Haae-a-Mahi

Haʻae was a High Chief (Aliʻi) of the island of Hawaiʻi.

He was a son of the Chiefess Kalanikauleleiaiwi[1][2] and her husband Kauaua-a-Mahi, son of Mahiolole, the great Kohala chief of the Mahi family. He had a brother called Alapainui ("Alapai the Great") and sister Kekuiapoiwa I who became a queen of Maui.[3]

He was an uncle of the king Kahekili II of Maui and Chief Keōua of Hawaii.

His wife was his half-sister Kekelakekeokalani. They had a daughter Kekuiapoiwa II, who was a mother of Kamehameha I.

Haʻae was thus an ancestor of great kings — Kamehameha I, Kamehameha II and Kamehameha III.

Family tree

Monarch
birth-ascension-(reign end-)death
Kalanikauleleiaiwi
17th–18th centuries
HaʻaeKanoena
Kekuiapoiwa IIKameʻeiamoku
?-1802
Kamehameha I
1758-1782-1819
Kepookalani
Kekāuluohi
1795–1885
Kamehameha II
1797-1819-1824
Kīnaʻu
1805–1839
Kamehameha III
1813-1824-1854
Keohokālole
1816–1869
Lunalilo
1835-1873-1874
Kamehameha IV
1834-1855-1863
Kamehameha V
1830-1836-1872
Kalākaua
1836-1874-1891
Liliuokalani
1838-1891-1893-1917
gollark: This makes so much sense, in retrospect.
gollark: APL is the antipython?
gollark: Which should have been inverted. I don't know why GPT-3 didn't do that.
gollark: Except the "one way to do it" thing.
gollark: Wow, that actually fits really well.

References

  1. Edith Kawelohea McKinzie. Hawaiian Genealogies: Extracted from Hawaiian Language Newspapers.
  2. Abraham Fornander (1880). An Account of the Polynesian Race: Its Origin and Migrations. Volumen br. 2. Charles E. Tuttle Company, 1969. str. 131–132.
  3. "Imaginary Portrait of Kalanikauleleiaiwi by Brook Kapukuniahi Parker". Luatechnologies.tumblr.com. 2012-02-23. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-07-30.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.