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RULING CHIEFS
Traditions relating to the colonizing period in
Hawaiian history emphasize the insignia of rank which became the
tangible signs by which a man's position was assured in aristocratic
society. These were: First, a family genealogy tracing back to the gods
through one of the two sons of Ki‘i, Ulu and Nana-ulu, and by as many
branches (lala) as family relationship could be stretched to cover.
Second, a name chant, composed at birth or given in afterlife,
glorifying the family history not only of persons concerned but also of
places made sacred by particular events or association. Third, signs in
the heavens by which aumakua of the day recognized their offspring on
earth. Fourth, a special place set aside as sacred to the birth of
high-ranking chiefs. Fifth, the sacred cord (aha) stretched at the
entrance of a chief's dwelling, under which all of lower rank must pass
but which fell "of itself" before the approach of anyone of equal or
higher position. Sixth, wealth, especially in lands, labor, and
specialized objects such as foods, ornaments, colors belonging to
ranking chiefs alone. Seventh, the power of the tapu, which gave the
ranking chief immense personal privilege, although the ruling chief
might have actually more power over lands and wealth; before certain
captive chiefesses of Maui of incredible sanctity, according to Kamakau,
Kamehameha himself had to remove his garment. Eighth, the right to
officiate in the heiau as both chief and priest. Ninth, at death, the
final deification of the bones and their laying away in a sacred (in
later years a secret) place difficult of access, the most important such
place in ancient times being the Iao valley on the island of Maui. Rank
therefore depended primarily upon blood; but of equal importance was the
conduct of life by which one could, by carelessness in preserving the
tapus and in making proper marriages, lose caste and prerogatives under
the severe discipline of the Aha-ali‘i or so-called "college of chiefs,"
or could, through a royal marriage, raise the rank of one's descendants
upon the family line.
The period during which political life became thus
stabilized--through the building up of a ruling-chief class under a
social system based upon strict religious observances--follows or
overlaps the mythical migrations and colonization represented in legend
by the arrival of the Kamau group and the activities of the kupua
Kamapua‘a, the coming of Pele and her family, the arrival of Kane and
Kanaloa and their attention to the water supply, and the introduction of
food plants.
Following the family of Akalana on the Ulu line
appear three Nana names of chiefs who are said, like the Maui brothers,
to have ruled the western end of Oahu in Waialua, Wahiawa, and Ewa
districts. The last of the three, Nana-kaoko, has a wife, Ka-hihi-o-ka-lani,
whose name resembles that of the chiefess as servants for whom Kahano
son of Newa brought over the Menehune to Oahu. It is this Nana-kaoko and
his wife who are the traditional founders on Oahu of the sacred place
for the birth of chiefs at Ku-kani-loko in the uplands of Wahiawa,
similar to that already set up at Holoholoku on Kauai. At Ho‘olono-pahu
(Sounding the pahu drum) the navel cord was tied and cut while the drum
sounded. Afterbirth, cord, and later the navel string (piko) were
carefully deposited, often in a heiau for safekeeping. The site chosen
is one frequently visited by thunderstorms, whose manifestations were
regarded as the voice of ancestral gods of the heavens welcoming an
offspring of divine rank. The drums perhaps simulated the voice of
deity.
It was from the time of Heleipawa of Maui, whom
some identify with Kapawa, that there began to be composed chants for a
ruling chief in which were named his birth and burial places, the spots
in which afterbirth, umbilical cord, and navel string were deposited,
his house site, and other places sacred to his history. The site of the
famous pleasure house (Hale-i-ka-lea) in Kipahulu built by Heleipawa was
still to be seen in Kamakau's day, and the tapu spring of fresh water,
welling up in the sea at Kaui from a depth of twenty feet and walled up
so firmly that the waves had not loosened the stones, where the chiefs
of his day washed off the salt water when coming in from surfing.
