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Sālote Tupou III

Sālote Tupou III (born Sālote Mafile‘o Pilolevu; 13 March 1900 – 16 December 1965) was Queen of Tonga from 1918 to her death in 1965. She reigned for nearly 48 years, longer than any other Tongan monarch. She was well known for her height, standing 6 ft 3 in (1.91 metres) tall in her prime.[1][2]

Sālote Tupou III
Queen Salote in her coronation robe
Queen of Tonga
Reign5 April 1918 – 16 December 1965
Coronation11 October 1918, Nukuʻalofa
PredecessorGeorge Tupou II
SuccessorTāufaʻāhau Tupou IV
Prime Ministers
Born(1900-03-13)13 March 1900
Royal Palace, Tonga
Died16 December 1965(1965-12-16) (aged 65)
Aotea Hospital, Auckland, New Zealand
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1916; died 1941)
IssueTāufaʻāhau Tupou IV
Prince Uiliami Tuku‘aho
Prince Fatafehi Tu'ipelehake
Names
Sālote Mafile‘o Pilolevu
HouseTupou
FatherGeorge Tupou II
MotherLavinia Veiongo
ReligionFree Wesleyan Church

Early life Edit

 
Crown Princess Sālote as a child in 1908

Sālote (Charlotte) was born on 13 March 1900 in Tonga as the eldest daughter and heir of King George Tupou II of Tonga and his first wife Queen Lavinia Veiongo.[3] She was baptized and named after her great-grandmother Sālote Mafile‘o Pilolevu (daughter of George Tupou I).[4] The young princess was the source of some hostility due to the nature of her parents' marriage.[5]

Her mother, Queen Lavinia, died from tuberculosis on 24 April 1902.[6] After her death, the Chiefs in Tonga urged King George Tupou II for many years to remarry to produce a male heir. On 11 November 1909, when the King finally married the 16-year-old ʻAnaseini Takipō (half-sister of the rejected candidate 'Ofakivava'u' from the first search of a wife for the King), the chiefs were jubilant. Queen Anaseni gave birth twice, both girls: Princess ʻOnelua (born 20 March 1911; died of convulsions aged six months, on 19 August 1911) and Princess ʻElisiva Fusipala Taukiʻonetuku (born 26 July 1912; died from tubercular peritonitis on 21 April 1933 aged 20).[7]

Tongan tradition allows offsprings from previous marriages to be killed. In order to protect her, the King sent Sālote away to Auckland in December 1909. She stayed with a family called Kronfeld and would maintain this connection throughout her life.[8]

Education Edit

In December 1909, Sālote was sent to Auckland, New Zealand, to start five years of education.[9] She returned to Tonga every Christmas holiday.

In 1913, Sālote was sent to the Anglican Diocesan School for Girls, a boarding school in Epsom, New Zealand. She would study there for 2 years before being ordered to stay in Tonga. Although the King wanted Sālote to continue her education, the chiefs convinced him otherwise. Queen Takipō had not given birth to a son and hence according to the Constitution of 1875, after her fifteenth birthday, Sālote became the heir presumptive to the Tongan throne.[10]

Personal history Edit

In 1917, Sālote married Viliami Tungī Mailefihi, an adult noble then 30 years old, 13 years her senior. At the age of 18, she became a mother for the first time. Her children were:

Sālote had a somewhat troubled medical history. She suffered from diabetes which required frequent visits to Auckland for treatment. An operation had to be conducted in 1935 to treat her cancer and during tests in Auckland in 1965 a second bout of cancer was found. Despite this the Queen returned to Tonga in May and even participated in a festival in July 1965 celebrating her record reign. 10,000 children were allowed to enter the palace grounds and wave at the Queen as she sat on the verandah. This would be the last time the Tongan people saw their Queen. Queen Sālote died peacefully on 16 December 1965 at 12:15 am. Her body was flown back to Tonga by the Royal New Zealand Air Force.[13]

