Malietoa Laupepa

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His Majesty Malietoa Laupepa
King (Malietoa) of Samoa
Image:Laupepa.jpg
Reign 1875 - 1887, 1889 - 1898
Born Month ? Day?, 1841
Birthplace Sapapali'i, Savaii, Samoa
Died August 22, 1898
Place of death Savaii, Samoa
Predecessor King Malietoa Moli
Successor Malietoa Tanumafili I
Consort Sisavai'i Malupo Niuva'ai
Father King Malietoa Moli
Mother Fa’alaituio Fuatino Su’a

King (Susuga) Malietoa Laupepa, (1841-1898) was the Malietoa 1880-1898, a Samoan chief. He was born in Sapapali'i, Savaii, Samoa as the son of Malietoa Moli and Fa’alaituio Fuatino Su’a in 1841.

Contents

[edit] Personal Life

Laupepa was the son and heir of King Malietoa Moli. He was raised in Malie, received a religious education at Malua Seminary and was well-known as a devout Christian. He was the recognized leader of the Sā Mōlī which was based primarily in northern Tuamasaga. Laupepa cemented ties with Palauli (the only significant Sā Mōlī support base on Savai‘i) through his marriage to Sisavai‘i Malupo, a daughter of Niuva‘ai of Palauli, Savaii. The children of this marriage were two sons called Tanumafili and Siliva‘ai, and a daughter named Fa‘amusami [Fa‘amuleuatoivao]. At about 20 years of age, Tanumafili would later become Malietoa Tanumafili I. Laupepa later married a Rarotongan woman named Tui Ariki of a chiefly Cook Islands family.

In June of 1894, both Laupepa and his son Mōlī [Mōlī II] visited with the Latter-day Saint missionaries at Lalovi, Mulifanua with an army regiment of about 1,000 men. The missionaries described Laupepa to be “a very pleasant old gentleman,” about 5’9” and 180 pounds who spoke in a “deep bass voice” (Hart, Hart & Harris 67). It is also noted of Laupepa that he underwent the rituals to receive the pe‘a tattoo when he was in his forties.

[edit] Military and Political Campaigns

Laupepa maintained his devout profession of Christianity throughout his life although he seems to have become increasingly aggressive as he was thrust into the power struggle against the powerful, warlike party of his uncle Talavou. Laupepa did not enjoy universal support from his fellow Samoans and his warfare record was dismal; he did however win some battles and managed to have himself crowned and subsequently deposed as Joint-King, Deputy-King (under Talavou), and sole King of Samoa (1881).

Interestingly, Churchward (84) recorded that the “Ellice group,” now known as the Tuvalu islands, were “formally annexed to Samoa in the name of Malietoa” by one of Laupepa’s colleagues from Malua Theological College. Before his death on August 22, 1898 Laupepa managed to gain the support of the foreign consuls but he had suffered great losses of prestige and confidence in the eyes of many Samoans after being continually routed in battle and eventually exiled to the Marshall Islands.

It is also noted that Laupepa owned a “prized Samoan war club” – probably a Malietoa family anava heirloom – which he gifted to the American consul William Churchill. This club was sought by the Bishop Museum in 1897 but was not relinquished by Churchill (Sorenson & Theroux 2005).

[edit] Laupepa, the Sā Tupua and Foreign Governments

Laupepa was crowned King of Samoa by the German, American, and British consuls in March 1881. Curiously, the Tumua polities of Ātua and A‘ana did not accept Laupepa as king (even though they previously supported him against Malietoa Talavou Tonumaipe'a) and they subsequently set up their own government in Leulumoega with Tuiātua Tupua Tamasese Titimaea as their declared King of Samoa. War between Tamasese and Laupepa was declared but the Lackawanna Agreement, signed on July 12, 1881, maintained an uneasy peace. This treaty, mediated by US Navy Captain J.H. Gillis, upheld Laupepa’s claim to the throne and named Titimaea as vice-king and Matā‘afa Iosefo as premier (Keesing 1934:68). King Laupepa protested the increasing German interference in Samoan politics and the Samoan government by petitioning Queen Victoria of Great Britain for protection in 1883 and again (twice) in November of 1884. When German consul Weber learned of the petitions he banished Laupepa and his chiefs from Apia. The German consul Stuebel asserted his dominance over Laupepa’s kingship in December 1885 when he ordered the removal of the national flag from Laupepa’s base in Apia (Gilson 1970).

The German consul placed Tuiātua Tupua Tamasese Titimaea in Laupepa’s office and yet another war between the Sā Malietoa and Sā Tupua began in 1887. Districts and families were very often divided and/or decided to remain neutral since so many leading chiefs were related to both clans. Malietoa Laupepa received a delegation from the Kingdom of Hawaii in January 1887 and received the Grand Cross of King Kalākaua medal. On February 17, 1887, Laupepa signed the Deed of Federation allying his government to that of the Kingdom of Hawai‘i. The Hawaiians seemed to understand Samoan politics better than the Europeans since they also sought the signatures of the other tama‘āiga but the Germans prevented Matā‘afa and Tupua Tamasese from attesting the document. Laupepa did not appreciate the rowdiness of the Hawai‘ian embassy but he had hope that the Polynesian Confederation would provide more than lip service to the Samoan cause. Support from the Hawai‘ian Kingdom never materialized and Laupepa was ultimately driven into the bush by the German-backed Sā Tupua army in August. Laupepa and some of his leading chiefs avoid capture for several weeks before turning themselves into the German authorities; German Captain Eugen Brandeis coerced Laupepa and others to formally recognize Titimaea as King of Samoa on September 15, 1887 (Gray 78-79) and then Laupepa was exiled on September 17, 1887.

