- Haka of Oahu
Haka was the 7th
Alii Aimoku of Oahu . During his reign Oahu was divided among the sons ofMaweke , the blue blood king of the northern islands of Oahu, Kauai and Niihau. He was descent of Maweke's many children and grandchildren. He was the last of the line ofKumuhonua , eldest sonMulielealii , eldest son of Maweke, and Oahu's first sovereign.The only genealogy of this chief of that has been agreed upon by others, is that from
Kapae-a-Lakona , 6th Alii Aimoku of Oahu, to Haka was spanned three generations. Although in some geneology it is stated that Haka's parents were Kapae-a-Lakona and Wehina. Of Haka's place on the genealogy there can be no doubt, however, as he was superseded as Moi,Mailekukahi , whose geneaology is perfectly correct from the time of Maweke down.He was the Moi of Oahu but the title was of no power. He only hold the land of
Ewa , as its district chief and resided atLihue . Of this Haka, traditional legends records that he was a stingy, rapacious, and ill-natured chief, who paid no regard to either his chiefs or his commoners. As a consequence they revolted from him, made war upon him, and besieged hisfortress , near Waewae, nearLihue . During one night of thesiege , an officer of his guards, whom he had ill-treated, surrendered the fort to the rebel chiefs, who entered and killed Haka. His life was the only one split on the occasion. Tradition does not preserved whetherMailikukahi had a hand in this affair, but he was clamorously elected by the chiefs of Oahu in councile convened as the Moi of Oahu and duly installed and anointed as such at theheiau . His successor was of the Moikeha branch.Haka's only known wife was the High Chiefess
Kapunawahine , with whom he had a son namedKapiko-a-Haka . He had two granddaughters from his only son. They wereKaulala , who marriedKalaniuli , a Koolau chief and became the ancestress of the royalKualii family on Oahu, and the other daughter wasKamili , who marriedIlihiwalani , son of Kalanikuma of Kauai, from whichKaumualii , the last independent Kauai king, descended.Reference
* Abraham Fornander, An Account of the Polynesian Race: Its Origin and Migrations, Rutland, VT: Charles E. Tuttle Company, 1969. Page 49, 65, 87-88
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