of this Kingdom is guilty of having perpetuated a grievous injury to Ourselves and to Our Royal family And Whereas such injury is of such a character as in Our judgement to authorize and require the expulsion of the said M C Monsarrat from Our Dominions Now therefore know that We in the exercise of the Power vested in Us by virtue of Our office as Sovereign of this Kingdom do hereby order that the said Marcus C Monsarrat be forthwith expelled from this Kingdom and he is hereby strictly prohibited forever from returning to any part of Our Dominions under penalty of Death 27 Monsarrat did in fact return and the King had him imprisoned and exiled again Often accounted as Princess Victoria Kamamalu s misbehavior and a love affair between the two the contemporaneous Charles de Varigny defended the princess by saying Monsarrat s insolence reached a point at which the princess was obliged to cry for help 28 Her brothers were in the process of marrying her to Kalakaua around 1857 The Monsarrat scandal either ended this arrangement 26 29 or was arranged to cover up the scandal 24 In her memoir Liliʻuokalani wrote I received a letter from my brother Kalakaua telling me that he was engaged to the Princess Victoria and asking me to come to Honolulu B ut upon my arrival I found that the engagement was broken for the Princess Victoria had gone to Wailua and my brother had heard nothing from her for a fortnight 30 Liliʻuokalani remaining silent on the royal scandal mentioned that the match was ultimately terminated when the princess decided to renew her on and off betrothal to Lunalilo 31 32 Historian Kihei de Silva noted that Kalakaua was willing in the union but Kamamalu refused the match 24 For the last few years of her life she was rarely seen in public 33 She remained a spinster for the remaining part of her life 24 Crown Princess Edit Princess Victoria in 1865 photographed by Charles L Weed Victoria was an expected heir to the throne throughout her life because both her brothers were unable to leave surviving issue of their own In fact she was appointed as Heiress Apparent and crown princess by her brother King Kamehameha V in 1863 She would have become queen of Hawaii upon her brother s death but she predeceased him Considered pro American the princess had a close friendship with the American missionaries Musically gifted she was an accomplished pianist and vocalist and she sat at the melodeon and led the choir of Kawaiahao Church for many years The Minister of Foreign Affairs Robert Crichton Wyllie considered it improper that a royal princess would sing in a choir and tried to convince her to stop but she stayed loyal to the American missionaries at Kawaiahao When the royal family switched from the Congregational Calvinist faith to the Anglican Church of Hawaii originally known as the Hawaiian Reformed Catholic Church Victoria refused to abandon her previous faith 34 35 She was also a poet and chanter and composed chants and mele in the traditional Hawaiian style including many on her nephew Prince Albert Kamehameha 36 37 In 1863 Victoria founded the Kaʻahumanu Society an organization concerned with the welfare of the ill and elderly Hawaiians originally to nurse the victims of the smallpox epidemic 38 39 40 Death EditKamamalu became ill during a party given at the Bishop s residence in Haleakala Honolulu in February 1866 The illness continued and resulted in paralysis in early May 39 She became bedridden for the last three weeks of her life The physicians Seth Porter Ford and Ferdinand William Hutchison were consulted although not much hope was given to her recovery Her brother Lot wrote to Queen Emma who was abroad in Europe at the time But thanks to a vigorous constitution and still young she has rallied and he wished Emma would see Victoria alive when she returned The princess was suffering from much pain swelling in the body and was unable to move without assistance She was nursed by her ladies in waiting Nancy Sumner and Liliʻuokalani 41 The Honolulu English language newspaper The Pacific Commercial Advertiser reported On Sunday she was better but her disease took an unfavorable turn soon after 33 Kamamalu did not recover and died at 10 a m on May 29 1866 at Papakanene house at Mokuʻaikaua at the age of 27 24 33 The exact illness that caused her death has never been discussed in detail The official