Chief Kalehenui (Hawaiian for "Kalehe the Great") was an ancient Hawaiian nobleman (Aliʻi) of Tahitian ancestry, and he lived on Oahu.[1][2]

He was a son of wizard Maweke[3] (chief of the highest known rank) and his wife Naiolaukea, and thus a brother of Chiefs Mulielealiʻi and Keaunui,[4] who was the father of the very High Chiefess Nuakea of Molokai.[5][6]

It was Kalehenui who was a ruler of Koʻolau Range; dominion over Koʻolau was given to Kalehenui by Maweke.

Marriage

Chief Kalehenui had married a woman called Kahinao (or Kahinalo, Kahinalu).[7][8]

The only known child of Kalehenui and his spouse was Princess Hinakaimauliʻawa, who was named after goddess Hina.

The grandchild of Kalehenui was Princess Mualani.

ManWomanChild
MawekeNaiolaukeaMulielealiʻi
Keaunui
Kalehenui
KalehenuiKahinaloHinakaimauliʻawa
KahiwakapuHinakaimauliʻawaMualani
KaomealaniMualaniKuomua
Kapuaʻamua
KuomuaKapuaʻamuaKawalewaleoku
KawalewaleokuUnaulaKaulaulaokalani

References

  1. He is also known as Kalehunui or as Kalehenui-a-Maweke, which connects him to his father.
  2. Māweke, A Voyaging Aliʻi
  3. Family of Maweke
  4. Kamakau, Samuel M., Ruling Chiefs of Hawaii (Revised Edition). Appendix Genealogies (Kamehameha Schools Press, Honolulu, Hawaii, 1961).
  5. Kalākaua, His Hawaiian Majesty. The Legends And Myths of Hawaii: The Fable and Folk-lore of a Strange People. Tokyo, Japan: Charles E. Tuttle Company Inc. of Rutland, Vermont & Tokyo Japan, 1972.
  6. Native Planters in Old Hawaii: their life, lore, and environment; by Edward Smith Craighill Handy; Elizabeth Green Handy; Mary Kawena Pukui. Honolulu, 1972.
  7. Kamakau, Samuel Manaiakalani, Ka Nupepa Kuokoa (Newspaper). 1865 Ka Moolelo O Hawaii Nei. Translated by Mary Kawena Pukui.
  8. Kamakau, Samuel M. Ruling Chiefs of Hawaii (Revised Edition), Appendix Genealogies (Kamehameha Schools Press, Honolulu, Hawaii 1961).
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