Hale Kapu Mo'olelo a Ali'i Ana
Hawaiian History · Mythology · IP Profiles · Cultural Education
The living educational archive of Hale Kapu Mo'olelo a Ali'i Ana. Every story here is the intellectual property of the Hawaiian people — protected under the Trust, told on our own terms. Read, learn, and carry these stories forward.
10 entries — All
Ke Ali'i Nui — The Great Chief
The warrior king who united the Hawaiian Islands under a single sovereign rule — the first and only man to accomplish this in the history of the archipelago.
The Last Sovereign Monarch of the Hawaiian Kingdom
The last reigning monarch of the Hawaiian Kingdom — a composer, poet, and sovereign who refused to shed the blood of her people even as her throne was stolen from her.
The Demigod — Trickster, Fisher, Fire-Bringer
The great demigod of Polynesia — the trickster who fished up islands from the sea, lassoed the sun to slow its passage, and stole fire from the underworld for humanity.
Goddess of Volcanoes — She Who Shapes the Sacred Land
The volcano goddess who created the Hawaiian Islands with her body — her tears are lava, her hair is volcanic glass, and the land itself is her living flesh.
The Hawaiian Creation Chant — 2,102 Lines of Sacred Genealogy
The great creation chant of the Hawaiian people — a 2,102-line genealogical epic that traces the origin of all life from the primordial darkness to the birth of the Hawaiian ali'i.
Pele's Beloved Sister — Healer, Poet, Warrior
Pele's youngest and most beloved sister — a healer, poet, and warrior whose epic journey across the Hawaiian Islands is the longest and most complex narrative in all of Hawaiian oral literature.
The Illegal Seizure of the Hawaiian Kingdom
On January 17, 1893, a group of American businessmen backed by U.S. Marines overthrew the sovereign government of the Hawaiian Kingdom — an act the United States Congress formally acknowledged as illegal 100 years later.
The Elder Sibling of the Hawaiian People
In Hawaiian cosmology, the taro plant is not a crop — it is the elder sibling of the Hawaiian people, born from the same divine parents, carrying the same sacred lineage.
The Body as Library, the Dance as Law
Hula is not performance — it is testimony. The body is the library. Every movement encodes history, genealogy, and law. Hula is the most sophisticated oral archive system ever created.
Love of the Land — The Spirit of Hawaiian Sovereignty
Aloha 'Āina — love of the land — is not a slogan. It is the foundational political philosophy of the Hawaiian people: the belief that the land is not property to be owned, but a living ancestor to be cared for.
Hale Kapu Mo'olelo a Ali'i Ana
The complete archive of Hawaiian ali'i — kings, queens, high chiefs, and sacred chiefesses whose lineages form the foundation of the Hawaiian Kingdom. Each entry contains a full educational biography researched from historical records, oral traditions, and scholarly sources.
54 of 54 entries
01
King of the Hawaiian Kingdom
c. 1736 – 1819
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02
King of the Hawaiian Kingdom
1797 – 1824
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03
King of the Hawaiian Kingdom
1814 – 1854
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04
Fourth king of the Hawaiian Kingdom
1834 – 1863
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05
King of the Hawaiian Kingdom
1830 – 1872
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06
King of the Hawaiian Kingdom
1835 – 1874
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07
King of the Hawaiian Kingdom
1836 – 1891
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08
Last reigning monarch of the Hawaiian Kingdom
1838 – 1917
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09
Queen Consort of the Hawaiian Kingdom
c. 1778 – 1823
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10
Queen Consort, Kuhina Nui, and Queen Regent of the Hawaiian Kingdom
1768 – 1832
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11
Queen Consort of the Hawaiian Kingdom, High Chiefess, Governor of Maui
c. 1778 – 1842
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12
Kuhina Nui of Hawaii
c. 1805 – 1839
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13
Kuhina Nui of Hawaii, High Chiefess of the Kingdom
1794 – 1845
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14
Kuhina Nui of the Hawaiian Islands and Minister of Interior
1810 – 1857
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15
Princess of the Hawaiian Kingdom
c. 1815 – 1837
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16
Kuhina Nui of Hawaii, Crown Princess of the Hawaiian Islands
1838 – 1866
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17
High chiefess, Governor of the Island of Hawaiʻi
1826 – 1883
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18
Aliʻi (Noble) of the Royal Family of the Kingdom of Hawaii, Philanthropist, Founder of Kamehameha Schools
1831 – 1884
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19
High Chiefess (aliʻi)
c. 1839 – 1899
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20
Prince of the Hawaiian Kingdom, Prospective Governor of Kauaʻi
1829 – 1848
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21
Prince of the Hawaiian Kingdom, Regent
1855 – 1877
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22
Crown Prince of the Hawaiian Kingdom
1858 – 1862
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23
Hawaiian aliʻi princess
1832 – 1861
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24
High Chiefess, Queen Consort of Hawaiian Islands, Governor of Maui
c. 1778 – 1842
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25
High Chiefess of Maui
c. 1735 – 1790
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26
Queen consort of the Hawaiian Kingdom
1834 – 1899
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27
Princess of the Hawaiian Kingdom
1851 – 1887
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28
Crown Princess of Hawaii, last heir apparent to the Hawaiian throne
1875 – 1899
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29
Prince of the Hawaiian Kingdom
1868 – 1908
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30
Prince of the Hawaiian Kingdom, Delegate to U.S. Congress
1871 – 1922
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31
Prince of the Hawaiian Kingdom
1869 – 1887
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32
Prince of the Hawaiian Kingdom, Heir Apparent, Regent
1855 – 1877
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33
High Chief of the Hawaiian Kingdom
1835 – 1852
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34
Princess of the Hawaiian Kingdom, Governor of Hawaiʻi Island
1839 – 1895
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35
Princess of the Hawaiian Kingdom, Governor of the Island of Hawaii
1851 – 1887
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36
Hawaiian ali'i princess
1860 – 1944
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37
Crown Princess of the Hawaiian Kingdom
1875 – 1899
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38
Iku Hoʻano (First Vice Regent) of the Kumuʻahakalani (Supreme Council) of the Hale O Na Aliʻi o Hawaiʻi
1952 – 2025
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39
Prince of Hawaiʻi, Delegate to the U.S. Congress
1871 – 1922
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40
Princess of the Hawaiian Kingdom, Royal Claimant
1926 – 2022
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41
High Chief of Kona and Kohala, Father of Kamehameha I
c. 1750s – c. 1760s
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42
High Chief of Maui
c. 1700 – 1736
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43
Last independent ruling chief of Maui
c. 1737 – 1794
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44
Aliʻi nui of Maui and King of Oʻahu
c. 1760 – 1795
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45
Last independent Aliʻi nui of Kauaʻi and Niʻihau
c. 1778 – 1824
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46
High chief of Oʻahu
c. 1655 – 1730
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47
Aliʻi nui of Hawaiʻi Island
c. 1700 – 1754
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48
Prince of the Big Island of Hawaiʻi, Aliʻi Nui of Kaʻū
c. 1700 – c. 1735
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49
King (Moʻi) of Maui
c. 1700 – 1736
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50
High Chiefess of Hawaii
c. 1680 – 1730
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51
High Chiefess
c. 1705 – 1812
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52
Aliʻi Aimoku of Hawaiʻi Island
c. 1660 – c. 1725
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53
High Chiefess of Maui
c. 1744 – c. 1800
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54
High Chiefess of Kaʻū and South Kona
c. 1781 – 1841
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