statement was that she died imprudently bathing while heated 42 43 Mark Twain was in Honolulu at the time and wrote favorably of her in his public correspondence to the Sacramento Daily Union However privately in his notebook he wrote Pr V died in forcing abortion kept half a dozen bucks to do her washing amp has suffered 7 abortions and later described how she kept a harem of thirty six splendidly built young native men who were present at her funeral 42 44 Victoria s childless death left her brother the king without obvious heirs 45 Her brother a bachelor throughout his life had intended that she should be his heir Her death left her brother without an obvious successor After his brother s death in 1872 an election was held between Kalakaua and Lunalilo both former suitors of the princess Lunalilo easily won the election yet his reign lasted less than a year Victoria died without a written will so her vast landholdings including much of the original private lands of her mother and Queen Kaʻahumanu were inherited by her father and eventually passed to her half sister Keʻelikōlani who willed them to Bernice Pauahi Bishop and from whence they became part of the Kamehameha Schools The Kaʻahumanu Society went to the wayside after her death but Lucy Kaopaulu Peabody reorganized the club in 1905 and it continues to this day Funeral Edit Illustrations of Hawaiian funeral rites during Princess lifetime from Roughing It a book chronicling Twain s travels The Legislature had to raise 6 000 for her funeral expenses including a coffin made from fine kou and koa wood 46 Her funeral ceremony also revived many funeral rites of the Native Hawaiians including the kanikau grief wailing and public hula performances 47 The wailing lasted for weeks Many loyal Hawaiians walked as far as 50 miles to pay their last respects to their princess Writing in high revolutionary fervor of the days immediately following the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii Professor William DeWitt Alexander remarked It is true that the germs of many evils of Kalakaua s reign may be traced to the reign of Kamehameha V The reactionary policy of that monarch is well known Under him the recrudescence of heathenism commenced as evidenced by the Pagan orgies at the funeral of his sister Victoria Kamamalu in June 1866 and his encouragement of lascivious hula hula dancers and the pernicious class of Kahunas or sorcerers Closely connected with this reaction was a growing jealousy and hatred of foreigners 48 Mark Twain a spectator to the events also labeled the acts of the grieving Hawaiians as pagan orgies Twain had his letters sent to his newspaper in Sacramento and he later published his observations in the book Roughing It He didn t understand that for the last years of the Princess life she had become disillusioned with Western modernization and retreated to the ancient Hawaiian traditions and the funeral ceremonies were her brother s way of honoring her dying wishes 48 Honours Edit Dame Grand Cross of the Most Noble Order of Kamehameha I References Edit Rose Conant amp Kjellgren 1993 pp 278 279 Forbes 2001 p 426 Kam 2017 pp 80 82 a b United States Hawaii Heads of State 1810 1898 Archontology org Archontology org Archived from the original on May 13 2008 Retrieved December 2 2014 a b Ii Pukui amp Barrere 1983 p 161 Hanau o Kamamalu Pikolia Ke Kumu Hawaii Vol IV no 12 Honolulu November 7 1838 p 47 Royal Family of Hawaii The Hawaiian Gazette Honolulu April 1 1874 p 3 Archived from the original on October 31 2016 Retrieved November 19 2016 Katharine Luomala University of Hawaii 1987 Reality and Fantasy The Foster Child in Hawaiian Myths and Customs Pacific Studies Brigham Young University Hawaii Campus pp 28 29 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Pratt 1920 p 53 a b Cooke amp Cooke 1937 p vi Princes and Chiefs eligible to be Rulers The Polynesian Vol 1 no 9 Honolulu July 20 1844 p 1 Archived from the original on December 22 2015 Retrieved August 22 2018 Van Dyke 2008 p 364 a b c Liliuokalani 1898 pp 10 15 Chamberlain Levi October 1 1838 July 21 1842 Journal of Levi Chamberlain PDF 23 Retrieved November 18 2021 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Kanahele 2002 p 55 78 Kuykendall 1965 pp 166 267 Kuykendall 1953 p 36 Victoria Kamamalu Hawaii State government archives web site Archived from the original on June 