Keakamahana
Keakamāhana (c. 1615–1665) was an aliʻi nui of Hawaiʻi Island from 1635–1665. She ruled as sovereign of the island from the royal complex at Hōlualoa Bay.
Keakamāhana | |
---|---|
Aliʻi Aimoku of Hawaiʻi | |
Reign | 1635 – 1665 |
Predecessor | Keakealanikane |
Successor | Keakealaniwahine |
Born | c. 1615 |
Died | 1665 |
Spouse | Iwikauikaua |
Issue | Queen Keakealaniwahine |
Father | Keakealanikane |
Mother | Kealiʻiokalani |
Life
She was the eldest daughter of the King Keakealanikane, the former aliʻi nui of Hawaiʻi. Her mother was Kealiiokalani.
She succeeded on the death of her father in 1635. She married her cousin Aliʻi Iwikauikaua, son of Aliʻi Makakaualiʻi, by his wife Kapukāmola. She died in 1665, and her daughter Keakealaniwahine succeed her.
gollark: Some of the Starlink satellites have communications lasers also.
gollark: I think you could technically have a "space laser" for only a few tens of kilodollars if you stick a few-watt laser diode onto a CubeSat or something. But it wouldn't be very good.
gollark: Hopefully space launch costs will reduce over time.
gollark: You know the Y distance (EDIT: from gun to can) is 0 because it says on the same level.
gollark: If you look at, say, HTTP internet radio stations which use ogg streams, then they appear to browsers and such as audio files which keep getting longer. I assume the format just allows you to stick ogg packets on the end and don't care much about declared length.
References
- Abraham Fornander (1880). John F. G. Stokes (ed.). An Account of the Polynesian Race: Its Origin and Migrations. Republished 1969 Charles E. Tuttle Company, Rutland, Vermont. p. 127.
Preceded by Keakealani Kāne |
Aliʻi Aimoku of Hawaiʻi Island 1635–1665 |
Succeeded by Keakealaniwahine |
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.