Individual Details

Hanalaaiki

( - )



LINEAGE
Conflict: Peleioholani, Genealogy of the Robinson Family and Ancient Legends and Chants of Hawaii, p 8 lists mother as Hiilani-hiileialialia .
Conflict: Fornander, An Account of the Polynesian Race, vol 2 p 26-27 questions whether there were twins or if Hanalaanui and Hanalaaiki (as extolled by the respective Maui chiefly descendants) were one and the same Hanalaa.
LIFE
A. He "inherited the rule of Maui, Molokai, and Lanai" (Oukah, Hawaiian Royal & Noble Genealogies, p 39). "Through Hanalaaiki are the ancestors of Maui" (McKinzie, Hawaiian Genealogies, vol 2 p 10). In the line of the Maui high chiefs (Malo, Hawaiian Antiquities, p 247). He is the ancestral chief of Maui (Kamakau, Tales and Traditions of the People of Old, p 37). "He was the ancestor of the Maui kings" (The Hawaiian Spectator, p 219).
Conflict: Fornander, An Account of the Polynesian Race, p 27 indicates the Hawaii chiefs claimed Hanalaaiki as their ancestor.
B. He was a high chief (Keahikuniaalapalapa, Royal Genealogy of H.R.H.P. Kaikilani IV and her Family, G-53, p 16).

Events

Alt nameHana Laaiki
Alt nameHaunalaaiki
Alt nameHanalaa
BirthHana, Maui

Families

SpouseKapukapu ( - )
ChildMauiloa ( - )
ChildKoowaikumailani ( - )
SpouseMahuia ( - )
ChildMauiloa ( - )
FatherPalena (1090 - )
MotherHikawai ( - )
SiblingHanalaanui (1115 - )

Endnotes