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Kameʻeiamoku

Kameʻeiamoku (died 1802) was a Hawaiian high chief and the Counselor of State to King Kamehameha I. He was called Kamehameha's uncle, but he was really the cousin of Kamehameha's mother, Kekuiapoiwa II.

Kameʻeiamoku
On the right is Kameʻeiamoku
Died1802
Puʻuki, Lahaina, Maui
SpouseKamakaʻeheikuli
Kealiʻiokahekili
Kahikoloa of Kauaʻi
Puhipuhiʻili
Kauhilanahonua
IssueKepoʻokalani
Ulumāheihei Hoapili
Hoʻolulu
Loe-wahine
Kekikipaʻa
FatherKeawepoepoe
MotherKanoena

Birth and ancestry

Along with his twin brother Kamanawa, Kameʻeiamoku's parents were the keiki aliʻi (prince or child of a chief[1]), Keawepoepoe and Kanoena (w). As the son of Kalanikauleleiaiwi and Lonoikahaupu, monarch's of several kingdoms between them, Keawepoepoe was an aliʻi (noble) of Hawaii, Maui, Oahu and Kauai.[2] As well being an aliʻi nui (great king or supreme monarch) Lonoikahaupu was a kahuna (priest) of the order of Lono (order of Nahulu or Holoa'e), one of two priestly orders, Kū (Kuali'i or Kauali'i) being the other.[3] Through this union Keawepoepoe received the kapu o pahenakalani (the prostrating kapu) which is how the Hawaii aliʻi received the kapu (a religious code of conduct) called the kapu moe.[2]

Fornander identifies their mother, Kanoena, as the daughter of Lonoanahulu from the Ehu ohana (family).[4] Almira Hollander Pitman refers to Kanoena in 1931 as Keawepoepoe's cousin.[5] However, in the Hawaiian Genealogy book volume 44: "Eia ka lani ke koi pae moku ka lauhulu paoki o ka aina", it shows Lonoanahulu marrying Hikuakanaloauuoo and having Manohili who marries Halao, which is the couple that has Kanoena. That would make Lonoanahulua Kanoena's grandfather.[6] Kamakau lists Mano-hili as one of the men who assisted Kameʻeiamoku in his attack on the Fair American.[7] Fornander also refers to Lonoanahulu, along with the Kameʻeiamoku and Kamanawa in regards to lands passed down to them from Liloa;

"Liloa, [king of Hawaii], gave Kekaha in Kona, Hawaii, to Laeanuikekaumanamana in perpetuity, and it descended to his grandchildren through Kualii, Kauluoaonana, Wahulu, Lonoanahulu, etc. to Kameeiamoku and Kamanawa. Umi likewise gave Kapalilua, in South Kona, to his child Kapunanahuanui-a-Umi, from whom it descended through Ua, Iwikaualii, lama to Keeaumoku".[8]

The Metcalfes, the Eleanora and the Fair American

In 1790, the American maritime fur trader Simon Metcalfe of the ship Eleanora mistreated Kameʻeiamoku when he boarded his ship. Metcalfe later fired his cannons on the villagers of Olowalu, killing about one hundred. In retaliation, Kameʻeiamoku attacked the next American ship to appear, the schooner Fair American, under the command of Thomas Humphrey Metcalfe, the son of Simon Metcalfe. All but one of the schooner's crew was killed, including Thomas Humphrey Metcalfe. The lone survivor was Welsh sailor Isaac Davis. Another sailor from the Eleanora, Englishman John Young, was sent ashore to find out what happened, and was also captured. Davis and Young would both become military advisors and translators for Kamehameha.[9]

Kameʻeiamoku participated in negotiating a treaty in February 1795 with George Vancouver for British support of Kamehameha.[10]

Kamehameha and the unification of the islands

Kameʻeiamoku and his twin Kamanawa were among the four great aliʻi warriors of Kona to support Kamehameha I in his rebellion against his cousin Kīwalaʻō; the other two being their half brother Keʻeaumoku Pāpaʻiahiahi, and Keawe-a-Heulu.[11] These were known as the "Four Kona chiefs".[12] They, along with Kamehameha's kumu (teacher) of Kapu Kuialua named Kekūhaupiʻo, were the center of the war council for Kamehameha when he took power in the battle of Mokuʻōhai in 1782, which strengthened his influence.

