Farm Family - Person Sheet
Farm Family - Person Sheet
NameEsther Kapiolani (Kapi'olani II) Na-pela-kapu-o-Kaka'e (Queen Consort of Hawaii) Na-pela-kapu-o-Kaka'e (Queen Consort of Hawaii) 1528,1692,1692,1697,1662, F
Birth31 Dec 1834, Hilo, Hawaii
Spouses
Marriage8 Mar 1852
Birth16 Nov 1836, Honolulu, Honolulu County, Hawaii
Death20 Jan 1891, San Francisco, San Francisco County, California Age: 54
BurialHonolulu, Honolulu County, Hawaii
MemoRoyal Mausoleum, Kawananakoa, Nu'uanu Valley, Oahu
CemeteryRoyal Mausoleum
FatherCaesar Kaluaiku KAPA’AKEA , M (1815-1866)
Marriage19 Dec 1863
Notes for Esther Kapiolani (Kapi'olani II) Na-pela-kapu-o-Kaka'e (Queen Consort of Hawaii) Na-pela-kapu-o-Kaka'e (Queen Consort of Hawaii)
After Namakeha dies, she married Kalakau.

Crowned with her husband Kalakaua in the grounds of the Iolani Palace, Honolulu, Oahu, 12th February 1883.
Notes for Benjamin (Spouse 1)
Na-makehā, Namakeha-o-kalani
Notes for David (Spouse 2)
-David La'amea Kamanakapu'u Mahinulani Nalaiaehu-o-kalani Lumialani Kalakaua I, King of the Hawaiian Islands. Elected monarch (FEB 12, 1874) in race against Queen Emma.

-He was reared by Kinimaka and his wife Ha'aheo.

-Hawaiian Monarch. Born David Laʻamea Kamananakapu Mahinulani Naloiaehuokalani Lumialani Kalākaua, the son of High Chiefs Analea 'Annie' Keohokālole and Caesar Kaluaiku Kapa'akea. He was named as eligible to succeed the throne by royal decree of King Kamehameha III, and enrolled in the Chief’s Children’s School at age four. At 16, he began a study of law, and by 1856, he was serving on the staff of King Kamehameha IV. He became leader of the political group, Young Hawaiians, who believed in Hawaii for Hawaiians. In December 1872, King Kamehameha V died without having designated an heir, and an election was held to determine his successor, Kalakaua made a bid for the throne but lost to William Lunalilo. The new king died after only a year in office, and a new election in 1874 saw him victorious, defeating Emma, the
widow of Kamehameha IV. Later that year, he sailed to the United States where he negotiated the Reciprocity Treaty of 1875, which eliminated the tariff on sugar and other Hawaiian products, resulting in a boom in the sugar industry and a period of Hawaiian prosperity. Upon his return, he commissioned the construction of Iolani Palace; with both electricity and indoor plumbing, it cost the unprecedented sum of one third of a million dollars. His cabinet was filled largely with native Hawaiians, angering European settlers who were cut out of power. In 1881, he took a trip around the world to encourage immigration and to achieve greater international recognition for the Kingdom of Hawaii as a legitimate and sovereign nation. In a March meeting with the Japanese Emperor at the Imperial Palace, the king received the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Chrysanthemum. He was received as an equal at the courts of Japan, China, Siam, Singapore, Burma, India, Egypt, France, England, Belgium, Spain, Portugal, Austria, and Germany. At home, he became the motivator of a Hawaiian cultural renaissance, re-popularizing the once banned hula which he called " ...the heartbeat of the Hawaiian people" and other traditional Hawaiian crafts, songs, and chants. He favored a return to an ancient social order, customs, and ideas, but indulged in extravagance and allowed corruption. In 1887, a minority of subjects and foreign nationals, met to organize a takeover, these so-called Honolulu Rifles threatened the king if he did not accept a new Cabinet Council. In July 1887, a new constitution was forced upon him by the members of this new cabinet. Called the Bayonet Constitution, it did not have consent or ratification of the Legislative Assembly, but was a document of duress that made the monarchy little more than a figurehead position. He yielded to demands to give the United States the right to use Pearl Harbor and maintain a naval coaling and repair station there. The political struggle between the king and his opposition continued, punctuated by an armed insurrection in 1889. His health failing, he sailed to San Francisco for treatment in 1991. He succumbed to Bright’s disease complicated by uremia. He named his sister his successor. In 1971, in an event named in his honor, the first competitive Merrie Monarch Festival hula took place in Hilo, Hawaii.1365
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Created 21 Jun 2024 by Ray K. Farm using Reunion for Mac

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