Another Maui chief, Haho, son of Paumakua and
grandson of Hua-nui-ka-la‘ila‘i, was the traditional founder of the Aha-ali‘i
or ranking body of chiefs who might be distinguished by the use of the
sacred cord called aha. They cultivated a metaphorical form of speech in
order that their words might be concealed from the uninitiated. The awe
attached to rank was accentuated by the dreaded tapu which attended the
person of a chief. Those of highest rank never went abroad except at
night lest their shadow falling upon the ground render it tapu. They
were already gods, and at death their bones were separated from the
flesh and placed in a receptacle (kaai) woven out of sennit or ie vine,
in some cases shaped to imitate a torso, and worshiped as a family
deity, while the soft parts of the body were laid away in some sacred
place of burial like that back of the "Needle" in Iao valley. Kamakau
records the names of chiefs down to Kalaniopu‘u of Hawaii who were thus
honored and enumerates also the names of their sacred cords.
Many generations before Heleipawa and Haho, on the
Ulu line, occur such mythical figures as Ku-hele-i-moana and his wife
Mapuna-i-aala (Springing up in fragrance), daughter of Haumea; Akalana (Wakalana)
and the Maui brothers; the Aikanaka to Laka group--all, except the
first, famous names in southern tradition and all centering about the
hill Kauiki in the fertile Hana district on the rain-washed eastern
extremity of the island of Maui, where the sun rises out of the sea and
the Kohala coast is to be seen beyond the channel of Ale-nui-haha (Great
waves crashing).
From the time of La‘a-mai-kahiki down to that of
Umi, East Maui, comprising Koolau, Hana, Kipahulu, and Kaupo districts,
was governed separately from the rest of the island and its chiefs were
grouped about the fortified hill of Kauiki, famous in history, song, and
story. Myths are told about its origin. Some say that it sprang from the
navel of Hamoa. Others that it was born to the parents of Pele, or to
the hill Kai-hua-kala by his wife Kahaule. Others relate how Ka-lala-walu
(The eight-branched) brought the hill from Kahiki as an adopted child,
but grew tired of its nibbling at her breasts and tried to leave it
along the way, first at Kaloa, then at Kaena, then at the Ka-wai-papa
stream. Others tell of the wanderings and death of Pu‘uhele, little
sister of Pele. The bay about Kauiki gives evidence of subsidence
following some volcanic outbreak, and men say that formerly Kane and
Kanaloa planted a garden below the hill, and they point out two rocks
below the hill on the inaccessible sea side which are called "the
coconuts of Kane and Kanaloa" and the "root-stock" (kumu) of Kauiki.
Mythical names are attached to the dwellers on Kauiki in ancient days.
On the summit may be seen the rock placed by Aiai as an outlook for
schools of fish entering the bay. Here Maui stood to push the sky higher
because it lay so near the earth at Kauiki. Here lived Hina-hana-ia-ka-malama,
she who worked at tapa making in the moon, and her husband, father of
Puna and Hema on the Ulu line of chiefs.
All about the bay are crowded the memorials of
those old days in the shape of a rock, a basin of water, a wave, a
spring, a cave, or a mere name remembered from the time when chiefs and
their followers thronged the bay, whose trifling deeds or misdeeds are
still cherished in the memories of their living descendants. "If I told
you all, it would fill a book," said old Kilinahi, watchman for schools
of fish off the bay. Hawaiian verse loves to play with the memory of
Kauiki. A hula begins,
O Kauiki, mauna ki‘eki‘e,
Huki a‘e la a pa i ka lani
He po‘ohiwi no kai halulu. . . .
"Kauiki, mountain famous in story,
Stretching upward to touch the heavens,
A shoulder for the buffeting sea. . . ."
and a modern verse opens with,
Healoha no Kauiki,
Au i ke kai me he manu la!
"Kauiki is beloved,
Afloat on the sea like a bird!"
Hana is called "a land beloved of chiefs because
of the fortress of Kauiki and the ease of living in that place." In time
of war the hill was reached by a ladder of ohia poles bound together
with withes. On the summit was spread a springy plant to serve as bed.