Family

Kameʻeiamoku had three or four wives and at least three sons. His first wife, Kamakaʻeheikuli, was the mother of Kepoʻokalani (c. 1760–?) who was the double great-grandfather of the last two monarchs of the Kingdom. His second wife Kealiʻiokahekili was the mother of Ulumāheihei Hoapili (c. 1776–1840). His third wife Kahikoloa was mother of Hoʻolulu (1794–?).[13][14] Kameʻeiamoku's descendants succeeded him in assisting Kamehameha after his death in 1802 in Lahaina on Maui.[15]

Legacy

Through his son Kepoʻokalani came the House of Kalākaua.[16] One of his other sons Hoʻolulu would be the father of Kinoʻole o Liliha who married the notable American businessman Benjamin Pitman. Daughter Kekikipaa would marry Kamehameha I, but then marry Keawemauhili and become the mother of High Chiefess Kapiʻolani.

He lives on the coat of arms of the Kingdom of Hawaii. On each side of the coat of arms was the figure of a chief in a feather cloak and a feather helmet. The one on the left, bearing a spear, was Kamanawa and the one on the right, with a Kahili (feather standard), was Kameʻeiamoku.[17] The land he was given in 1795 was used by his granddaughter Kuini Liliha, who donated it to Christian missionaries. It eventually became Punahou School in 1841.[15]

Ancestry

Family 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 Mānaiakalani Kamakau's; "Ruling Chiefs of Hawaii" and other works by the author, John Papa ʻĪʻī's; "Fragments of Hawaiian History", Edith Kawelohea McKinzie's; "Hawaiian Genealogies: Extracted from Hawaiian Language Newspapers, Vol. I & 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.
(k) = Kane (Hawaiian for male or husband). (w) = Wahine (female or wife). Hawaiian genealogies use these as indicators for gender instead of (m) and (f)

Kauihi-a-Hiwa (k)Kueluakawai (w)
Kealohi
kanakamaikai (k)
Kaneiahaka (w)
Kainaaila (k)Kapulauki (w)Kauākahikua
ʻanaʻauakāne (w)
Iwikauikaua (k)Keakamahana (w)
Kauakahilau (k)Kuluina (w)Kāneikaiwilani (k)Keākealaniwahine (w)Kanaloakapulehu (k)Ahu-a-ʻI (k)Piʻilaniwahine (w)
Kamuokaumeheiwa (w)Lonoikahaupu (k)Kalanikauleleiaiwi (w)Kauaua-a-Mahi (k)Keaweʻīkekahi
aliʻiokamoku
(k)
Lonomaʻaikanaka (w)
Kaumeheiwa (k)Kaʻapuwai (w)Keawepoepoe (k)Kūmaʻaikū (w)Kanoena (w)Haʻae-a-mahi (k)Kekelakekeokalani (w)Kalanikeʻeaumoku (k)Kamakaimoku (w)Kalaninuiamamao (k)
Kaeokulani (k)Kamakahelei (w)Kameʻeiamoku (k)Kamakaʻeheikuli (w)Keeaumoku
Pāpaiahiahi
(k)
Nāmāhānaʻi Kaleleokalani (w)Kamanawa (k)Kekelaokalani (w)Kekuʻiapoiwa II (w)Keōua (k)Kalola Pupuka (w)Kalaniʻōpuʻu (k)
Kapuaamohu (w)Kaumualii (k)Kepookalani (k)Alapai Wahine (w)Keohohiwa (w)Kaheiheimālie (w)Namahana Piʻia (w)Peleuli (w)Kamehameha I (k)Kekuiapoiwa Liliha (w)Kīwalaʻō (k)
Kaʻahumanu (w)Kalaʻimamahu (k)Kahōʻanokū Kīnaʻu (k)Wahinepio (w)Palila Nohomualani (k)Moana (w)Keōpūolani (w)
Kinoiki Kekaulike (w)Kūhiō Kalanianaʻole (k)Kealiʻiahonui (k)Kekauʻōnohi (w)Levi Haʻalelea (k)Eia (k)Kauwā (w)
Kamanawa II (k)
(c. 1785 – October 20, 1840)[i]
Kamokuiki (w)
(died 1840)[ii]
ʻAikanaka (k)
(died 1837)[iii]
Kamaʻeokalani (w)Iʻahuʻula (w)Naihekukui (k)
Kapaakea (k)
(1815 – November 13, 1866)[iv]
Keohokālole (w)
(died April 6, 1869)[v]
Kekāuluohi (w)
(c. 1794[vi] – June 7, 1845[vii])
Charles Kanaʻina (k)
(May 4, 1798 – March 13, 1877)
Kamāmalu (w)
(c. 1802–1824)
Kamehameha II (k)
(c. 1797 – July 14, 1824)
Kīnaʻu (w)
(c. 1805 – April 4, 1839)
Kekūanāoʻa (k)
(c. 1791 – November 24, 1868)
Kamehameha III (k)
(March 17, 1814 – December 15, 1854)
Kalama (w)
(1817–September 20, 1870)
Kapiʻolani (w)
(December 31, 1834 – June 24, 1899)
Kalākaua (k)
(November 16, 1836 – January 20, 1891)
Liliʻuokalani (w)
(September 2, 1838 – November 11, 1917)
John Owen Dominis (k)
(March 10, 1832 – August 23, 1891)
Lunalilo (k)
(January 31, 1835 – February 3, 1874)

