Kealiiokaloa

Keali'iokaloa
Ali‘i Aimoku of Hawaii
Reign 1525 – 1545
Predecessor ʻUmi-a-Liloa
Successor Keawenuiaumi
Issue Kukailani
Father ʻUmi-a-Liloa
Mother Aliʻi Kapukinia-Liloa
Born 1500
Died 1545 (aged 4445)

Keali'iokaloa (1500 – 1545) was the Ali’i Aimoku of the island of Hawaiʻi, from 1525 to 1545. He was the sovereign king or chief of the island of Hawai’i.[1]

Family

Keali’iokaloa was the eldest son of ʻUmi-a-Liloa, Ali’i Aimoku of Hawaiʻi, by his third wife and half-sister, Aliʻi Kapukini-a-Liloa, daughter of Liloa, Ali’i Aimoku of Hawaiʻi.

He succeeded on the death of his father in the year 1525.[2]

In 1545 he was deposed by his younger brother Keawenuiaumi.

He married first Makuwahineapalaka, then Helu’anu’u and Hika’alani. He died in 1545, having had issue, a son Aliʻi Kukailani and daughter Kaohukiokalani.

Preceded by
ʻUmi-a-Liloa
Ali’i Aimoku of Hawai’i
1525–1545
Succeeded by
Keawenuiaumi

Sources

  1. Royal family tree of Hawaiian kings and chiefs
  2. Abraham Fornander, An Account of the Polynesian Race: Its Origin and Migrations, Rutland, VT: Charles E. Tuttle Company, 1969.