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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kakaʻalaneo
King of Maui
ConsortKaualua
Kanikaniaula
FatherKaulahea I
MotherKapohanaupuni
ReligionHawaiian religion

Kakaʻalaneo was chief of the island of Maui.

Biography

Kakaʻalaneo was a son of King Kaulahea I of Maui and Chiefess Kapohanaupuni of Hilo. His brother was King Kakae. Kakaʻalaneo appears to be the center of the legends of that reign. He and his brother, appears to have jointly ruled Maui and Lānaʻi with his elder brother holding the title of Moʻi.

The brothers' courts were at Lāhainā.[1]

Tradition has gratefully remembered him as the one who planted the breadfruit trees in Lāhainā, for which the place in later times became so famous for.

Legend of Kaululaʻau

A marvelous legend is still told of one of Kakaʻalaneo's sons, named Kaululaʻau, who, for some of his wild pranks at his father's court in Lāhainā, was banished to Lānaʻi, which island was said to have been terribly haunted by Akua-ino, ghosts and goblins. Kaululaʻau, however, by his prowess and skill, exorcised the spirits, brought about peace and order on the island, and was in consequence restored to the favour of his father.[2]

Family

It was said that Kaululaʻau's mother was Kanikaniaula of the Kamauaua family, through Haili, a brother of Keoloewa. One legend mentions six children of Kaululaʻau by the names of Kuihiki, Kuiwawau, Kuiwawau-e, Kukahaulani, Kumakaʻakaʻa, and Ulamealani. No further record of them are kept, however.

With another wife, named Kaualua, Kakaʻalaneo had a son Kaihiwalua, who was the father of Luaia, who became the husband of the noted Kūkaniloko, daughter of Piliwale, the King of Oʻahu, son of Kālonaiki, and brother of Lo Lale. Kakaʻalaneo is also said to have had a daughter named Wao, who caused the watercourse in Lāhainā called Auwaiawao to be dug and named after her.

He was succeeded by his nephew Kahekili I, son of his brother.

References

  • Fornander, Abraham (1969). An Account of the Polynesian Race: Its Origin and Migrations. Rutland, Vermont: Charles E. Tuttle Company. pp. 82–83.
Preceded by Moʻi of Maui Succeeded by
This page was last edited on 6 September 2021, at 09:53
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