Notes:

  1. ^ Forbes-1998-p. 256
    "Twelve days after the first Hawaiian Constitution was signed, a chief, Kamanawa II, grandfather of future monarchs David Kalakaua and Lydia Makaeha Liliuokalani, was hung for the murder of his wife. The method used was poison, and after a trial by jury, Kamanawa and Lonoapuakau (spelled Lonopuakau in title), captain of the Hawaiian vessel Hooikaika, were convicted. The sentence of death was set by the premier (Kekauluohi) and agreed upon by the king only after a long consultation with Commander Charles Wilkes of the United States Exploring Expedition. This is the printed order setting the date of execution for October 20, 1840."[α]
  2. ^ Yalom-2008-p. 241
    "Kamokuiki Died 1840"[β]
  3. ^ Andrews-1865-p. 557
    "1837. Aikanaka died."[γ]
  4. ^ Forbes-1998-p. 428
    "[Caesar Kapaakea] He died in Honolulu on November 13, 1866"[δ]
  5. ^ Stauffer-2004-p. 61
    "[Keohokālole] died in Hilo on April 6, 1869."[ε]
  6. ^ Kamehiro-2009- p. 61
    "High Chiefess Kekāuluohi (ca. 1794–1845), premier, wife of Kamehameha I, and mother of King Lunalilo, built her house at this site, on the premises known as Pohukaina"[ζ]
  7. ^ Kam - 2017- p.205
    "Hawaiian Gazette lists “Kekauluohi, Mother of Lunalilo, died June 7, 1845."[η]
  1. ^ David W. Forbes (1998). Hawaiian National Bibliography 1780-1900: 1831-1850. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 256–. ISBN 978-0-8248-2379-5.
  2. ^ Marilyn Yalom (2008). The American Resting Place: 400 Years of History Through Our Cemeteries and Burial Grounds. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 241–. ISBN 978-0-547-34543-7.
  3. ^ Lorrin Andrews (1865). A Dictionary of the Hawaiian Language: To which is Appended an English-Hawaiian Vocabulary and a Chronological Table of Remarkable Events. H. M. Whitney. ASIN B00AGZPHNE.
  4. ^ Forbes, David W. (1998). Hawaiian National Bibliography, Vol 3: 1851-1880. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-2503-4.
  5. ^ Robert H. Stauffer (2004). Kahana: How the Land Was Lost. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-2590-4.
  6. ^ Kamehiro, Stacy L. (2009). The Arts of Kingship: Hawaiian Art and National Culture of the Kal?kaua Era. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-3263-6.
  7. ^ Kam, Ralph Thomas (2017). Death Rites and Hawaiian Royalty: Funerary Practices in the Kamehameha and Kalakaua Dynasties, 1819-1953. McFarland. ISBN 978-1-4766-6846-8.