27 2009 Retrieved October 1 2009 Taylor 1929 pp 24 29 Articles of Amendment of the Constitution proposed and passed pursuant to the 105th Article of the Constitution The Polynesian Honolulu August 16 1862 p 3 Kanahele 1999 p 139 Comeau 1996 p 27 Alekoki Huapala org Archived from the original on February 6 2015 Retrieved December 2 2014 a b c d e Silva Allen 1982 pp 81 90 a b Kanahele 1999 p 79 Forbes 2001 pp 198 199 Varigny 1874 p 86 Varigny 1981 p 64 Haley 2014 p 197 Liliuokalani 1898 pp 13 14 Allen 1995 pp 33 34 Liliuokalani 1898 pp 12 15 a b c The Pacific Commercial Advertiser 1866 Twain 1938 pp 96 97 Tranquada amp King 2012 p 30 Peterson 1984 p 193 Cracroft Franklin amp Queen Emma 1958 pp 302 303 Kanahele 1999 p 188 a b Peterson 1984 p 194 Allen 1982 pp 98 99 Topolinski 1975 pp 51 52 a b Scharnhorst 2018 pp 341 342 The New York Herald 1866 Twain 1975 p 129 Kuykendall 1953 pp 239 242 Twain 1938 pp 100 101 Silva 2000 pp 43 44 a b HAWAII Monarchy In Hawaii Part 2 Janesoceania com Archived from the original on November 21 2008 Retrieved December 2 2014 Bibliography EditBooks and journalsAllen Helena G 1982 The Betrayal of Liliuokalani Last Queen of Hawaii 1838 1917 Glendale CA A H Clark Company ISBN 978 0 87062 144 4 OCLC 9576325 Allen Helena G 1995 Kalakaua Renaissance King Honolulu Mutual Publishing ISBN 978 1 56647 059 9 OCLC 35083815 Archived from the original on December 21 2019 Retrieved October 26 2016 Comeau Rosalin Uphus 1996 Kamehameha V Lot Kapuaiwa Honolulu Kamehameha Schools Press ISBN 978 0 87336 039 5 OCLC 34752213 Cooke Amos Starr Cooke Juliette Montague 1937 Richards Mary Atherton ed The Chiefs Children School A Record Compiled from the Diary and Letters of Amos Starr Cooke and Juliette Montague Cooke by Their Granddaughter Mary Atherton Richards Honolulu Honolulu Star Bulletin OCLC 1972890 Cracroft Sophia Franklin Jane Queen Emma 1958 Korn Alfons L ed The Victorian Visitors An Account of the Hawaiian Kingdom 1861 1866 Including the Journal Letters of Sophia Cracroft Extracts from the Journals of Lady Franklin and Diaries and Letters of Queen Emma of Hawaii Honolulu University of Hawaii Press hdl 10125 39981 ISBN 978 0 87022 421 8 OCLC 8989368 Forbes David W ed 2001 Hawaiian National Bibliography 1780 1900 Volume 3 1851 1880 Vol 3 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2503 4 OCLC 123279964 Gregg David L 1982 King Pauline ed The Diaries of David Lawrence Gregg An American Diplomat in Hawaii 1853 1858 Honolulu Hawaiian Historical Society ISBN 9780824808617 OCLC 8773139 Haley James L 2014 Captive Paradise A History of Hawaii New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 60065 5 OCLC 865158092 Ii John Papa Pukui Mary Kawena Barrere Dorothy B 1983 Fragments of Hawaiian History 2 ed Honolulu Bishop Museum Press ISBN 978 0 910240 31 4 OCLC 251324264 Kaeo Peter Queen Emma 1976 Korn Alfons L ed News from Molokai Letters Between Peter Kaeo amp Queen Emma 1873 1876 Honolulu The University Press of Hawaii hdl 10125 39980 ISBN 978 0 8248 0399 5 OCLC 2225064 Kam Ralph Thomas 2017 Death Rites and Hawaiian Royalty Funerary Practices in the Kamehameha and Kalakaua Dynasties 1819 1953 S I McFarland Incorporated Publishers ISBN 978 1 4766 6846 8 OCLC 966566652 Kameʻeleihiwa Lilikala 1992 Native Land and Foreign Desires Honolulu Bishop Museum Press pp 107 124 27 146 207 213 218 228 229 254 303 307 310 death of 290 309 genealogy of 101 119 123 231 ISBN 0 930897 59 5 OCLC 154146650 Kanahele George S 1999 Emma Hawaii s Remarkable Queen Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2240 8 OCLC 40890919 Kanahele George S 2002 1986 Pauahi The Kamehameha Legacy Honolulu Kamehameha Schools Press ISBN 978 0 87336 005 0 OCLC 173653971 Kuykendall Ralph Simpson 1965 1938 The Hawaiian Kingdom 1778 1854 Foundation and Transformation Vol 1 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0 87022 431 X OCLC 47008868 Kuykendall Ralph Simpson 1953 The Hawaiian Kingdom 1854 1874 Twenty Critical Years Vol 2 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 87022 432 4 OCLC 47010821 Liliuokalani 1898 Hawaii s Story by Hawaii s Queen Liliuokalani Boston Lee and Shepard ISBN 978 0 548 22265 2 OCLC 2387226 Peterson Barbara Bennett ed 1984 Notable Women of Hawaii Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 0820 4 OCLC 11030010 Osorio Jon Kamakawiwoʻole 2002 Dismembering Lahui A