Kihanuilulumoku
Encyclopedia
Kihanuilulumoku was the 11th Alii Aimoku of Hawaii
Hawaii (island)
The Island of Hawaii, also called the Big Island or Hawaii Island , is a volcanic island in the North Pacific Ocean...

 ruling from 1435 to 1465. He was sovereign king or chief of the island of Hawaii.

Biography

Kiha-nui-lulu-moku was the son of Kauholanuimahu
Kauholanuimahu
Kauholanuimahu ruled as the 10th Alii Aimoku of Hawaii from 1405 to 1435. He was the sovereign king or chief of the island of Hawaii.He followed his father Kahoukapu as 9th Alii Aimoku or sovereign of Hawaii. He was contemporary with the Kakaalaneo family on Maui, with Kalonas on Oahu, and with...

 and Neula, and succeeded his father as Moi of Hawaii. His principal residence was at Waipio, district of Hamakua
Hamakua
thumb|right|280px|Districts of [[Hawaii |Hawaii island]]: from northernmost, clockwise; [[Kohala, Hawaii|Kohala]], Hāmākua , [[Hilo, Hawaii|Hilo]], [[Puna, Hawaii|Puna]], [[Kau, Hawaii|Kaū]], [[Kona District, Hawaii|Kona]]...

, where the Moi of Hawaii seem to have preferred to dwell from the days of Kahaimoelea
Kahaimoelea
Kahaimoelea ruled as the 6th Alii Aimoku of Hawaii from 1285 to 1315. He was the sovereign king or chief of the island of Hawaii. Sometimes referred as Kahai or Kahiamoeleaikaaikupou....

.

Kiha, though no wars or conquests are reported as occurring during his reign, is represented in the legends as a strong, powerful, and industrious chief, who made himself respected and obeyed at home, and held in high estimation by his neighbours. Hawaiian priests and bards of later ages embellished his legend with marvels, and witchery, and superhuman adventures, a certain proof of the high esteem in which he was held by his contemporaries and their posterity. He is eulogised as a chief of a peaceful disposition, but at the same time always ready to keep peace between the subordinate chieftains by force if necessary. Agriculture and industry received his attention, and the island of Hawaii is represented as prosperous and contented during his reign.

A curious and much-prized memento of Kiha has come down to our times. It was the celebrated war-trumpet of Kiha—" Kiha-pu "—whose notes, when blown upon, were said to have been audible from Waipio to Waimea
Waimea
-Places:United States*Waimea, Hawaii County, Hawaii *Waimea, Kauai County, Hawaii*Waimea Bay, Hawaii on Oahu*Waimea Canyon State Park on Kauai*Waimea Ditch on Kauai*Waimea River on Kauai*Waimea Valley on OahuNew Zealand...

, a distance of ten miles. It was a large nautilus shell, of a kind seldom if ever found now in this group, and inlaid, after the custom of those days, with the teeth of rebel or opposing chiefs slain in battle. It had been preserved as an heirloom in the Kamehameha branch of Kiha's descendants, and was, with many other relics of the Hawaiian heathen time, sent to the Paris Exhibition of 1865. It now adorns the Royal Hawaiian Museum. Many a weird tale is still told by some of the older people of the miraculous properties of the said shell or trumpet, how it was found, and of its power over the Kini Akua, " the host of gods," when properly blown.

Kiha lived to a very old age and died at Waipio. His first wife was his own aunt, Waoilea, the sister of Neula, his mother, with whom he had Liloa
Liloa
Liloa ruled as the 12th Alii Aimoku of Hawaii from 1465 to 1495. He was sovereign king or chief of the island of Hawaii.He was the son of King Kihanuilulumoku, 11th Alii Aimoku of Hawaii and Waoilea. He succeeded on the death of his father in 1465. He was a ruling chief, a sacred high chief who...

, who succeeded him as Moi of Hawaii. He also had three other sons, either with Waoilea or with some other wife whose name has not been preserved. Their names were Kaunuamoa, Makaoku, and Kepailiula, the second of whom became chief of the Hilo district, and married Hinaiakamalama, sixth in descent from Kalaunuiohua
Kalaunuiohua
Kalaunuiohua ruled as the 7th Alii Aimoku of Hawaii from 1315 to 1345. He was the sovereign king or chief of the island of Hawaii. He is represented in the legends as a warlike and enterprising king.- War of Kawelewele :...

. In his old age Kiha took a new wife named Hina-opio, with whom he had a son, Hoolana, who appears to have been provided for in the Puna district, where the family remained for four generations, until Kuikai removed to Molokai, married Kumakakaha, the daughter of Kalani-Pehu, the then most potent chief of that island, and became the ancestor of the well known Kaiakea family, the head of which still survives in the au daughter.

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