References

  1. ^ Mary Māmaka Kaiao Kuleana kope. "Hawaiian Dictionaries". University of Hawaii Press. Retrieved 2019-08-02.
  2. ^ a b McKinzie 1986, p. 102.
  3. ^ Sahlins 1996, p. 256.
  4. ^ 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 & Company. pp. 154–. Kameeuiamoku and Kamanawa, the twin children of Keawepoepoe", "..I have had access to represent them as sons of Keawepoepoe and Kanoena ; the former a son of Kalanikauleleiaiwi and her Kauai husband Lonoikahaupu ; the latter a daughter of Lonoanahulu, of the great Ehu family.
  5. ^ Pitman 1931, pp. 151–152.
  6. ^ "Ulukau: Genealogy book volume 44: Eia ka lani ke koi pae moku ka lauhulu paoki o ka aina". Retrieved 2020-09-29.
  7. ^ Samuel Manaiakalani Kamakau (1992). Ruling Chiefs of Hawaii. Kamehameha Schools Press. p. 147. ISBN 978-0-87336-014-2.
  8. ^ Fornander, Abraham (1920). Fornander collection of Hawaiian antiquities and folk-lore ... Bishop Museum Press. p. 320.
  9. ^ "A Cultural History of Three Traditional Hawaiian Sites on the West Coast of Hawaiʻi Island" by Diane Lee Rhodes, on National Park Service web site
  10. ^ Cummins Speakman and Rhoda Hackler (1989). "Vancouver in Hawaii". Hawaiian Journal of History. Hawaiian Historical Society, Honolulu. 23. hdl:10524/121.
  11. ^ Day, Arthur Grove (1984). History Makers of Hawaii: A Biographical Dictionary. Mutual Publishing of Honolulu. p. 66. ISBN 978-0-935180-09-1.
  12. ^ Lawrence, Mary S. (1912). Old Time Hawaiians and Their Work. Ginn. p. 126.
  13. ^ McKinzie 1986, pp. 70–72.
  14. ^ "Kameeiamoku, (k)". Our Family History and Ancestry. Families of Old Hawaii. Retrieved 2009-12-03.
  15. ^ a b William De Witt Alexander, ed. (1907). "Historical Sketch of Oahu College". Oahu college: list of trustees, presidents, instructors, matrons, librarians. Hawaiian Gazette Company for Punahou School. p. 3.
  16. ^ Kalākaua Chart 2008-02-16 at the Wayback Machine on the Royal Family of Hawaii official web Site
  17. ^ Taylor, Albert Pierce (1922). Under Hawaiian Skies: A Narrative of the Romance, Adventure and History of the Hawaiian Islands. Honolulu: Advertiser Publishing Company, Ltd. p. 326. OCLC 479709.

Bibliography

  • Pitman, Almira Hollander (1931). After fifty years: an appreciation, and a record of a unique incident. Priv. print., The Plimpton press. OCLC 3703871.
  • McKinzie, Edith Kawelohea (1986). Hawaiian Genealogies: Extracted from Hawaiian Language Newspapers - volume 2. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-939154-37-1.
  • Sahlins, Marshall (October 1996). How "Natives" Think: About Captain Cook, For Example. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-73369-2.