The funeral service took took place on December 23 with 50,000 people in attendance. Her body was placed next to her husband and her tomb was guarded for several nights, as per tradition.[14]

Sālote was well-loved and respected by her people. Many Tongans saw her as "tough, hard-working, just, ambitious".[15] She was also very approachable with her palace doors being open to all. This led to her being very knowledgeable not just of Tongan tradition (which she was already well-versed from prior to her marriage), but also of specific family histories, which are very important in Tongan culture. In fact she would often assist and impress visiting anthropologists with her detailed knowledge of the culture.[16]

Achievements Edit

 
Tongan 1 paʻanga coin depicting Salote Tupou III
 
Queen Salote inspects her troops following Tonga's declaration of war on Nazi Germany in 1940.

Her marriage to Tungī Mailefihi had been a political masterstroke by her father, as Tungī was a direct descendant of the Tu‘i Ha‘atakalaua.[17] Their children, therefore, combined the blood of the three grand royal dynasties in Tonga.

In 1920–1921, she assisted the Bernice P. Bishop Museum's Bayard Dominick Expedition with their mapping of Tongan archaeological sites by providing access to localities and information. The expedition's reports on the Tongan past—including a large volume of material which still remains unpublished even today—were primarily compiled by Edward Winslow Gifford and provided the groundwork for comprehensive studies of the pre-contact history of the Tongans (Burley 1998). She was also a keen writer and author of dance songs and love poems, published in 2004, edited by her biographer, Elizabeth Wood-Ellem.[18][19]

Sālote led Tonga through World War II, with the islands declaring war on Germany in 1940 and on Japan in 1941 following the attack on Pearl Harbor.[20] She put Tonga's resources at the disposal of Britain and supported the Allied cause throughout the war. Tongan troops saw battle against the Japanese in the Solomon Islands campaign, including on Guadalcanal.[21]

She brought Tonga to international attention when, during her sole visit to Europe, she attended the 1953 coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in London. During the coronation procession, it began to rain and hoods were placed on the carriages in the procession. As Tongan custom dictates that one should not imitate the actions of persons one is honouring,[22] she refused a hood and rode through the pouring rain in an open carriage with Sultan Ibrahim IV of Kelantan, endearing herself to spectators.[22][23] She served as Chairman of the Tonga Traditions Committee 1954–1965 and patronised the Tonga Red Cross Society.[24]

Depictions in popular culture Edit

Trinidadian-Venezuelan musician Edmundo Ros composed, recorded, and performed a calypso song titled "The Queen of Tonga" whose lyrics refer to Queen Sālote attending the coronation of Elizabeth II.[25]

