Lunalilo | |||||
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Photograph of Lunalilo by Menzies Dickson
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King of the Hawaiian Islands (more...) | |||||
Reign | January 8, 1873 – February 3, 1874 | ||||
Investiture | January 9, 1873 Kawaiahaʻo Church |
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Predecessor | Kamehameha V | ||||
Successor | Kalākaua | ||||
Born |
Pohukaina, Honolulu, Oahu |
January 31, 1835||||
Died | February 3, 1874 Haimoeipo, Honolulu, Oahu |
(aged 39)||||
Burial | February 28, 1874 Royal Mausoleum at Mauna ʻAla (temporary) November 23, 1875 Lunalilo Mausoleum, Kawaiahaʻo Church |
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House |
Keōua Nui / Kamehameha Kalaimamahu |
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Father | Charles Kanaina | ||||
Mother | Kekāuluohi |
Full name | |
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William Charles Lunalilo |
Lunalilo, born William Charles Lunalilo (January 31, 1835 – February 3, 1874), was King of the Hawaiʻi from January 8, 1873 until February 3, 1874. Due to his popularity and status as Hawaii's first elected monarch, he became known as "The People's King".
William Charles Lunalilo was born on January 31, 1835 in a two-story house made of coral brick, an area known as Pohukaina, now part the grounds of the ʻIolani Palace in Honolulu. His mother was High Chiefess Miriam Auhea Kekāuluohi (later styled as Kaʻahumanu III) and his father was High Chief Charles Kanaʻina. He was grandnephew of Kamehameha I by blood and the monarch's stepson by marriage to his mother. His grandmother was Kalākua Kaheiheimālie, sister of Kamehameha’s favorite wife, Queen Kaʻahumanu. This made him both, a second cousin as well as first cousin to King Kamehameha V, King Kamehameha IV, and Princess Victoria Kamāmalu through their mothers: Kekāuluohi and Kīnaʻu (later styled as Kaʻahumanu II) who were half-sisters. Lunalilo translates as Luna (high) lilo (lost) or "so high up as to be lost to sight" in the Hawaiian language. He was also named after King William IV of the United Kingdom, a great friend of the Hawaiian Royal Family.
He was declared eligible to succeed by the royal decree of King Kamehameha III and sent to the Chief's Children's School (later called the Royal School) when it was founded by missionaries Amos Starr Cooke and Juliette Montague Cooke. Learning to speak both Hawaiian and English, he gained a mastery of English literature and love of Shakespearian soliloquies. According to one of his classmates Elizabeth Kekaaniau, Lunalilo was groomed to one day assume the Governorship of Oahu after Kekūanāoʻa's death.