Kawaokaohele | |
---|---|
Aliʻi of Maui | |
Spouse | Kepalaoa |
Issue | Piʻilani |
Father | Kahekili I |
Mother | Haukanuimakamaka |
Religion | Hawaiian religion |
Kawaokaohele (Hawaiian for "our days of poverty") was a High Chief who ruled the island of Maui in ancient Hawaii.[1]
Biography
Kawaokaohele was a son of Kahekili I and Haukanuimakamaka, who was a High Chiefess and is also known as Hauanuihonialawahine.[2] She was born on Kauai, but married Kahekili on Maui. Kawaokaohele succeeded his father. His reign was prosperous.[3] No war occurred during Kawaokaohele was ruler of the island.[4]
Kawaokaohele’s sister, beautiful Keleanohoanaʻapiʻapi, was abducted and married into the noble family of Oahu.[5]
Marriage
Kawaokaohele had married Kepalaoa, whose pedigree is not remembered, but who was probably a Maui chiefess or an Oahu princess. She bore a famous son, Piʻilani,[6] and Kawaokaohele was succeeded by him.[7]
Legend
In one ancient legend, Kawaokaohele is represented as the foster father of Piʻilani.
According to this old story, god Kū was the biological father of Piʻilani.
Family tree
Notes
- ↑ Tales and Traditions of the People of Old: Na Mo'Olelo a Ka Po'E Kahiko by Samuel Kamakau
- ↑ "Family of Haukanimaka". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2012-06-08.
- ↑ How Chiefs Became Kings: Divine Kingship and the Rise of Archaic States in ancient Hawaii by Patrick Vinton Kirch
- ↑ Abraham Fornander, An Account of the Polynesian Race: Its Origin and Migrations, Rutland, Vermont: Charles E. Tuttle Company, 1969.
- ↑ Pacific Passages: An Anthology of Surf Writing by Patrick J. Moser
- ↑ Moku'ula: Maui's sacred island by P. Christiaan Klieger
- ↑ The Stories of the Genealogies of Maui