Family tree Edit

Honours Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ "GREAT BRITAIN: Reunion in Paradise". Time. 28 December 1953.
  2. ^ Chloe Foussianes (25 October 2018). "Queen Elizabeth Just Honored Her Friend Queen Salote, Tonga's 6-Foot Queen Who Reigned for 48 Years". Town & Country.
  3. ^ Wood-Ellem 1999, p. 1.
  4. ^ Wood-Ellem 1999, pp. 8, 19.
  5. ^ Wood-Ellem 1999, p. 8.
  6. ^ Wood-Ellem 1999, p. 9.
  7. ^ Wood-Ellem 1999, p. 12–13, 15, 32.
  8. ^ Wood-Ellem 1999, p. 13, 323.
  9. ^ Queen Salote Tupou (1900–1965), Tepapa.govt.nz, Retrieved 2 August 2016
  10. ^ Wood-Ellem 1999, p. 15.
  11. ^ a b c Eustis 1997, p. 101.
  12. ^ Wood-Ellem 1999, p. 162.
  13. ^ Wood & Wood-Ellem 1977, p. 207-208.
  14. ^ Wood & Wood-Ellem 1977, p. 208.
  15. ^ Wood-Ellem 1999, p. x.
  16. ^ Wood & Wood-Ellem 1977, p. 194.
  17. ^ Wood & Wood-Ellem 1977, p. 192.
  18. ^ "Queen Salote's masterpiece published in Tonga". Matangi Tonga. 23 September 2004. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  19. ^ "Queen Salote's masterpieces reprinted". Matangi Tonga. 15 September 2019. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  20. ^ "The United States Invasion of Tonga In 1942". Retrieved 23 July 2021.
  21. ^ Garamone, Jim (9 November 2010). "Mullen Thanks Tonga for Steadfast Support". U.S. Navy. Retrieved 9 January 2018.
  22. ^ a b Theroux, Paul (7 June 1992). "In the Court of the King of Tonga". The New York Times. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
  23. ^ Panter-Downes, Mollie (5 June 1953). "The Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II". The New Yorker. Retrieved 9 September 2022.
  24. ^ Kerry, James (2002). "Review of Salote, Queen of Paradise, by Margaret Hixon". The Contemporary Pacific. 14 (2): 487. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  25. ^ Youtube
  26. ^ Brierley, Mark. "From the Archives: Queen Salote of Tonga". Royal Over-Seas League (ROSL). Retrieved 4 December 2021.
  27. ^ Archive
  28. ^ "Tonga profile – Timeline – BBC News". BBC News. 23 December 2011. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
  29. ^ "Queen Salote's Cloak – Picture of Tonga National Cultural Centre, Tongatapu Island". Tripadvisor.com. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
  30. ^ "Image: lotte-meitner-graf-salote-tupou-iii-1900-65-of-tonga.jpg, (366 × 488 px)". Imgc.allpostersimages.com. Retrieved 4 September 2015.

References Edit

  • Bain, Kenneth Ross, (1967), The Friendly Islanders: a story of Queen Salote and her people, London: Hodder & Stoughton.
  • Burley, David V. (1998): Tongan Archaeology and the Tongan Past, 2850-150 B.P. Journal of World Prehistory 12 (3): 337–392. doi:10.1023/A:1022322303769 (HTML abstract)
  • Eustis, Nelson (1997). The King of Tonga: A Biography. Adelaide: Hobby Investment. ISBN 978-0-646-33077-8. OCLC 38837175.
  • Kaeppler, A.L.; Taumoefolau, M.; Tukuʻaho, N., & Wood-Ellem, E. (2004): Songs and poems of Queen Salote. ISBN 978-982-213-008-9
  • Luke, Sir Harry (1954), Queen Salote & Her Kingdom, London: Putnam.
  • Wood-Ellem, Elizabeth (1999). Queen Sālote of Tonga: The Story of an Era 1900–1965. Auckland, N.Z: Auckland University Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-2529-4. OCLC 262293605.
  • Wood, Alfred Harold; Wood-Ellem, Elizabeth (1977). "Queen Sālote Tupou III". In Rutherford, Noel (ed.). Friendly Islands: A History of Tonga. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195505190.

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Sālote Tupou III of Tonga at Wikimedia Commons
Regnal titles
Preceded by Queen of Tonga
1918–1965
Succeeded by

