The Aliʻi of Koʻolau were the rulers of Koʻolau Range on the island of Oahu, in ancient Hawaii. Ancient Hawaiians believed that the Chiefs of Koʻolau were the descendants of the god named Wākea. Chiefs could have different noble ranks; those who were born from the unions of full siblings had the highest known rank. The first ruler of Koʻolau was High Chief Kalehenui.

List

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Koʻolau Range
  • Kalehenui[1] — child of Maweke (a wizard from Tahiti[2])
  • Hinakaimauliʻawa[3] (female) — child of Kalehenui and Kahinalo
  • Mualani (female) — child of Hinakaimauliʻawa and Kahiwakaʻapu
  • Kua-o-Mua — child of Mualani and Kaomealani I
  • Kawalewaleoku — child of Kua-o-Mua and his sister, Kapua-a-Mua; considered a deity
  • Kaulaulaokalani — child of Kawalewaleoku and Unaʻula[4]
  • Kaimihauoku (female) — child of Kaulaulaokalani and Kalua-i-Olowalu
  • Moku-o-Loe[5] — son of Kaimihauoku
  • Kalia-o-kalani (Kahoakalani-o-Moku) — child of Moku, and husband of Kua-a-ʻohe
  • Ke-opu-o-lani (Kupualani) — consort of Kaohi-a-kanaka
  • Kupanihi — husband of Kahua-o-kalani
  • Lua-poluku — son of Kupanihi, and husband of Mumu-ka-lani-ohua
  • Ahu-kai
  • Maʻe-nui-o-kalani
  • Kapikiʻo-kalani
  • Holaulani (Kauaohalaulani) (female)
  • Laninui-a-Kaʻihupeʻe
  • Hoalani
  • Ipuwai-o-Hoalani (female)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Abraham Fornander. An Account of the Polynesian Race: Its Origins and Migrations, and the Ancient History of the Hawaiian People to the Times of Kamehameha I. "They probably ruled over the Kona side of the island, while Kaulaulaokalani, on the Maweke-Kalehenui line, ruled over the Koolau side..."
  2. ^ Māweke, A Voyaging Aliʻi
  3. ^ "Family tree of Hinakaimauliawa". Archived from the original on 2016-03-16. Retrieved 2017-06-08.
  4. ^ "Kaulaulaokalani (Ka-'ula'ula-o-kalani)". Archived from the original on 2016-03-17. Retrieved 2017-06-08.
  5. ^ Memoirs of the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum of Polynesian Ethnology and Natural History. Bishop Museum Press, 1920.