Keleanohoanaapiapi
Keleanohoanaapiapi, short name Kelea, was an ancient Hawaiian noblewoman who is mentioned in ancient legends,[1] and her genealogy is given in chants. She was a Princess (Hawaiian language: Aliʻi) of Maui, one of the Hawaiian Islands. She was a High Chiefess, but not of the highest known rank.
Legend about her abduction can be compared to the myth of Helen of Troy.
Family
Keleanohoanaapiapi was a daughter of High Chief Kahekili I the Great of Maui[2] and his wife, Lady Haukanuimakamaka of Kauai, and thus a sister of Chief Kawaokaohele.[3]
Her paternal grandmother was Queen Kapohauola.
Life
Keleanohoanaapiapi was most likely born on the island of Maui.
She was considered very beautiful and became a wife to the handsome Prince Lo Lale of Oahu, brother of King Piliwale.[4] They had three children. Lo Lale and Keleanohoanaapiapi were later divorced.
Keleanohoanaapiapi later married a noble named Kalamakua.[5] Their daughter was Queen La’ieloheloheikawai, wife of King Piʻilani of Maui.
Crater
There is a crater called Keleanohoanaapiapi on Venus.
References
- Edith Kawelohea McKinzie. Hawaiian Genealogies: Extracted from Hawaiian Language Newspapers.
- Ka Nupepa Kuokoa (newspaper). July 26, 1901. Hala ia Makuahine ("This Mother is Gone"). Obituary of Panana Parker.
- Abraham Fornander, An Account of the Polynesian Race: Its Origin and Migrations, Rutland, VT: Charles E. Tuttle Company, 1969.
- Keleanuinohoana'api'api
- Kamakau, Samuel Manaiakalani, Ka Nupepa Kuokoa (newspaper). August 26, 1865. Ka Moolelo O Hawaii ("The History of Hawaii").