sālote, tupou, born, sālote, mafile, pilolevu, march, 1900, december, 1965, queen, tonga, from, 1918, death, 1965, reigned, nearly, years, longer, than, other, tongan, monarch, well, known, height, standing, metres, tall, prime, queen, salote, coronation, robe. Salote Tupou III born Salote Mafile o Pilolevu 13 March 1900 16 December 1965 was Queen of Tonga from 1918 to her death in 1965 She reigned for nearly 48 years longer than any other Tongan monarch She was well known for her height standing 6 ft 3 in 1 91 metres tall in her prime 1 2 Salote Tupou IIIQueen Salote in her coronation robeQueen of TongaReign5 April 1918 16 December 1965Coronation11 October 1918 NukuʻalofaPredecessorGeorge Tupou IISuccessorTaufaʻahau Tupou IVPrime MinistersSee List Hon Tevita TuʻivakanoPrince ViliamiHon Solomone Ula AtaCrown Prince TaufaʻahauBorn 1900 03 13 13 March 1900Royal Palace TongaDied16 December 1965 1965 12 16 aged 65 Aotea Hospital Auckland New ZealandBurialMala e KulaSpousePrince Viliami Tungi Mailefihi m 1916 died 1941 wbr IssueTaufaʻahau Tupou IVPrince Uiliami Tuku ahoPrince Fatafehi Tu ipelehakeNamesSalote Mafile o PilolevuHouseTupouFatherGeorge Tupou IIMotherLavinia VeiongoReligionFree Wesleyan Church Contents 1 Early life 2 Education 3 Personal history 4 Achievements 5 Depictions in popular culture 6 Family tree 7 Honours 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksEarly life Edit nbsp Crown Princess Salote as a child in 1908Salote Charlotte was born on 13 March 1900 in Tonga as the eldest daughter and heir of King George Tupou II of Tonga and his first wife Queen Lavinia Veiongo 3 She was baptized and named after her great grandmother Salote Mafile o Pilolevu daughter of George Tupou I 4 The young princess was the source of some hostility due to the nature of her parents marriage 5 Her mother Queen Lavinia died from tuberculosis on 24 April 1902 6 After her death the Chiefs in Tonga urged King George Tupou II for many years to remarry to produce a male heir On 11 November 1909 when the King finally married the 16 year old ʻAnaseini Takipō half sister of the rejected candidate Ofakivava u from the first search of a wife for the King the chiefs were jubilant Queen Anaseni gave birth twice both girls Princess ʻOnelua born 20 March 1911 died of convulsions aged six months on 19 August 1911 and Princess ʻElisiva Fusipala Taukiʻonetuku born 26 July 1912 died from tubercular peritonitis on 21 April 1933 aged 20 7 Tongan tradition allows offsprings from previous marriages to be killed In order to protect her the King sent Salote away to Auckland in December 1909 She stayed with a family called Kronfeld and would maintain this connection throughout her life 8 Education EditIn December 1909 Salote was sent to Auckland New Zealand to start five years of education 9 She returned to Tonga every Christmas holiday In 1913 Salote was sent to the Anglican Diocesan School for Girls a boarding school in Epsom New Zealand She would study there for 2 years before being ordered to stay in Tonga Although the King wanted Salote to continue her education the chiefs convinced him otherwise Queen Takipō had not given birth to a son and hence according to the Constitution of 1875 after her fifteenth birthday Salote became the heir presumptive to the Tongan throne 10 Personal history EditIn 1917 Salote married Viliami Tungi Mailefihi an adult noble then 30 years old 13 years her senior At the age of 18 she became a mother for the first time Her children were Prince Siaosi Taufaʻahau Tupoulahi 4 July 1918 10 September 2006 later known as King Taufa ahau Tupou IV 11 Prince Uiliami Tuku aho 5 November 1919 28 April 1936 who died young 11 Prince Sione Ngu Manumataongo 7 January 1922 10 April 1999 later known as 5th Tu ipelehake Fatafehi 11 Three pregnancies ended in miscarriages 12 Salote had a somewhat troubled medical history She suffered from diabetes which required frequent visits to Auckland for treatment An operation had to be conducted in 1935 to treat her cancer and during tests in Auckland in 1965 a second bout of cancer was found Despite this the Queen returned to Tonga in May and even participated in a festival in July 