The Mythology of Hawaii. King of Hawaii David Kalakaua
href="#fb3_img_img_dab7c28a-64d1-5c2b-a196-d7eb2f36881f.jpg" alt="Princess Kauilani."/>
Princess Kauilani.
Kamehameha III. died in 1854 and was succeeded by Kamehameha IV. The latter reigned until 1863, when he died and was succeeded by Prince Lot, with the title of Kamehameha V. In 1864 Lot abrogated the constitution of 1840 and granted a new one. He reigned until 1872, and died without naming a successor, and the Legislative Assembly elected Lunalilo to the throne. He was of the Kamehameha family, and with his death, in 1873, the Kamehameha dynasty came to an end. He, too, failed to designate a successor, and as but two of the accepted descendants of the first Kamehameha remained—one a sister of Kamehameha V. and the other a female cousin of that sovereign—David Kalakaua was elected to the throne by the Legislative Assembly in 1874, receiving all but five votes of that body, which were cast for the queen-dowager Emma, widow of Kamehameha IV.
Provision having been made for the event by a previous Legislative Assembly, King Kalakaua, with his queen, Kapiolani, was formally crowned on the 12th of February, 1883, in the presence of the representatives of many of the nations of the Old World and the New. Since the coronation the last of the Kamehamehas has passed away, including the queen-dowager Emma, and King Kalakaua remains the most direct representative in the kingdom of the ancient sovereigns of Hawaii. He draws his strain from Liloa through the great I family of Hawaii, who joined their fortunes with the first Kamehameha in the conquest of the group. His queen, Kapiolani, is a granddaughter of the last independent sovereign of Kauai, and is thus allied in blood with the early rulers of the group. She is childless, and the Princess Liliuokalani, the elder of the two sisters of the king, has been named as his successor. She is the wife of His Excellency John O. Dominis, an American by birth and present governor of the islands of Oahu and Maui. The only direct heir in the families of the king and his two sisters is the Princess Kaiulani, daughter of the Princess Likelike,1 wife of Mr. Cleghorn, a merchant of Honolulu.
Following is a list of the sovereigns of Hawaii, with the dates and durations of their several governments, from the eleventh to the nineteenth century. It embraces only the rulers of the island of Hawaii, who eventually became the masters of the group. Until the reign of Kalaniopuu, which began in 1754, the dates are merely approximate:
Pilikaeae, | from A.D. 1095 to 1120 |
Kukohau, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1120 to 1145 |
Kaniuhi, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1145 to 1170 |
Kanipahu, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1170 to 1195 |
Kalapana (including the usurpation of Kamaiole), | from,,,,A.D.,, 1195 to 1220 |
Kahaimoelea, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1220 to 1260 |
Kalaunuiohua, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1260 to 1300 |
Kuaiwa, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1300 to 1340 |
Kahoukapu, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1340 to 1380 |
Kauholanuimahu, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1380 to 1415 |
Kiha, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1415 to 1455 |
Liloa, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1455 to 1485 |
Hakau, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1485 to 1490 |
Umi, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1490 to 1525 |
Kealiiokaloa, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1525 to 1535 |
Keawenui, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1535 to 1565 |
Kaikilani and Lonoikamakahiki, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1565 to 1595 |
Keakealanikane, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1595 to 1625 |
Keakamahana, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1625 to 1655 |
Keakealaniwahine, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1655 to 1685 |
Keawe and sister, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1685 to 1720 |
Alapanui, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1720 to 1754 |
Kalaniopuu, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1754 to 1782 |
Kamehameha I, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1782 to 1819 |
Kamehameha II.—Liholiho, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1819 to 1824 |
Kaahumanu regency, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1824 to 1833 |
Kamehameha III.—Kauikeaouli, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1833 to 1854 |
Kamehameha IV, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1854 to 1863 |
Kamehameha V.—Lot, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1863 to 1872 |
Lunalilo, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1872 to 1873 |
Kalakaua, | from,,,,A.D.,, 1874 to—— |
Having thus briefly sketched the outlines of the prominent political events of the islands, the ancient religion of the Hawaiians will next be referred to; and as the tabu was no less a religious than a secular prerogative, it may properly be considered in connection with the priesthood. A knowledge of the power, scope and sanctity of the tabu is essential to a proper understanding of the relations existing in the past between the people and their political and religious rulers, and this great governing force will now claim our attention.
THE TABU.
Strictly speaking, the ancient tabu, or kapu, was a prerogative adhering exclusively to political and ecclesiastical rank. It was a command either to do or not to do, and the meaning of it was, “Obey or die.” It was common to the Polynesian tribes, and was a protection to the lives, property and dignity of the priesthood and nobility.
The religious tabus were well understood by the people, as were also the personal or perpetual tabus of the ruling families; but the incidental tabus were oppressive, irksome and dangerous to the masses, as they were liable to be thoughtlessly violated, and death was the usual penalty.
Everything pertaining to the priesthood and temples was sacred, or tabu, and pigs designed for sacrifice, and running at large with the temple mark upon them, could not be molested. It was a violation of perpetual tabu to cross the shadow of the king, to stand in his presence without permission, or to approach him except upon the knees. This did not apply to the higher grades of chiefs, who themselves possessed tabu rights.
The Puloulou, or Tabu Mark.
Favorite paths, springs, streams and bathing-places were at intervals tabued to the exclusive use of the kings and temples, and squid, turtle, and two or three species of birds could be eaten only by the priests and tabu nobility.
Yellow was the tabu color of royalty, and