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Kamehameha, also known as Kamehameha I and Kamehameha the Great ( circa 1758- 1819), unified the Hawaiian Islands in battle and formally established the Kingdom of Hawai‘i in 1810. A skilled diplomat, Kamehameha developed friendships with the major colonial powers in the Pacific resulting in the preservation of independence, as well as a guarantee of peace and prosperity of the kingdom, for future generations of native Hawaiians. Kamehameha is most noted for his vehement defense of traditional Hawaiian values and the kapu system of law and religion. He is also remembered for mamalahoe or the Law of the Splintered Paddle, used today throughout the world protecting the human rights of non-combatants in times of battle. He is forever immortalized with the Kamehameha Statue at Ali‘iolani Hale, Kohala, and the United States CapitolThe United States Capitol is the building which serves as home for the legislative branch of the United States government. It is located atop Capitol Hill in Washington, DC. The building is characterized by a central dome (inspired as much by St Paul's Ca.
Although there is some debate as to the precise year of his birth, Hawaiian legends claimed that a great king would one day unite the islands, and that the sign of his birth would be a cometHalley's Comet nucleus sunlit from the left. A comet is a relatively small astronomical object similar to an asteroid but composed largely of ice. In Earth's solar system, the orbits of comets may extend past that of Pluto; of the comets which enter the i. Halley's cometESA Giotto mission. The nucleus is sunlit from the left, and several bright jets of gas and dust are visible. Comet Halley officially designated 1P/Halley more generally known as Halley's Comet after Edmond Halley, is the best-known and the brightest of t was visible from Hawai‘i in 1758, and it is therefore assumed that Kamehameha was born shortly after its appearance.
Kamehameha's birth is shrouded in legend. He was born as Paiea, to Keoua and Keku‘iapoiwa, ali‘iAli'i is the chiefly or noble rank in Hawaiian society. Ali'i are the highest people in indigenous Hawai'ian culture. As such they rank above both kahuna (priests) and maka'ainana (commoners). Ali'i are full of mana and can place and remove kapu on object of Kohala on the island of Hawai‘i. Kamehameha's father, Keoua , was the grandson of Keaweikekahiali‘iokamoku , who had once ruled a large portion of the island. When he died, war broke out over succession between his sons, Ke‘eaumoku and Kalaninui‘amamao , and a rival chief, Alapa‘inuiakauaua . Alapa‘i emerged victorious over the two brothers, and their orphan sons were absorbed into his clan.
When Kamehameha was born, Alapa‘i ordered the child killed. One of his KahunaOriginally, Kahuna was the Hawaiian title for a shaman, and the term is still used in that context by some native Hawaiians. see ancient Hawai'i) One of the Kahunas of the then king of Hawai'i ( Alapa'i) predicted that a fiery light in the sky would signas had warned him that a fiery light in the sky would signal the birth of a "killer of chiefs", or ali‘i. Alapa‘i, nervous at the thought of his nephew usurping his rule, decided to take no chances.
Paiea's parents, however, had anticipated this. As soon as he was born, he was given into the care of Nae‘ole, another ali‘i, and disappeared from sight.
Nae‘ole raised Paiea for the first few years of his life. Five years after his birth, Alapa‘i, perhaps remorseful of his actions, invited the child back to live with his family. He is said to have had a dour disposition, and acquired the name he is best known for today: Kamehameha, from the HawaiianHawaiian could refer to the Hawaiian language the native Hawaiian people a resident of the state of Hawaii. However, to avoid confusion, residents of the state normally do not refer to themselves as Hawaiian in this sense, unless they have, in fact some H language term for "the lonely one".