Kalahumoku II

Kalahumoku II

Kalahumoku II was a Hawaiian High Chief and maternal grandfather of Kalokuokamaile, the progneitor of the Kalokuokamaile Dynasty.

He was the son of the High Chief Mopua of Hana and the High Chiefess Kauaamano. He was great-great-grandson of Lonohonuakini, King of Maui, and his wife, Queen Kalanikauanakinilani of Maui. [The Stories & Genealogies of Maui," http://www.mauiculture.net/mookuauhau/index.html, Accessed 29 Aug 2008.] [http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/a/h/y/Thomas-Eugene-imakakoloaihe-Ah-yee/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-0406.html] He was the reigning high chief of all of Hāna including the districts of Kipahulu and Kaupo, whose chiefs previously deceased, on the island of Maui. He was not the status was not that of an Ali'i Aimoku, which was held by the Moi of Maui or the Alii Aimoku of Hawaii depending on who had a hold on Hana at the time since Hana was a disputed territory between the two powers. Either one of these had suzerainity over him, he act more like a governor king. Kalahumoku was lineal descendant of Loe, the great progneitor of the Maui chiefdom, and also of the Piilanis, Kamalalawalu and others, and of the Chiefs of Hāna. His family possessed a wonderful kapu entirely different from, and never known to exist among, any other chief families of the Hawaiian Islands. It was styled "Ka Poo hoolewa i ka La," and inherited from Kaakaualaninui, the grandmother of Kalahumoku. It signified the laying of the head toward the sun's position in the heavens from its rising unto it's setting. Days for the observance of this kapu were strictly kept. The only time for recreation during the kapu must be taken from between the setting of luminary and the dawn of a new day. [Pratt. 10-11]

He wed the High Chiefess Kalani-Kaumehameha and had two beautiful daughters Kahikikala, the elder, and Kalanilehua, the younger. Their beauty and sacredness was spread across the waters of the okinaAlenuihāhā Channel to the Island of Hawaii where Keoua Kalanikupuapaikalaninui resided in the court of his father Keeaumoku-nui. Keoua asked his father to allow him to visit the court of Hāna to take one of them for great was his ambition to obtain the wonderful kapu that Kalahumoku owned, so as to hand it down to his descendants. [Pratt. 9-12]

Footnotes

References

*Citation
last1 = Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum
title = [http://books.google.com/books?id=D0lgAAAAIAAJ&ie=ISO-8859-1&output=html A Preliminary Catalogue of the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum of Polynesian Ethnology and Natural History ...]
publisher = Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum
year = 1892
isbn =
.
*Citation
last1 = Pratt | first1 = Elizabeth K.
title = [http://books.google.com/books?id=K-O5nPqJVKEC&ie=ISO-8859-1&output=html_text An Account of the Polynesian Race]
publisher = T. H.
year = 1920
isbn =
.

External links

* [http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~royalty/hawaii/i292.html#I292 KALAHUMOKU at Rootsweb]


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