Fishponds below furnished unlimited stores of fish. Heaps of awa root
"delighted the nostrils of the dear firstborn chiefs."
Maui chiefs who settled with their families in
later days about Kauiki were Kanaloa and Kalahumoku, sons of Hualani the
wife of Kanipahu, and half-brothers to Kalapana who ruled Hawaii; Eleio;
Ka-la-ehaeha; Lei; Ka-mohohali‘i; Kalae-hina; Ho‘olae. Much earlier, on
the Ulu line, comes the name of Hua son of Pohukaina, said to be a
contemporary of the prophet Naula-a-Maihea who came with La‘a-mai-kahiki
from the south. Two legends are connected with his ns me. One is the
tragic story of his grandmother, the beautiful Popoalaea, put to death
by her jealous husband. The other is the story of Hua's quarrel with his
prophet Luaho‘omoe (Ulu-ho‘omoe) and the terrible drought that befell as
a result of his impious conduct in condemning the prophet to death on a
trumped-up charge. The story resembles the Kuula legend from the same
locality and in fact Kuula the fish god is said to be descended from a
son of the prophet whose death was attended by such evil results.
Kepelino tells us that a struggle for power early arose between the
secular and religious heads of the people, finally adjusted by uniting
both powers in the person of the ruling chief, who became thus entitled
to perform certain sacred offices in company with the priest. Both the
Hua and the Kuula legend play up the priests' side of the contest. A
story like that of the chief Ka-lau-nui-a-hua (The long leaf of Hua,
referring to family descent) on the island of Hawaii shows the disaster
that follows when a prophet's warning is disregarded.
LEGEND OF POPOALAEA
Popo-alaea (Ball of red clay), a chiefess of rank
in Hana district on Maui during the rule of Kamohoali‘i, is won as a
re-ward of victory in strength-testing games by the chief Kaakea (Makea)
and he makes their home close to the crater above Kaupo at a place
called Koae-kea because there the koae birds flock (or at the village of
Hono-ka-lani). He is jealous, especially of her fondness for her younger
brother. People bring malicious tales, and he sharpens his axe to kill
her. She flees with an attendant and the two women hide in the cavern at
the pool of Wai-anapanapa. At night they go to the village of
Hono-kalani for food. The people report seeing ghosts. He watches, and
detects her hiding place from the moving shadow of the fly brush, waved
by her attendant, cast upon the surface of the water. Searching the
cave, he dashes out the brains of the two women upon the rocks.
Today, on the night of Ku, god of justice, the
water in the pool runs red. At some time each morning prismatic colors (anapa)
such as are sacred to divine chiefs play over the waters of this pool as
proof of her innocence. The water of the pool makes even a dark skin
look white when immersed in it.
LEGEND OF HUA AND THE
PROPHET
Hua's seer Lua-ho‘omoe (Ulu-ho‘omoe) arouses the
chief's anger and he seeks an excuse to discredit him and put him to
death. He therefore sends his men to the mountains after a certain
species of bird found only on the coast. They appeal to the seer, who
points out the impossibility of the task to his chief. When the men
bring the birds from the sea, Hua pretends that they have been trapped
in the mountains and condemns the seer for predicting falsely. The seer
has the birds cut open to show that it is seafood, not mountain berries,
upon which they have fed. Hua nevertheless orders his death. A drought
ensues and fish disappear from the sea. Only for the two sons of the
seer, named Kaa-ka-kai and Kaa-na-hua, is a place provided where rain
falls, and thither they retire in secret. Naula-a-Maihea scans the sky
from the summit of Kaala on Oahu and sees a cloud resting over
Pu‘u-o-inaina in Hanaula. He prepares a great offering of swine for the
sons of Hua and the drought is broken.