kameʻeiamoku, died, 1802, hawaiian, high, chief, counselor, state, king, kamehameha, called, kamehameha, uncle, really, cousin, kamehameha, mother, kekuiapoiwa, right, died1802puʻuki, lahaina, mauispousekamakaʻeheikuli, kealiʻiokahekili, kahikoloa, kauaʻi, puh. Kameʻeiamoku died 1802 was a Hawaiian high chief and the Counselor of State to King Kamehameha I He was called Kamehameha s uncle but he was really the cousin of Kamehameha s mother Kekuiapoiwa II KameʻeiamokuOn the right is KameʻeiamokuDied1802Puʻuki Lahaina MauiSpouseKamakaʻeheikuli Kealiʻiokahekili Kahikoloa of Kauaʻi Puhipuhiʻili KauhilanahonuaIssueKepoʻokalaniUlumaheihei Hoapili Hoʻolulu Loe wahine KekikipaʻaFatherKeawepoepoeMotherKanoena Contents 1 Birth and ancestry 2 The Metcalfes the Eleanora and the Fair American 3 Kamehameha and the unification of the islands 4 Family 5 Legacy 6 Ancestry 7 References 8 BibliographyBirth and ancestry EditAlong with his twin brother Kamanawa Kameʻeiamoku s parents were the keiki aliʻi prince or child of a chief 1 Keawepoepoe and Kanoena w As the son of Kalanikauleleiaiwi and Lonoikahaupu monarch s of several kingdoms between them Keawepoepoe was an aliʻi noble of Hawaii Maui Oahu and Kauai 2 As well being an aliʻi nui great king or supreme monarch Lonoikahaupu was a kahuna priest of the order of Lono order of Nahulu or Holoa e one of two priestly orders Ku Kuali i or Kauali i being the other 3 Through this union Keawepoepoe received the kapu o pahenakalani the prostrating kapu which is how the Hawaii aliʻi received the kapu a religious code of conduct called the kapu moe 2 Fornander identifies their mother Kanoena as the daughter of Lonoanahulu from the Ehu ohana family 4 Almira Hollander Pitman refers to Kanoena in 1931 as Keawepoepoe s cousin 5 However in the Hawaiian Genealogy book volume 44 Eia ka lani ke koi pae moku ka lauhulu paoki o ka aina it shows Lonoanahulu marrying Hikuakanaloauuoo and having Manohili who marries Halao which is the couple that has Kanoena That would make Lonoanahulua Kanoena s grandfather 6 Kamakau lists Mano hili as one of the men who assisted Kameʻeiamoku in his attack on the Fair American 7 Fornander also refers to Lonoanahulu along with the Kameʻeiamoku and Kamanawa in regards to lands passed down to them from Liloa Liloa king of Hawaii gave Kekaha in Kona Hawaii to Laeanuikekaumanamana in perpetuity and it descended to his grandchildren through Kualii Kauluoaonana Wahulu Lonoanahulu etc to Kameeiamoku and Kamanawa Umi likewise gave Kapalilua in South Kona to his child Kapunanahuanui a Umi from whom it descended through Ua Iwikaualii lama to Keeaumoku 8 The Metcalfes the Eleanora and the Fair American EditIn 1790 the American maritime fur trader Simon Metcalfe of the ship Eleanora mistreated Kameʻeiamoku when he boarded his ship Metcalfe later fired his cannons on the villagers of Olowalu killing about one hundred In retaliation Kameʻeiamoku attacked the next American ship to appear the schooner Fair American under the command of Thomas Humphrey Metcalfe the son of Simon Metcalfe All but one of the schooner s crew was killed including Thomas Humphrey Metcalfe The lone survivor was Welsh sailor Isaac Davis Another sailor from the Eleanora Englishman John Young was sent ashore to find out what happened and was also captured Davis and Young would both become military advisors and translators for Kamehameha 9 Kameʻeiamoku participated in negotiating a treaty in February 1795 with George Vancouver for British support of Kamehameha 10 Kamehameha and the unification of the islands EditKameʻeiamoku and his twin Kamanawa were among the four great aliʻi warriors of Kona to support Kamehameha I in his rebellion against his cousin Kiwalaʻō the other two being their half brother Keʻeaumoku Papaʻiahiahi and Keawe a Heulu 11 These were known as the Four Kona chiefs 12 They along with Kamehameha s kumu teacher of Kapu Kuialua named Kekuhaupiʻo were the center of the war council for Kamehameha when he took power in the battle of Mokuʻōhai in 1782 