Piliwale
Piliwale (pronunciation: Peeh-leeh-wah-leh) was an ancient Hawaiian nobleman, the High Chief of the island of Oahu.[1][2] He was a member of the House of Maʻilikākahi, being the descendant of Maʻilikākahi. It is most likely that Piliwale lived in the 16th century.
Biography
Chief Piliwale (Hawaiian: Aliʻi Piliwale) was born on the island of Oʻahu (in the 16th century?). His parents were High Chief Kālonaiki of Oʻahu and his consort, Kikinui-a-ʻEwa, whose genealogy is unknown today. Piliwaleʻs paternal uncle was High Chief Kalamakua of Halawa, whilst Piliwaleʻs aunt-in-law was famous Princess Keleanohoanaapiapi of Maui, who also married Piliwaleʻs brother, Prince Lō-Lale.[3]
After the death of Kālonaiki, the grandson of Maʻilikākahi, Piliwale became a ruler of Oʻahu. He married a woman named Paʻakanilea (Paʻa-kani-lea),[4] who was maybe his own sister. Paʻakanilea and Piliwale were the parents of Princess Kūkaniloko and Princess Kohepalaoa (Kohipalaoa)[5] of Oʻahu.[6][7] It was Kūkaniloko who succeeded Piliwale on the throne of Oʻahu.[8] It is believed she was the first Chiefess suo jure of one Hawaiian island, although there were already chiefesses of the part of the island of Oʻahu, namely Hinakaimauliʻawa and her daughter Mualani, and Piliwaleʻs ancestress Maelo.
See also
References
- Stephen Denison Peet. The American Antiquarian and Oriental Journal, Opseg 15. Jameson & Morse, 1893. "There lived then at Oahu a chief named Lo-Lale, whose brother, Piliwale, was sovereign of the island."
- Jan Knappert. 1992. Pacific Mythology: An Encyclopedia of Myth and Legend.
- Memoirs of the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum of Polynesian Ethnology and Natural History, Opseg 6. Bishop Museum Press, 1920.
- The family tree of the Chief Piliwale. "Kalona-iki's children, as known, were Piliwale, Lo-Lale, and Kamaleamaka... Piliwale's wife Paʻakanilea is most likely his sister Kawaalaauaka (Kamaleamaka). Kamakau tells us Kukaniloko and Kepalaoa were niaupi'o chiefs."
- Kohepalaoa (Kepalaoa, Kohe-palaoa, Kohipalaoa). "Kohe-palaoa [is] one version of the name used by S.M. Kamakau."
- Kamakau, Samuel Manaiakalani, Ka Nupepa Kuokoa (Newspaper), 1865. "Ka Moolelo O Hawaii Nei Helu 14" (The History of Hawaii No. 14).
- Johannes C. Andersen. Tuttle Publishing, 2012. Myths & Legends of the Polynesians. "Piliwale had two daughters, but no son."
- Edith Kawelohea McKinzie. Hawaiian Genealogies: Extracted from Hawaiian Language Newspapers, Opseg 2. University of Hawaii Press, 1986.