Kuhina Nui
Kuhina Nui of the Hawaiian Islands
Kuhina Nui | |
---|---|
Flag of the Kuhina Nui | |
Coat of arms of the Kingdom of Hawaii | |
Style | His/Her Highness |
Nominator | Kamehameha I to Kamehameha V |
Inaugural holder | Kaʻahumanu I |
Formation | 1819 |
Final holder | Mataio Kekūanāoʻa |
Abolished | 1864 |
Kuhina Nui was a powerful office in the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi from 1819 to 1864. It was usually held by a relative of the king and was the rough equivalent of the 19th-century European office of Prime Minister or sometimes Regent.
Origin of the office
Prior to the establishment of the office of Kuhina Nui by Kamehameha, there was a position called Kālaimoku ("kālai" meaning "to carve" and "moku" being an island). This was an ancient office from the very dawn of Hawaiian civilization. During this time before the Kuhina Nui Kalanimoku, a trusted chief of Kamehameha, was the Kālaimoku until Kamehameha established the office of the Kuhina Nui. When King Kamehameha II assumed the throne in 1819, his father's favorite wife, Queen Kaʻahumanu, told him Kamehameha I had wished for her to rule the kingdom alongside him. Whether this was really the will of Kamehameha I is a matter of debate. In either case, Kamehameha II did not object and the office of Kuhina Nui was created for Kaʻahumanu. According to other sources, Kamehameha I had wanted Kaʻahumanu to succeed her father Keeaumoku Papaiahiahi as chief counselor.
Kaʻahumanu became the driving force behind the kingdom’s policy during the reign of Kamehameha II. She and another one of Kamehameha I's wives, Keopuolani, pressured Kamehameha II into abolishing the old kapu system of laws and religion.
Conflict between the Kuhina Nui and the King
At the death of Kamehameha II in 1824, his younger brother and heir Kauikeaouli was still only a child. Because of this, Kaʻahumanu ruled in his place as regent. After her death in 1832, a queen named Kīnaʻu, a daughter of Kamehameha I and the Dowager Queen of Kamehameha II, assumed the office of Kuhina Nui as Kaʻahumanu II and the regency until her half-brother Kauikeaouli declared himself to be of age in 1833. Kauikeaouli was crowned King Kamehameha III thereafter and the office of Kuhina Nui became the second-most powerful office in the kingdom.[1]
During Kīnaʻu's time in office, the offices of the king and Kuhina Nui often battled for power. This was mainly due to conflict between the views of the two people holding the office. While Kamehameha III desired a revival of the old Hawaiian culture, his elder sister Kīnaʻu wanted Hawaiʻi to be a Protestant state which tolerated no other religion. For the first few years of Kamehameha III’s reign, the kingdom suffered from the frequent quarrels between Kīnaʻu and the king.
The Constitution of 1840
The 1840 Constitution of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi codified the office of Kuhina Nui into law. The constitution specified the following duties and powers:
- The Kuhina Nui was to be appointed by the King.
- All business connected with the special interests of the kingdom which the King wished to transact was to be done by Kuhina Nui under the authority of the king.
- All documents and business of the kingdom executed by the Kuhina Nui were to be considered as executed by the King's authority.
- All government property was to be reported to the Kuhina Nui.
- The King was not allowed to act without the knowledge of the Kuhina Nui, nor was the Kuhina Nui allowed to act without the knowledge of the King.
- All important business of the kingdom which the King chose to transact in person, he could do only with the approbation of the Kuhina Nui.
The 1840 Constitution created a degree of power sharing between the King and Kuhina Nui. Both were given seats in the House of Nobles in the legislature and both also held seats in the Kingdom's judiciary.
The position was written into a constitution devised by patriarchal American attorneys and missionaries. In the United States, women held no political offices, were denied suffrage, and in some states could not even control their inherited property. Yet the Americans William Richards, John Ricord, and William Little Lee all believed it was appropriate to reinforce the power and authority of the Kuhina Nui as an equivalent to the King despite the fact it had become a "traditional" female office.[2]
The Constitution of 1852
The 1852 Constitution of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi dedicated a full section (Section 2) to the office of Kuhina Nui. Articles 43 through 48 described the office:
- The Kuhina Nui was given the title, "Kuhina Nui of the Hawaiian Islands", and the style of "Highness."
- All business connected with the special interests of the kingdom, which the King wished to transact, was to be done by Kuhina Nui under the authority if the King
- All documents and business of the kingdom executed by the Kuhina Nui, were to be considered as executed by the King's authority.
- All important business of the kingdom which the King chose to transact in person, he could do only with the approbation of the Kuhina Nui.
- The Kuhina Nui was to act as regent in the absence of the King, or if the King was too young to rule on his own. In addition, should the crown become vacant, the Kuhina Nui would act as monarch until a new king was chosen.
End of the Office
The power sharing scheme set in place by Kamehameha III in 1852 seemed to work and it remained in place throughout the remainder of Kamehameha III's reign and throughout the reign of Kamehameha IV. Kamehameha IV and his brother despised the position but Kamehameha IV did place the role upon his less than responsible sister, Victoria Kamamalu. Mostly she just signed and approved papers to the wishes of her brothers. When Kamehameha V assumed the throne in 1863, however, the new king made it clear that he favored a more autocratic monarchy over the constitutional one set in place in 1852. In 1864, the King issued a new constitution that was much less liberal than the Constitution of 1852. The 1864 Constitution of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi abolished the office of Kuhina Nui and effectively merged the powers into his own office as King. The office was never revived after that, with the Hawaiian monarchy lasting only about three more decades before being overthrown. The termination of the office did not destroy opportunity for feminine leadership in the kingdom. By strengthening the office of the Monarch, it made it possible for a queen to wield real political power.
An office of Prime Minister was created during the reign of King Kalākaua:
- Walter M. Gibson (1882–1887)
- Celso Caesare Moreno (1880)
List of Kuhina Nui
The female Kuhina Nui took the title "Kaʻahumanu" followed by a number, in honor of the first holder of the office in much the same way that all members of the Kamehameha dynasty took the title "Kamehameha".
Portrait Name Born - Died Kuhina Nui From Kuhina Nui Until Kaʻahumanu I 1768–1832 1819 June 5, 1832 Kaʻahumanu II 1805–1839 June 5, 1832 April 4, 1839 Kaʻahumanu III 1794–1845 April 5, 1839 June 7, 1845 Keoni Ana 1810–1857 June 10, 1845 January 16, 1855 Kaʻahumanu IV 1838–1866 January 16, 1855 December 21, 1863 Mataio Kekūanāoʻa 1793–1868 December 21, 1863 August 24, 1864
References
- ↑ "Kuhina Nui 1819-1864". Centennial Exhibit. State of Hawaii Department of Accounting and General Services. Retrieved 2009-10-03.
- ↑ Dismembering Lahui: A History of the Hawaiian Nation to 1887 By Jonathan Kamakawiwo'ole Osorio. Page 114-115
Bibliography
- Mrantz, Maxine. Hawaiian Monarchy: The Romantic Years. Honolulu: Tongg Publishing Co., Ltd., 1974.
- Potter, Norris W. The Hawaiian Monarchy. – Honolulu: The Bess Press, Inc., 1983.