Mata'uvave

Mata'uvave

Matauvave was the name given to a dynasty of male chiefs presiding over the Haapai Island Group of Tonga from the 15th century until the mid 1980s. The first Matauvave was appointed to a gubernatorial role by Tui Tonga Kauulufonua I to increase the Tui Tongas control over Haapai. The first few generations of the title subdued several islands in northern Haapai and undertook several major building projects, most notably pigeon mounds, the Huluipaongo burial mound, and the Velata fortress. Within a few generations the Matauvave attempted to rule independently, antagonizing the authority of chiefs in Tongatapu and causing a confrontation that the Matauvave eventually lost. They were relegated to a line of nobility calledeiki sii, ora minor chief without importance.”

Contents

Creation of the Title

The Matauvave dynasty was created out of the drastic political restructuring of the Tongan elite following the assassination of the 23rd Tui Tonga, Takalaua, in the late 14th or early 15th century. Takalaua was succeeded by his son Kauulufonua as the 24th Tui Tonga. Kauulufonua chased the assassins, according to tradition, toEua, Haapai, Vavau, Niuatoputapu, Futuna, Uvea, and eventually killed them in brutal fashion in Samoa, thereby earning the name Kauulufonuafekai, or Kauulufonua the savage.[1] At the same time, the secular duties of the TuI Tonga were divested into a new title called Tui Haatakalaua while the TuI Tonga became more of a religious and ceremonial figure.

Historians are unsure of the veracity of the revenge story, but it describes a known reassertion of control of the Tongatapu chiefs over the island groups within the Tui Tonga empire at that time.[1] Either Kauulufonuafekai or the new Tui Haatakalaua appointed powerful new governors for each of the main island groups. Matauvave received the dominion of Haapai.[1]

Domination of Northern Haapai

The colorful early history of the Matauvave dynasty is based only on oral tradition and interpretation of place names, but archaeologist David V. Burley has found corroborating evidence in remnants of ceremonial mounds and fortresses. Oral tradition describes these events as though it all happened to one man, but historians suggest that the following events occurred over a longer period of time and by several title holders.[1]

The Matauvave and his supporters initially settled in Hihifo on Lifuka island, where they forced Haapaians to build the large fortress of Velata.[1] He worshipped the god Aloaaloa and his tract of land was known as Tamatuiumee. From his base in Hihifo, the Matauvave conquered Foa island by destroying the fortress in Lotofoa. In league withthe cannibal chief Tahi Fisi,” he then defeated the powerful Haa Ngana chiefs who had power bases inUiha and Kauvai Islands.[1]

The Matauvave moved with his supporters toUiha island and ruled over the more populated Lifuka and Foa Islands to the north. As a Matauvave title holder in the 1920s told, “Matauvave went to live in Uoleva island. If he wanted to let the people know that he was going to give a command (fono) he would send someone to the north shore of Uoleva to remove his garment and expose his buttocks. Then the people in Lifuka would know that the governor was going to give a command as to certain work to be done. If the signal were given in the afternoon, the people assembled that evening in Uoleva. When a chiefs grave was to be dug or a pigeon mound to be erected sufficient labor was obtained for the earth to be dug and the mound formed in the night. In the morning the mound (sea) would be already made.”[1]

The Matauvave ordered the people of Lifuka to build many monuments either for himself of for other chiefs to project status and power. Most of these structures were mounds for pigeon snaring, which was a sport reserved only for chiefs but required substantial investments of plebian labor. There are pigeon snaring mounds associated with Matauvave on Lofanga, Haano, Nukunamo, Tatafa, and Uoleva islands. Uoleva has ten pigeons mounds, including one named Siaulufotu, the largest such mound in all of Tonga. He also had constructed adjacent to Siaulufotu a freshwater bathing well named Vaisioata.[1]

Between Uoleva and Lifuka islands is a shallow reef that was then and is still now walkable during low time. Oral tradition tells that after a daughter of the Matauvave, Tahilakifue, “hurt herself by falling on a rock trying to cross the exposed reef from Uoleva to Lifuka, Matauvave had the people clear a path between the two islands. Given the haughty nature of Tahilakifue, the area where she fell was named Fokiangatoma (toma meaning to dress pretentiously). The path is known as Taemaka, meaning to hew the stone.”[1]

The first Matauvave is believed to have been buried in Nuanga, near present day Pangai on Lifuka Island, but successive title holders were buried at Huluipaongo, also known as the Burial Mound of Matauvave.[1] It is located at the southern tip of Lifuka island and is the highest mound on all of Lifuka. Tradition tells that it was constructed either from the clay used to wash hair as people walked fromUoleva to Lifuka (after building the pigeon mounds) or that it was carried from nearby in baskets.[1]

Confrontation with Tongatapu

The title of Matauvave was created to instill a governor in Haapai who was subservient to the Tui Tonga and Tui Haatakalaua in Tongatapu. Over time, however, the Matauvave attempted to gain more autonomy. The only specific story is that he stopped sending tribute to the main island for the annualinasi, orfirst fruitsceremony. To collect the tribute and institute a new gubernatorial regime on Haapai, the Tui Haatakalaua sent to Haapai three chiefs, collectively known as theOtu Haapai.[1] The Matauvave was stripped of much of his power and forced out of Uoleva and onto a small tract of land near the southern tip of Lifuka called Lakifue. The remaining Matauvave supporters were supposedly violent towards anyone encroaching on their last piece of property, and the road from Hihifo to Lakifue became known as, and is still known as, Halamate, or theroad of death.”[1]

The Matauvave of Recent Times

The Matauvave of 1920, who told many of these stories to Gifford during his collection of genealogical information, was Tuakimoana, who was appointed in 1870 by Kalaniuvalu, the son of Laufilitonga, the last Tui Tonga. “Tuakimoana informed Gifford that he had succeeded his mothers brother Nehoa whose son and lineal descendant had died. Nehoa was preceded by his older brother Jacob who had replaced a man named Paul Fisilau. Since Tuakimoana, three additional Matauvave have been appointedindividuals bearing the personal names of Mano, Mau and Kavaliku. The last, Kavaliku, died in the mid-1980s without heir and the title is now vacant.”[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n David V. Burley, Mata'uvave and 15th Century Ha'apai, The Journal of Pacific History, Vol. 30 No. 2 (Dec., 1995). pp. 154-172

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