- Kaihikapuamanuia
Kaihikapu-a-Manuia was the 14th
Alii Aimoku of Oahu . He reigned as the titular chieftain or King of the island ofOahu and all its territories it may of claim at the time.
=Early Life= He was the second son ofKalaimanuia , the Alii Aimoku of Oahu, and her husbandLupe Kapukeahomakalii , a son of High ChiefKalanuili and High ChiefessNaluehiloikeahomakalii . His brothers wereKu-a-Manuia and Hao, and his sister was the High ChiefessKekela . According to ancient custom the sons were given over to their several Kahus or guardians, chiefs of high rank and generally related to the parents, to be by them brought up and educated. Thus he, was brought up atWaimanalo ,Koolaupoko , and his brothers and sister were brought up away from each other.Conflict with Ku
Before his mother's death she made the following dispositions of the government and the land. She appointed his elder brother, Ku-a-Manuia, to succeed her as Moi of Oahu, and she gave him the Kona and
Koolaupoko districts for his maintenance. ToKaihikapu-a-Manuia , she confided the charge of thekapu , the religious culte, and her family gods, " Kukalani" and " Kuhooneenuu;" and for his maintenance she gave him the lands ofKalauao ,Aiea ,Halawa , andMoanalua . To Hao she gave the districts ofEwa andWaianae , subject in authority, however, to his two elder brothers. And to her daughter, Kekela, she gave the districts ofWaialua andKoolauloa . This division of the government and the religion had its comtemporary on Hawaii between the rival brothersHakau andUmi and it would reoccur again after the death ofKalaniopuu , 300 hundred years later, and the division of the Big Island betweenKamehameha andKiwalao . In all these incident the one who inherited the family gods would be the eventual victors.His brother,
Ku-a-Manuia , succeed to the dignity and position of Moi after their mothers death. Ku-a-Manuia was atyrant whose greed angered the priests and the common people. Ku-a-Manuia was especially jealous of the land-holding of his brothers Hao and Kaihikapu-a-Manuia. Kaihikapu-a-Manuia’s disputes with his brother continued for the six years, when finally Ku-a-Manuia resolved on an armed attack on his brother, Kaihikapu-a-Manuia. At the time, Kaihikapu-a-Manuia was building the two fishponds at Keehi known as Kaihikapu and Lelepaua. He cleverly defended himself against this sudden surprise attack; the commoners and his brother Hao hurried to his assistance and a general battle was fought between Lelepaua and Kapuaikaula, in which his elder brother was slain. Today a memorial stone still point out on that field as marking the place for Kaihikapu-a-Manuia great victory.Reign
With the death of his brother, Oahu was without a monarch. Kaihikapu-a-Manuia, being the second son of Queen
Kalaimanuia , succeededKu-a-Manuia as the Moi of Oahu. Tradition has preserved his memory as a pious and worthy chief, who built newheiau s, repaired the old, and encouraged devotion and religious exercises. During one of the circuits of the island which the Moi occasionally made to inspect the condition of the country; to administer justice, and to dedicate or repair Heiaus, he visited his brother Hao, who lived at Waikele, Ewa, and, as the legend says. Kaihikapu-a-Manuia was surprised and disturbed in his mind at the wealth of all kinds and the number of vassals and retainers, both chiefs and commoners, that followed the banner of his opulent brother.Apprehensive that a chief with so abundant material resources might any day rise in revolt and assert his independence, Kaihikapu-a-Manuia returned to
Waikiki and took counsel with his high-priest,Luamea . The priest advised him that open force would not prevail against Hao, as could be seen in the case of boths’ elder brother, but that he might be overcome by stratagem and surprise. The native legend makes a kind ofTrojan horse of an enormousshark that had been caught offWaikiki by Kaihikapu-a-Manuia, and which was sent as a present to Hao. From the shark, while Hao was occupied in dedicating it to the gods, armed men issued out and slew Hao, his priest, and attendant chiefs, who, occupied with the sacrifice, were unarmed and unprepared. It is inclined to believe that the embellishments of the legends, as in many other cases, are of a much later time, and that the actual fact of the matter was the sending of a valuable present, the bearers of which surprised Hao at the Heiau and killed him there. Hao's sonNapulanahu-mahiki escaped from the assassins and fled toWaianae , where he maintained himself against his uncle until the death of the latter. By marrying his aunt,Kekela , Kaihikapu-a-Manuia’s sister and a notable warrior chiefess,Napulanahu came into possession also of the Waialua and Koolauloa districts, and the island was thus divided into two independent sections, which continued until his son’s reign.Kaihikapu-a-Manuia’s wife was Kaunui-a-Kanehoalani, a daughter of
Kanehoalani , who was a grandson of High ChiefLo-Lale and High Chiefess Keleanohoanaapiapi. Kaunui's mother was Kuialoakalailai of theKalehenui branch of theMaweke line, but whose pedigree is lost to the ages. With this wife Kaihikapu-a-Manuia had a son namedKakuhihewa . If Kaihikapu-a-Manuia had other wives or other children, the legends of Oahu are silent on the subject. His son Kakuhihewa succeeded him as Moi and would become the greatest king in Oahuan history.Reference
* Abraham Fornander, An Account of the Polynesian Race: Its Origin and Migrations, Rutland, VT: Charles E. Tuttle Company, 1969. Page 91, 269-273
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