The Germans, along with the Ta‘imua and Faipule, declared Tupua Tamasese Titimaea King of Samoa and by August 1888 Tamasese was calling himself both Malietoa and Tafa‘ifā. He gravely offended the Malietoa families because he did not in fact hold the Malietoa title. He added further insult by amassing Malietoa family fine-mats for himself. Matā‘afa Iosefo, who was the actual Gato‘aitele and Tamasoāli‘i, likewise took offense to Tamasese’s audacious claim. With Laupepa in exile the Sā Malietoa was divided once again as to who should rightfully represent the Malietoa families. Some believed Tamasese’s claim to the Malietoa was legitimate; others felt that Fa‘alataitaua (Talavou’s son) was the rightful sa‘o; others saw Matā‘afa Iosefo as the legitimate contender. Matā‘afa Iosefo [Faife‘au] eventually came to the forefront of the Malietoa title struggle and he seems to have obtained the Malietoa title sometime during the years 1888-1889.

Matā‘afa – who was supported by Fa‘alataitaua and the Sā Talavou faction – managed to reconsolidate the Malietoa allies and led them against Tamasese Titimaea in August 1888. Matā‘afa’s people refused to recognize Tamasese as king, especially Manono and Apolima. In response, the German gunship SMS Adler attacked Manono and Apolima on September 5, 1888 (Sorenson & Theroux 2005), three days before Matā‘afa Iosefo was declared King of Samoa at Fale‘ula. In mid-September, Matā‘afa’s forces successfully drove Tamasese’s Ātua forces from Vaiala to Matafagatele (Vaimauga, Tuamasaga) and successfully won the battle around 10 o’clock at night (Tuvale 45). Malietoa allies from Sātupa‘itea, Savaii raided and razed Leulumoega, the capital of A‘ana, on September 20 and Matā‘afa’s militias burned villages and plantations in Sātapuala, Faleasi‘u, Fasito‘outa, and other areas of A‘ana within a month of the Leulumoega victory. The people of Ātua experienced the same fate when the newly refurbished Matā‘afa-Malietoa fleets from Manono and Fa‘asāleleaga invaded the coastal villages of Tamasese’s allies in Falefā, Faleapuna, Lufilufi and Sāluafata. By February 1889 Matā‘afa’s personal army had swelled to about 6,000 warriors.

[edit] Malietoa Laupepa and Malietoa Matā‘afa

Germany refused to recognize Matā‘afa Iosefo as ruler even though the Samoans in general recognized him as their king, and a leader of the itūmālō. Instead, Germany, Britain, and the United States signed the General Act of Berlin on June 14, 1889, which declared Laupepa king once again even though he was still in exile (Bevans 118). When Laupepa returned to Samoa on November 8, 1889, he acknowledged Matā‘afa’s right to the title and office which had both been acquired through war and the consent of the people. Peace existed for a time and both men were acknowledged as Malietoa titleholders and national leaders. However Laupepa was soon convinced by his chiefly colleagues to reclaim the kingship which the foreign powers and the Berlin Treaty had allotted him (Meleiseā 1987b:92). On December 4, 1889 a fono was held in Lepea, Faleata and Laupepa’s supporters (including several Tutuila chiefs) declared him King of Samoa. This declaration led to another division of the Sā Malietoa, this time between Laupepa-Sā Mōlī and Matā‘afa-Sā Talavou.

Under Sā Talavou sanction, Matā‘afa challenged Laupepa and the Sā Mōlī by establishing himself in Malie, the traditional government seat of the Malietoa chiefs, on May 31, 1891. Laupepa and his supporters moved in to occupy Mulinu‘u where Laupepa’s government had been headquartered. Latter-day Saint missionary journals reveal that support from eastern ‘Upolu (Ātua) had rallied behind Matā‘afa (who was by this time the Tuiātua) in Malie and hundreds were arriving to offer their assistance. A similar show of support for Laupepa was witnessed on October 28, 1892 when “a hundred boats” arrived at Mulinu‘u bearing military support and provisions. Malietoa Laupepa eventually succeeded in ousting Matā‘afa from Malie toward the end of April 1893. Matā‘afa then “set up house” in Manono where he was designated “Tama Sā” through the title To‘oā, not to be confused with the sa‘o‘aualuma title of the Malietoa (Tamasese 1995b:71). The subsequent War of 1893 was won by Malietoa Laupepa in July of that year and Matā‘afa and other notable leaders were deported to Jaluit, Marshall Islands on July 26 of that year (Keesing 1934:72). Even though Matā‘afa had been deported, the factions that favored him over Laupepa continued in their opposition of King Laupepa. Malietoa Fa‘alata assumed full leadership of the Sā Talavou in the absence of his ally, Matā‘afa. Matā‘afa’s sanction as Malietoa was “washed out” through a desanctification ritual and the title then fell into dispute between the Sā Talavou (behind Malietoa Fa‘alataitaua) and the Sā Moli (led by Malietoa Laupepa).

Malietoa Laupepa – Tamasoāli‘i and Gato‘aitele – died at 10 o’clock in the morning of August 22, 1898 and was succeeded by his son Malietoa Tanumafili I.


Preceded by
Malietoa Talavou Tonumaipe’a
Malietoa
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Succeeded by
Malietoa Tanumafili I

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