LEGEND OF KALAUNUIAHUA
Ka-lau-nui-a-hua consults the priestess Waahia as
to the result of his war expedition and she consistently predicts
disaster. He attempts in vain to put her to death. Finally at her own
suggestion he has her body burned in the heiau of Keeku in Kona. She
puts a tapu against his coming out of the house during the burning lest
her god punish the land. As the smoke rises, it takes the shape of two
cocks fighting, then of two mud hens. The chief can no longer resist
tearing away the thatch with his hand as he hears the shouts of the
multitude at this last portent, and the spirit of Waahia takes
possession of his hand through the god Kane-nui-akea. If he but points
with his hand, the land falls before him.
Hua conquers the chiefs of Maui, Molokai, Oahu,
and proceeds with the captured chiefs to Kauai. Here the spirit leaves
his hand and enters that of a man of Kauai. His men are routed and he
and the three chiefs, Ka-malo-o-Hua of Maui, Ka-hoku-o-Hua of Molokai,
Hua-pouleilei of Ewa and Waianae are taken prisoner by Kukona of Kauai,
great-great-grandson of La‘a-mai-kahiki, according to the genealogy.
Kukona treats his prisoners with great magnanimity. On one occasion he
feigns sleep, overhears them grumbling against him and discussing a plot
to murder him, a proposal vehemently protested against by Ka-malo-o-Hua,
then pretends to awaken and repeats to them the whole conversation as if
it were a dream. As a tribute to Ka-malo-o-Hua's good faith, he then
dismisses the three chiefs to their own lands with all the honors of
war, but keeps Ka-lau-nui for some years a captive. There are in
consequence no fresh invasions.
The-long-leaf-of-Hua ruled on Hawaii as grandson
of Kalapana descended on the Pili line. He was a restless and ambitious
chief bent on the consolidation of the group under the rule of Hawaii,
and his legend is not without interest for its bearing upon the
resistance attempted by stubborn chiefs to the warnings of the
priesthood. The incident of the magnanimous conduct of the chief of
Kauai had a bearing upon later history, for even down to the time of
Kamehameha, when chiefs consulted the memories of their archivists as to
the conduct of the forefathers in like situations, the "peace of Ka-malo-o-Hua"
was cited as precedent for securing a peaceful ending of hostilities.
It was during the time of Kakaalaneo of Maui that
the division of lands is said to have taken place under a kahuna named
Kalaihaohi‘a (Hew the bark of the ohia tree) which portioned out the
island into districts, subdistricts, and smaller divisions, each ruled
over by an agent appointed by the landlord of the next larger division,
and the whole under control of the ruling chief over the whole island or
whatever part of it was his to govern. Land reforms and other means of
strengthening the power of the ruling chief and stabilizing control over
a growing population were carried out on Oahu also at about this time by
Mailikukahi, successor on the Moikeha line of the last ruling chief of
the elder Kumuhonua line, who was forced to retire because of his
unpopularity. The names of Mailikukahi, his son Kalona-iki, and his
grand-daughter Kukaniloko are handed down in tradition as wise and just
rulers. With Mailikukahi, Waikiki became the ruling seat of chiefs of
Oahu. He carried out strict laws, marked out land boundaries, and took
the firstborn son of each family to be educated in his own household. He
honored the priests, built heiaus, and discountenanced human sacrifice.
A raiding band from Hawaii and Maui he met at Waikakalaua gulch and
pursued and slaughtered at Kipapa gulch. Punalu‘u was killed in the
battle on the plain of that name. The head of Hilo, son of Lakapu, was
stuck up at a place called Po‘o-Hilo in Hono-uliuli.
Legends gather about the name of the ruling chief
of Maui, Kakaalaneo (Kukaalaneo, Kaalaneo), who lived in the present
Lahaina district on the hill Keka‘a, owned fish-ponds in Hana district
on the opposite end of the island, planted a famous breadfruit grove,
and took to wife the Molokai chiefess whom Eleio found for him and who
brought him the first feather cape seen on Maui, by whom he had the
mischievous son Kaululaau who killed off the spirits on Lanai. In his
day the old name of Lele became attached to Lahaina. In the legend of
the red-skinned kupua of Puna Kepaka-ili-ula, Kakaalaneo is represented
as a skilful spearsman who "never misses a grassblade, an ant, or a
flea," but in a contest for the favors of a lady (drawn direct from a
tale from The Arabian Nights) he is worsted by the kupua and
ignominiously slain. This way of aggrandizing one hero at the expense of
another's traditional fame is no new thing in Hawaiian story-telling,
but the treatment of the episode marks it as a foreign imitation.
