Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Kaiminaauao

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Father
  
Caesar Kapaʻakea

Cousins
  
Kamehameha V

House
  
House of Kalakaua

Name
  
Kaiminaauao Kaiminaauao

Died
  
November 10, 1848

Mother
  
Analea Keohokalole


Burial
  
Mauna ʻAla Royal Mausoleum

Parents
  
Kapaakea, Keohokalole, Kamehameha III, Kalama

Siblings
  
Likelike, James Kaliokalani

Similar People
  
Kapaakea, Likelike, Kamehameha III, Leleiohoku II, Poomaikelani

My kauai by kalani kaiminaauao


Kaʻiminaʻauao (1844 – November 10, 1848) was a Hawaiian princess by adoption to Queen Kalama and King Kamehameha III. She died of the measles at the age of four. She was a member of the House of Kamehameha (by adoption) and the House of Kalākaua (by birth).

Contents

Her mother was Analea Keohokālole, and her father was Caesar Kapaʻakea. Both were Hawaiian nobility. She was a younger sister of James Kaliokalani, David Kalākaua, Lydia Kamakaeha, and Anna Kaʻiulani, and she was the older sister of Miriam Likelike, and William Pitt Leleiohoku II. Two of her siblings became rulers after her death.

She was an adopted (in the Hawaiian tradition of hānai) child, as were most of her siblings. Kamehameha III and his queen, Kalama, were childless at the time because two sons born to Kalama had died before reaching adulthood. Kamehameha III had previously adopted his half-sister Kīnaʻu's son Alexander Liholiho as his heir. Kalama probably wished to have a daughter of her own to raise, so they adopted Kaiminaʻauao. Kaiminaʻauao was the first in her family to be referred as a princess since her foster parents were the sovereign king and queen of the Hawaiian Islands.

The measles, brought to Hilo by an American warship, decimated about a third of the Hawaiian population. Measles, whooping cough and influenza epidemics wiped out 10,000 people, mostly native Hawaiians. Among the high chiefs who died were Moses Kekūāiwa (son of Kīnaʻu and Kekūanāoʻa), William Pitt Leleiohoku I, husband of Ruth Keʻelikolani, and the four-year-old Kaʻiminaʻauao on November 10, 1848. She was interred in the Kalākaua Crypt of the Royal Mausoleum of Hawaii at Mauna Ala.

Kalani kaiminaauao


References

Kaiminaauao Wikipedia


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