which strengthened his influence Family EditKameʻeiamoku had three or four wives and at least three sons His first wife Kamakaʻeheikuli was the mother of Kepoʻokalani c 1760 who was the double great grandfather of the last two monarchs of the Kingdom His second wife Kealiʻiokahekili was the mother of Ulumaheihei Hoapili c 1776 1840 His third wife Kahikoloa was mother of Hoʻolulu 1794 13 14 Kameʻeiamoku s descendants succeeded him in assisting Kamehameha after his death in 1802 in Lahaina on Maui 15 Legacy EditThrough his son Kepoʻokalani came the House of Kalakaua 16 One of his other sons Hoʻolulu would be the father of Kinoʻole o Liliha who married the notable American businessman Benjamin Pitman Daughter Kekikipaa would marry Kamehameha I but then marry Keawemauhili and become the mother of High Chiefess Kapiʻolani He lives on the coat of arms of the Kingdom of Hawaii On each side of the coat of arms was the figure of a chief in a feather cloak and a feather helmet The one on the left bearing a spear was Kamanawa and the one on the right with a Kahili feather standard was Kameʻeiamoku 17 The land he was given in 1795 was used by his granddaughter Kuini Liliha who donated it to Christian missionaries It eventually became Punahou School in 1841 15 Ancestry EditvteKeawepoepoe 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 k Kane Hawaiian for male or husband w Wahine female or wife Hawaiian genealogies use these as indicators for gender instead of m and f Kauihi a Hiwa k Kueluakawai w Kealohikanakamaikai k Kaneiahaka w Kainaaila k Kapulauki w Kauakahikuaʻanaʻauakane w Iwikauikaua k Keakamahana w Kauakahilau k Kuluina w Kaneikaiwilani k Keakealaniwahine w Kanaloakapulehu k Ahu a ʻI k Piʻilaniwahine w Kamuokaumeheiwa w Lonoikahaupu k Kalanikauleleiaiwi w Kauaua a Mahi k Keaweʻikekahialiʻiokamoku k Lonomaʻaikanaka w Kaumeheiwa k Kaʻapuwai w Keawepoepoe k Kumaʻaiku w Kanoena w Haʻae a mahi k Kekelakekeokalani w Kalanikeʻeaumoku k Kamakaimoku w Kalaninuiamamao k Kaeokulani k Kamakahelei w Kameʻeiamoku k Kamakaʻeheikuli w KeeaumokuPapaiahiahi k Namahanaʻi Kaleleokalani w Kamanawa k Kekelaokalani w Kekuʻiapoiwa II w Keōua k Kalola Pupuka w Kalaniʻōpuʻu k Kapuaamohu w Kaumualii k Kepookalani k Alapai Wahine w Keohohiwa w Kaheiheimalie w Namahana Piʻia w Peleuli w Kamehameha I k Kekuiapoiwa Liliha w Kiwalaʻō k Kaʻahumanu w Kalaʻimamahu k Kahōʻanoku Kinaʻu k Wahinepio w Palila Nohomualani k Moana w Keōpuolani w Kinoiki Kekaulike w Kuhiō Kalanianaʻole k Kealiʻiahonui k Kekauʻōnohi w Levi Haʻalelea k Eia k Kauwa w Kamanawa II k c 1785 October 20 1840 i Kamokuiki w died 1840 ii ʻAikanaka k died 1837 iii Kamaʻeokalani w Iʻahuʻula w Naihekukui k Kapaakea k 1815 November 13 1866 iv Keohokalole w died April 6 1869 v Kekauluohi w c 1794 vi June 7 1845 vii Charles Kanaʻina k May 4 1798 March 13 1877 Kamamalu w c 1802 1824 Kamehameha II k c 1797 July 14 1824 Kinaʻu w c 1805 April 4 1839 Kekuanaoʻa k c 1791 November 24 1868 Kamehameha III k March 17 1814 December 15 1854 Kalama w 1817 September 20 1870 Kapiʻolani w December 31 1834 June 24 1899 Kalakaua k November 16 1836 January 20 1891 Liliʻuokalani w September 2 1838 November 11 1917 John Owen Dominis k March 10 1832 August 23 1891 Lunalilo k January 31 1835 February 3 1874 Notes Forbes 1998 p 256 Twelve days after the first Hawaiian Constitution was signed a chief Kamanawa II grandfather of future monarchs David Kalakaua and Lydia Makaeha Liliuokalani was hung for the murder of his wife The method used was poison and after a trial by jury Kamanawa and Lonoapuakau spelled Lonopuakau in title captain of the Hawaiian vessel Hooikaika were convicted The sentence of death was set by the premier Kekauluohi and agreed upon by the king only after a long consultation with Commander Charles Wilkes of the United States Exploring Expedition This is the printed order setting the date of execution for October 20 1840 a Yalom 2008 p 241 Kamokuiki Died 1840 b Andrews 1865 p 557 1837 Aikanaka died g Forbes 1998 p 428 Caesar Kapaakea He died in