Individual Details
Haho
(Abt 1065 - )
LINEAGE
Conflict: Genealogy, Volume I, G-44, p 4 and Peabody-Henriques genealogy, Hms G17, p 2 list mother as Kapuhaakia.
Conflict: He kuauhau no ka hanau ana o na kupuna a pau o hawaii nei, G-10, p 2 lists Haho's mother as Kapoea and Paumakua's mother as Kapuhaakia.
Conflict: Phillips Collection Book. G-3, p 1 lists parents as Kapulani and Kaponuikuakaaloha, child of Kapukaukia and Huanuiikalalailai, child of Manokalililani and Kapounuikaianaina, child of Hikiluna and Kahuaimolunakalani.
Conflict: Buke ku Auhau Hawaii. G-8, p 4 and Genealogy of the Chiefs, Hms G46, p 3 lists parents as Kapoee and Kapounuikuaolokea, child of Kapuahaakia and Huanuikalalailai, child of Manokalililani and Kapounuikaianaino, child of Hikiluna (or Kahikiluna in G46) and Pahuainainolunakalani (or Kahuaimolunakalani in G46), child of Pohukaina and Huahuakapulei.
LIFE
A. See Cole and Jensen, Israel in the Pacific, p 106-107 for explanation of birth year estimates.
Conflict: Kamakau, Tales and Traditions of the People of Old, p 151 states he was born in Waialua, Oahu.
B. He was of Maui (Fornander, An Account of the Polynesian Race, p 39). He "inherited the rule of Hawaii and Maui from his father" (Oukah, Hawaiian Royal & Noble Genealogies, p 37).
C. "Before Haho reigned, the island of Hawaii had been governed by commoners, maka'ainana..... The maka'ainana therefore searched for a chief for themselves and found one on O'ahu to be placed over their chiefdom.... He was called Haho-lani-a-Huamakua; the names of his father and grandfather were combined into one" (Kamakau, Tales and Traditions of the People of Old, p 156). "The chiefs of Hawai'i island were the originators of the council of chiefs, aha. In the time when Haho reigned over the chiefdom of Hawai'i, it became a government ruled over by a council of chiefs."
D. Somehow connected to Hakalanileo and his sons. "Haho was a haughty and warlike chief" (Kalakaua ,The Legends and Myths of Hawaii, p 84).
E. High chiefs of Maui descended from him (Fornander, Account of the Polynesian Race, vol 2 p 78).
Events
Families
| Spouse | KauilaiAnapa ( - ) |
| Child | Palena (1090 - ) |
| Child | Kupehau ( - ) |
| Father | Paumakua (Maui) (1040 - ) |
| Mother | ManoKalililani ( - ) |
| Sibling | KauilaiAnapa ( - ) |
| Sibling | Mano ( - ) |
| Sibling | Nana ( - ) |
Endnotes
1. William A. Cole and Jensen, Elwin W, Israel in the Pacific (Salt Lake City: Genealogical Society, 1961)., Chart No 2..
2. Samuel Manaiakalani Kamakau, Tales and Traditions of the People of Old: Na Mo'olelo a Ka Po'e Kahiko, trans. Mary Kawena Pukui (Honolulu: Bishop Museum Press, 1991)., p 101..
3. Descendants of Prince Keeaumoku I. HMS G65 (FamilySearch: Bishop Museum)., Chart 3..
4. Samuel Manaiakalani Kamakau, Tales and Traditions of the People of Old: Na Mo'olelo a Ka Po'e Kahiko, trans. Mary Kawena Pukui (Honolulu: Bishop Museum Press, 1991)., p 156..
5. Hawaii State Archives, Genealogy Books, G-5, Mele for Keohohiwa, Genealogies, Heiau Prayers., p 2..
6. Edith Kawelohea McKinzie, Hawaiian Genealogies: Extracted from Hawaiian Language Newspapers, (Laie: The Institute for Polynesian Studies, 1983), vol. 1., p 97..
