- Kuini Liliha
Infobox Person
name = Kuini Liliha
image_size =
caption =
birth_date = circa 1802
birth_place = Hawaii
death_date = death date|1839|8|25|mf=y
death_place = Honolulu
occupation = Royal governor
spouse =Boki
parents =Ulumaheihei Hoapili and Kalilikauoha
children =Jane Loeau andAbigail Maheha Kuini Liliha (circa 1802 —
August 25 ,1839 ) was a High Chiefess in theancient Hawaii an tradition and served theKingdom of Hawaii as royal governor ofOahu . She administered the island from 1829 to 1831 following the death of her husbandBoki , an advisor and friend toKamehameha II . [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=8137144 Kuini Liliha] on Find A Grave.com]Early life
She was the only daughter of
Ulumaheihei Hoapili andKalilikauoha . Her father was Ulumaheihei Hoapili a son of one of the nian pio royal twinsKame'eiamoku and his wife Kamakaeheikuli. Her mother was High Chieftess Kalilikauoha of Maui who was the daughter of KingKahekili II of Maui and his half sister-bride Luahiwa. Her names surprisingly signified, "the fat of hogs".United Kingdom
Boki, Kuini Liliha, and
Mataio Kekuanaoa were principal members of the entourage that accompanied Kamehameha II and the Queen Consort on an 1824 diplomatic tour of theUnited Kingdom , visiting King George IV. The entire delegation contracted themeasles one after the other, a disease foreign toNative Hawaiians . As a result, the Queen Consort Kamehamalu and several chiefs died, including Kamehameha II who became so distraught after his Queen's death that he died in Kuini Liliha's arms.Boki and Kuini Liliha survived the measles and took charge of what was left of the delegation. They managed to secure agreements of friendship from the British government. The Kingdom of Hawaii also became a protectorate of the British military under those agreements. Boki and Kuini Liliha returned to Oahu with the bodies of Kamehameha II, Kamehamalu and several island chiefs.
Royal governor
As royal governor, Boki incurred large debts from the foreigners and attempted to cover them by traveling to the
New Hebrides to harvestsandalwood . Before departing, Boki entrusted administration of Oahu to his wife, Liliha. One of her new responsibilities was to become legal guardian and sole trustee of the properties ofKamehameha III , who became king as a child. This was opposed byKaahumanu who was ruling Hawaii as queen regent. Kaahumanu had developed a rivalry with Kuini Liliha.Boki and his entourage of chiefs were lost at sea and pronounced dead, leaving Liliha permanently in administration as royal governor. She was later replace in 1831 by
Naihe Kukui a chief and father of QueenKalama as governor of Oahu because of the dispute between her and Kaahumanu.Catholicism
Kuini Liliha became embroiled in the dispute over freedom of religion in the kingdom. Kaahumanu had become influenced by the
Protestant missionaries in Honolulu and was baptized into theCongregational church . Heeding the advice of her Congregationalist ministers, Kaahumanu influenced Kamehameha III to ban theRoman Catholic Church from the islands.The priests and lay brothers of the
Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary were forcibly deported from the kingdom. Native Hawaiians who had converted were persecuted. Some were beaten and imprisoned. When Kaahumanu discovered thatBoki and Liliha were among the first chiefs to convert to the suppressed Hawaii Catholic Church it angered the queen regent, who wanted all the chiefs to acceptProtestantism in order that allHawaiians would follow. Kuini Liliha's steadfastness in her Catholicism influenced Native Hawaiian Catholics to persevere even in suppression. Kaahumanu stripped Kuini Liliha of her power.Only after the intervention of the French government and Captain Cyrille-Pierre-Théodore Laplace and Kamehameha III's proclamation of the Edict of Toleration did Native Hawaiians like Kuini Liliha have the right of membership in the Hawaii Catholic Church. She died in August 24, 1839 in Honolulu, Oahu. She had issues by her other husbands Kalaniulumoku and Namaile:
Princess Jane Loeau andPrincess Abigail Maheha who both attended Royal School and were declared eligible for theHawaiian throne byKamehameha III .References
External links
* [http://www.spiritofaloha.com/place/0302/place.html Liliha, Beloved Chiefess]
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