1965 celebrating her record reign 10 000 children were allowed to enter the palace grounds and wave at the Queen as she sat on the verandah This would be the last time the Tongan people saw their Queen Queen Salote died peacefully on 16 December 1965 at 12 15 am Her body was flown back to Tonga by the Royal New Zealand Air Force 13 The funeral service took took place on December 23 with 50 000 people in attendance Her body was placed next to her husband and her tomb was guarded for several nights as per tradition 14 Salote was well loved and respected by her people Many Tongans saw her as tough hard working just ambitious 15 She was also very approachable with her palace doors being open to all This led to her being very knowledgeable not just of Tongan tradition which she was already well versed from prior to her marriage but also of specific family histories which are very important in Tongan culture In fact she would often assist and impress visiting anthropologists with her detailed knowledge of the culture 16 Achievements Edit nbsp Tongan 1 paʻanga coin depicting Salote Tupou III nbsp Queen Salote inspects her troops following Tonga s declaration of war on Nazi Germany in 1940 Her marriage to Tungi Mailefihi had been a political masterstroke by her father as Tungi was a direct descendant of the Tu i Ha atakalaua 17 Their children therefore combined the blood of the three grand royal dynasties in Tonga In 1920 1921 she assisted the Bernice P Bishop Museum s Bayard Dominick Expedition with their mapping of Tongan archaeological sites by providing access to localities and information The expedition s reports on the Tongan past including a large volume of material which still remains unpublished even today were primarily compiled by Edward Winslow Gifford and provided the groundwork for comprehensive studies of the pre contact history of the Tongans Burley 1998 She was also a keen writer and author of dance songs and love poems published in 2004 edited by her biographer Elizabeth Wood Ellem 18 19 Salote led Tonga through World War II with the islands declaring war on Germany in 1940 and on Japan in 1941 following the attack on Pearl Harbor 20 She put Tonga s resources at the disposal of Britain and supported the Allied cause throughout the war Tongan troops saw battle against the Japanese in the Solomon Islands campaign including on Guadalcanal 21 She brought Tonga to international attention when during her sole visit to Europe she attended the 1953 coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in London During the coronation procession it began to rain and hoods were placed on the carriages in the procession As Tongan custom dictates that one should not imitate the actions of persons one is honouring 22 she refused a hood and rode through the pouring rain in an open carriage with Sultan Ibrahim IV of Kelantan endearing herself to spectators 22 23 She served as Chairman of the Tonga Traditions Committee 1954 1965 and patronised the Tonga Red Cross Society 24 Depictions in popular culture EditTrinidadian Venezuelan musician Edmundo Ros composed recorded and performed a calypso song titled The Queen of Tonga whose lyrics refer to Queen Salote attending the coronation of Elizabeth II 25 Family tree EditvteTupou family treeTuʻi Haʻatakalaua lineTuʻi Tonga lineTuʻi Kanokupolu lineKalolaine FusimataliliGeorge Tupou IFinau KaunangaFifita VavʻauTevita ʻUngaSalote Mafile o PilolevuFiliaipulotuFusipala TaukiʻonetukuFatafehi ToutaitokotahaLavinia VeiongoGeorge Tupou IIʻAnaseini TakipōViliami Tungi MailefihiSalote Tupou IIIVilai Tupou illegitimate son Tupou SeiniTaufaʻahau Tupou IVHalaevalu MataʻahoʻAhomeʻeSiaosi Alipate Tupou Baron VaeaTuputupu Ma afu o TukuialahiGeorge Tupou VTupou VINanasipauʻu TukuʻahoTupoutoʻa ʻUlukalalaSinaitakala FakafanuaTaufaʻahau ManumataongoReference Fox James J Sather Clifford 1996 Origins Ancestry and Alliance Explorations in Austronesian Ethnography Canberra Department of Anthropology Australian National University p 252 ISBN 978 0 7315 2432 7 OCLC 245762652 Kaeppler Adrienne Lois D C 2008 The Pacific Arts of Polynesia and Micronesia Oxford Oxford University Press p 90 ISBN 978 0 