Honolulu on November 13 1866 d Stauffer 2004 p 61 Keohokalole died in Hilo on April 6 1869 e Kamehiro 2009 p 61 High Chiefess Kekauluohi ca 1794 1845 premier wife of Kamehameha I and mother of King Lunalilo built her house at this site on the premises known as Pohukaina z Kam 2017 p 205 Hawaiian Gazette lists Kekauluohi Mother of Lunalilo died June 7 1845 h David W Forbes 1998 Hawaiian National Bibliography 1780 1900 1831 1850 University of Hawaii Press pp 256 ISBN 978 0 8248 2379 5 Marilyn Yalom 2008 The American Resting Place 400 Years of History Through Our Cemeteries and Burial Grounds Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 241 ISBN 978 0 547 34543 7 Lorrin Andrews 1865 A Dictionary of the Hawaiian Language To which is Appended an English Hawaiian Vocabulary and a Chronological Table of Remarkable Events H M Whitney ASIN B00AGZPHNE Forbes David W 1998 Hawaiian National Bibliography Vol 3 1851 1880 University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2503 4 Robert H Stauffer 2004 Kahana How the Land Was Lost University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2590 4 Kamehiro Stacy L 2009 The Arts of Kingship Hawaiian Art and National Culture of the Kal kaua Era University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 3263 6 Kam Ralph Thomas 2017 Death Rites and Hawaiian Royalty Funerary Practices in the Kamehameha and Kalakaua Dynasties 1819 1953 McFarland ISBN 978 1 4766 6846 8 References Edit Mary Mamaka Kaiao Kuleana kope Hawaiian Dictionaries University of Hawaii Press Retrieved 2019 08 02 a b McKinzie 1986 p 102 Sahlins 1996 p 256 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 pp 154 Kameeuiamoku and Kamanawa the twin children of Keawepoepoe I have had access to represent them as sons of Keawepoepoe and Kanoena the former a son of Kalanikauleleiaiwi and her Kauai husband Lonoikahaupu the latter a daughter of Lonoanahulu of the great Ehu family Pitman 1931 pp 151 152 Ulukau Genealogy book volume 44 Eia ka lani ke koi pae moku ka lauhulu paoki o ka aina Retrieved 2020 09 29 Samuel Manaiakalani Kamakau 1992 Ruling Chiefs of Hawaii Kamehameha Schools Press p 147 ISBN 978 0 87336 014 2 Fornander Abraham 1920 Fornander collection of Hawaiian antiquities and folk lore Bishop Museum Press p 320 A Cultural History of Three Traditional Hawaiian Sites on the West Coast of Hawaiʻi Island by Diane Lee Rhodes on National Park Service web site Cummins Speakman and Rhoda Hackler 1989 Vancouver in Hawaii Hawaiian Journal of History Hawaiian Historical Society Honolulu 23 hdl 10524 121 Day Arthur Grove 1984 History Makers of Hawaii A Biographical Dictionary Mutual Publishing of Honolulu p 66 ISBN 978 0 935180 09 1 Lawrence Mary S 1912 Old Time Hawaiians and Their Work Ginn p 126 McKinzie 1986 pp 70 72 Kameeiamoku k Our Family History and Ancestry Families of Old Hawaii Retrieved 2009 12 03 a b William De Witt Alexander ed 1907 Historical Sketch of Oahu College Oahu college list of trustees presidents instructors matrons librarians Hawaiian Gazette Company for Punahou School p 3 Kalakaua Chart Archived 2008 02 16 at the Wayback Machine on the Royal Family of Hawaii official web Site Taylor Albert Pierce 1922 Under Hawaiian Skies A Narrative of the Romance Adventure and History of the Hawaiian Islands Honolulu Advertiser Publishing Company Ltd p 326 OCLC 479709 Bibliography Edit Pitman Almira Hollander 1931 After fifty years an appreciation and a record of a unique incident Priv print The Plimpton press OCLC 3703871 McKinzie Edith Kawelohea 1986 Hawaiian Genealogies Extracted from Hawaiian Language Newspapers volume 2 University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 939154 37 1 Sahlins Marshall October 1996 How Natives Think About Captain Cook For Example University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 73369 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kameʻeiamoku amp oldid 1120818493, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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