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Charles Kanaʻina

Kanaʻina II
His Honour/His Highness
Kanaina painting.jpg
Born 1801
Napoʻopoʻo, Hawaiʻi
Died March 13, 1877(1877-03-13)
Honolulu, Oahu
Burial March 29, 1877
Kawaiahaʻo Church
Spouse Miriam Auhea Kekāuluohi
Issue Davida
William Charles Lunalilo
Kamehameha Dynasty House of Moana
House of Kamehameha
Father [Eia] Ka-makakaualii
Mother Kauwā Palila
Occupation House of Nobles
Privy Counsel
Royal attendant
Kāhili Bearer
Signature Kanaʻina II's signature

Charles Kanaʻina, officially referred to as His Honour and His Highness, (Kanaʻina II) (abt. May 4, 1798 – March 13, 1877) was an aliʻi (hereditary noble) of the Kingdom of Hawaii and father of William Charles Lunalilo, the 6th monarch of the Kamehameha Dynasty. Kanaʻina was a descendant of several figures from ancient Hawaiian history, including Liloa, Hakau and Umi-a-Liloa of Hawaiʻi Island as well as Piilani of Maui. He served on both the Privy Counsel and in the House of Nobles. He was named after his uncle Kanaʻina, a name that means "The conquering" in the Hawaiian Language. This uncle greeted Captain James Cook in 1778 and confronted the navigator before he was killed.

His wife Miriam Auhea Kekāuluohi was a widow and niece of Kamehameha I. She was also married to Kamehameha II before he converted to Christianity and gave up all but one wife. Kanaʻina and Kekāuluohi lived in a traditional aliʻi style home in a sacred neighborhood in Honolulu called Pohukaina near Kekūanāoʻa, Kaʻahumanu and their offspring. The compound would eventually become the Iolani Palace (the official Royal Residence of the Hawaiian Royal Family) and Palace Walk when Kekūanāoʻa built Hale Aliʻi in the center of the families estates as a gift to his daughter Victoria Kamāmalu. Kanaʻina kept his property at the palace until his death and would be the only original owner to do so while the Palace was in use, living there through five monarchs, from the 1820s to 1877. Kanaʻina's son, William Charles Lunalilo, was named by Kamehameha III as an heir to the throne of the kingdom and ascended in 1873 while his father still lived. Lunalilo died only a year later, three years before his father's death on March 13, 1877. Having not re-written his will, which left everything to his son who had predeceased, Kanaʻina died intestate. Probate hearings proceeded for 5 years. On final adjudication his property was auctioned with the proceeds going to several of Kanaʻina's cousins including Ruth Keelikōlani and Bernice Pauahi Bishop.


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