19 284238 1 OCLC 236158882 Volkel Svenja 2010 Social Structure Space and Possession in Tongan Culture and Language An Ethnolinguistic Study Amsterdam Philadelphia John Benjamins Publishing p 45 ISBN 978 90 272 0283 3 Wood Ellem Elizabeth 1999 Queen Salote of Tonga The Story of an Era 1900 1965 Auckland N Z Auckland University Press p front ISBN 978 0 8248 2529 4 OCLC 262293605 Honours Edit nbsp United Kingdom Honorary Dame Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George 26 nbsp United Kingdom Honorary Dame Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order 27 nbsp United Kingdom Honorary Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire 28 29 30 nbsp United Kingdom Honorary Dame Grand Cross of the Order of St John nbsp United Kingdom Recipient of the King George V Silver Jubilee Medal citation needed nbsp United Kingdom Recipient of the King George VI Coronation Medal citation needed nbsp United Kingdom Recipient of the Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal citation needed Notes Edit GREAT BRITAIN Reunion in Paradise Time 28 December 1953 Chloe Foussianes 25 October 2018 Queen Elizabeth Just Honored Her Friend Queen Salote Tonga s 6 Foot Queen Who Reigned for 48 Years Town amp Country Wood Ellem 1999 p 1 Wood Ellem 1999 pp 8 19 Wood Ellem 1999 p 8 Wood Ellem 1999 p 9 Wood Ellem 1999 p 12 13 15 32 Wood Ellem 1999 p 13 323 Queen Salote Tupou 1900 1965 Tepapa govt nz Retrieved 2 August 2016 Wood Ellem 1999 p 15 a b c Eustis 1997 p 101 Wood Ellem 1999 p 162 Wood amp Wood Ellem 1977 p 207 208 Wood amp Wood Ellem 1977 p 208 Wood Ellem 1999 p x Wood amp Wood Ellem 1977 p 194 Wood amp Wood Ellem 1977 p 192 Queen Salote s masterpiece published in Tonga Matangi Tonga 23 September 2004 Retrieved 14 December 2022 Queen Salote s masterpieces reprinted Matangi Tonga 15 September 2019 Retrieved 14 December 2022 The United States Invasion of Tonga In 1942 Retrieved 23 July 2021 Garamone Jim 9 November 2010 Mullen Thanks Tonga for Steadfast Support U S Navy Retrieved 9 January 2018 a b Theroux Paul 7 June 1992 In the Court of the King of Tonga The New York Times Retrieved 4 September 2015 Panter Downes Mollie 5 June 1953 The Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II The New Yorker Retrieved 9 September 2022 Kerry James 2002 Review of Salote Queen of Paradise by Margaret Hixon The Contemporary Pacific 14 2 487 Retrieved 14 December 2022 Youtube Brierley Mark From the Archives Queen Salote of Tonga Royal Over Seas League ROSL Retrieved 4 December 2021 Archive Tonga profile Timeline BBC News BBC News 23 December 2011 Retrieved 4 September 2015 Queen Salote s Cloak Picture of Tonga National Cultural Centre Tongatapu Island Tripadvisor com Retrieved 4 September 2015 Image lotte meitner graf salote tupou iii 1900 65 of tonga jpg 366 488 px Imgc allpostersimages com Retrieved 4 September 2015 References EditBain Kenneth Ross 1967 The Friendly Islanders a story of Queen Salote and her people London Hodder amp Stoughton Burley David V 1998 Tongan Archaeology and the Tongan Past 2850 150 B P Journal of World Prehistory 12 3 337 392 doi 10 1023 A 1022322303769 HTML abstract Eustis Nelson 1997 The King of Tonga A Biography Adelaide Hobby Investment ISBN 978 0 646 33077 8 OCLC 38837175 Kaeppler A L Taumoefolau M Tukuʻaho N amp Wood Ellem E 2004 Songs and poems of Queen Salote ISBN 978 982 213 008 9 Luke Sir Harry 1954 Queen Salote amp Her Kingdom London Putnam Wood Ellem Elizabeth 1999 Queen Salote of Tonga The Story of an Era 1900 1965 Auckland N Z Auckland University Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2529 4 OCLC 262293605 Wood Alfred Harold Wood Ellem Elizabeth 1977 Queen Salote Tupou III In Rutherford Noel ed Friendly Islands A History of Tonga Melbourne Oxford University Press ISBN 0195505190 External links Edit nbsp Media related to Salote Tupou III of Tonga at Wikimedia CommonsRegnal titlesPreceded byGeorge Tupou II Queen of Tonga1918 1965 Succeeded byTaufaʻahau Tupou IV Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Salote Tupou III amp oldid 1175405363, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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