History of the Hawaiian Nation to 1887 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0 8248 2549 7 OCLC 48579247 Parker David Kawika 2008 Crypts of the Ali i The Last Refuge of the Hawaiian Royalty Tales of Our Hawaiʻi PDF Honolulu Alu Like Inc OCLC 309392477 Archived from the original PDF on November 11 2013 Pratt Elizabeth Kekaaniauokalani Kalaninuiohilaukapu 1920 History of Keoua Kalanikupuapa i nui Father of Hawaii Kings and His Descendants with Notes on Kamehameha I First King of All Hawaii Honolulu Honolulu Star Bulletin OCLC 154181545 Rose Roger G Conant Sheila Kjellgren Eric P September 1993 Hawaiian Standing Kahili in the Bishop Museum An Ethnological and Biological Analysis Journal of the Polynesian Society Wellington NZ Polynesian Society 102 3 273 304 JSTOR 20706518 Scharnhorst Gary 2018 The Life of Mark Twain The Early Years 1835 1871 Columbia MO University of Missouri Press ISBN 978 0 8262 7400 7 OCLC 1007505891 Silva Noenoe K 2000 Kanawai E Ho opau I Na Hula Kuolo Hawai i the Political Economy of Banning the Hula The Hawaiian Journal of History Honolulu Hawaiian Historical Society 34 29 48 hdl 10524 347 OCLC 60626541 Taylor Albert Pierce October 15 1929 Intrigues conspiracies and accomplishments in the era of Kamehameha IV and V and Robert Crichton Wyllie Papers of the Hawaiian Historical Society Honolulu Hawaiian Historical Society 16 16 32 hdl 10524 978 OCLC 528831753 Topolinski John Renken Kahaʻi 1975 Nancy Sumner A Part Hawaiian High Chiefess 1839 1895 Honolulu University of Hawaiʻi at Manoa OCLC 16326376 Tranquada Jim King John 2012 The ʻUkulele A History Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 3544 6 OCLC 767806914 via Project MUSE Twain Mark 1938 Letters from the Sandwich Islands Written for the Sacramento Union Palo Alto Stanford University Press pp 16 137 OCLC 187974 Twain Mark 1975 Anderson Frederick Frank Michael B Sanderson Kenneth M eds Mark Twain s Notebooks amp Journals Volume I 1855 1873 Oakland CA University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 90538 2 OCLC 2015814 Twain Mark 1872 Roughing it New York Hippocrene Books pp 490 497 ISBN 978 0 87052 707 4 OCLC 19256406 Van Dyke Jon M 2008 Who Owns the Crown Lands of Hawaiʻi Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 3211 7 OCLC 163812857 Varigny Charles Victor Crosnier de 1874 Quatorze ans aux iles Sandwich Paris Hachette et cie OCLC 191324680 Varigny Charles Victor Crosnier de 1981 Fourteen Years in the Sandwich Islands 1855 1868 Translated by Alfons L Korn Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 0709 2 OCLC 456816908 Newspapers and online sources La Hanai O Ke Kama Alii Wahine Ka Nupepa Kuokoa Vol 3 no 45 Honolulu November 5 1864 p 2 Retrieved June 2 2014 Ka Make ana o Ka Mea Kiekie Ke Kama Aliiwahine Victoria Kamamalu Kaahumanu Ka Nupepa Kuokoa Vol 5 no 22 Honolulu June 2 1866 p 2 Retrieved June 2 2014 Death of the Heir Apparent The Pacific Commercial Advertiser Honolulu June 2 1866 p 2 Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Retrieved June 2 2014 Hawaiian Legislature The Pacific Commercial Advertiser Honolulu June 2 1866 p 1 Retrieved June 2 2014 Hawaiian Legislature The Pacific Commercial Advertiser Honolulu June 9 1866 p 1 Retrieved June 2 2014 Programme Of The Funeral Of Her Later Royal Highness the Princess Victoria Kamamalu Kaahumanu The Pacific Commercial Advertiser Honolulu June 30 1866 p 2 Retrieved June 2 2014 A Novel Recreation The Pacific Commercial Advertiser Honolulu June 30 1866 p 3 Retrieved June 2 2014 Miscellaneous The New York Herald Honolulu July 30 1866 p 4 Retrieved June 2 2014 Silva Kihei de ʻAlekoki Revisited Kaleinamanu Library Archives Kamehameha Schools Archived from the original on March 24 2012 Retrieved September 3 2011 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Victoria Kamamalu March 27 1855 New York Times article on her Mark Twain in Sacramento Union 14 Victoria Kamamalu on a Stamp Hawai i s Lost Princess Princess Victoria Kamamalu Ka ahumanu IV Victoria Kamamalu A Worthy Successor by Julie Stewart WilliamsPreceded byKeoni Ana Kuhina Nui of the Hawaiian IslandsJanuary 16 1855 December 21 1863 Succeeded byKekuanaoʻa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Victoria Kamamalu amp oldid 1152076737, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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