Tradition places in Kakaalaneo's time the arrival
of a party of strangers (haole) who played an active part in court life
and whose names were, according to Kamakau, kept in memory as late as
Captain Cook's day, for to the question whether Cook's party were gods
or men, the kahunas expressed the opinion that they were "men from the
land of Kaekae (Kakae) and Kukanaloa." After regular voyages between
Hawaii and the southern islands had ceased, chance seems to have brought
some boats to shore which had drifted from their course. One is said to
have arrived off Mokapu point on Oahu and another in the time of Ka-malu-o-Hua
to have been wrecked off the coast of Maui with five persons on board,
one of them a woman whom "Wakalana" took as his wife and descendants of
whom are said to be living on Maui and Oahu. A third party of strangers
was brought back by Paumakua from one of his voyages. Kaekae and Maliu
they are called, but a chant names them Auakahinu and Auakamea, or, in
one version, Kukahauula and Kukalepa. They were priests, and it seems
likely that the Kane and Kanaloa of the Haumea tradition have been here
confused with Paumakua's people. But all these arrivals are described so
much alike and in terms so similar to such incidents recounted in
southern groups, where the chance of a drifting boat making land with
women on board is much more plausible, that they must be regarded as
traditional rather than historical narratives.
Kukanaloa and Kaekae are the leaders of the party
said to have arrived in Kakaalaneo's day, and the legend of their
arrival and the chant that follows in which their names are played upon
in listing names of chiefs will illustrate the type rather than fix the
event. The last allusion in the legend is a pun upon the chief Lolale of
Oahu who abducted the pretty chiefess of Maui, Kelea, while she was out
surfing and carried her away to Oahu in the uplands of Lihue. She
deserted him for his cousin Kalamakua in Ewa, by whom she became mother
of the high chiefess Laie-lohelohe (The drooping pandanus vine), who
became in turn the wife of her Maui cousin Pi‘ilani. All these names
appear in the chant linked with the coming of Ku-kanaloa, together with
the names of a wife and son of Kakaalaneo.
LEGEND OF KUKANALOA
(a) The strangers land first at Keei in
South Kona and then come on to Waihe‘e, Maui, and land at a place called
Ke-ala-i-Kahiki (The road to Kahiki). They are exhausted and the natives
clothe and feed them. In looks they are light with sparkling eyes. When
asked after their homeland and parents they point to the uplands "far,
far above where our parents dwell," and show themselves familiar with
bananas, breadfruit, mountain-apple, and candlenut trees. The two
leaders become Kakaalaneo's property. There is no tapu place closed to
them. They marry chiefesses and some of their descendants are living
today. Kani-ka-wi and Kani-ka-wa (Whistle and Flute) they are called,
"perhaps because their speech was as unintelligible as that of the lale
birds that live in the hills."
Puka mai o Kanikawi, Kanikawa,
O na haole iluna o Halakaipo,
Puka mai nei Kukanaloa,
Kupuna haole mai Kahiki
Puka mai nei Kakaalaneo
Me ke leo iki o Kakae,
O Kaualua ia, o Kaihiwalua
O Kelea, o Kalamakua,
O Pi‘ilani ia, o Laielohelohe.
"Came Sharp-sound, Loud-sound,
The strangers above Halakaipo,
Came Ku-kanaloa,
The stranger forefather from Kahiki,
Came Kakaalaneo,
With the soft-voiced Kakae,
Kaualua (the wife), Kaihiwalua (the son),
Kelea (the wife), Kalamakua (the husband),
Pi‘ilani (the husband), Laielohelohe (the wife)."
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