Kamehameha Ii

Kamehameha II (1797 - 1824) was the second king of the Kingdom of Hawai‘i. Born Liholiho in Hilo, Hawai‘i, the eldest son of Kamehameha I and his highest-ranking wife Keopuolani, he was groomed to be heir to the throne from age five. Liholiho succeeded to the throne upon Kamehameha I's death in May 1819, but among other conditions, he was forced to take on merely a ceremonial role; administrative power was to be vested in Ka‘ahumanu, his father's favorite wife, and the former king's prime minister. Kamehameha II is best remembered for ordering that the ancient kapu (taboo) system of religious laws be abolished six months into his reign. It was also during his reign that the first Christian missionaries arrived in the Hawaiian Islands. In November 1823 Kamehameha II and his queen traveled to London seeking to complete negotiations for an alliance between Hawaii and Great Britain. However, before he could meet with King George IV, he and his queen caught measles, to which they had no immunity. Kamehameha II died on July 14, 1824. He was succeeded by his younger brother, Kauikeaouli, who became Kamehameha III. Kamehameha II of Hawaii Kamehameha II of Hawaii

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
vanier, ontario
monochord
baker library
smith chart
wesleyan church
powder river (montana)
nancy kress
warrior (comic)
order of the engineer
aktau
clinical psychology
gb18030
mariel
union (computer science)
battle of chattanooga
bank of america corporate center
record (computer science)
witches' mark
five children and it
seth schoen
budweiser rocket
branch (disambiguation)
commonplace
manju
butterfly mcqueen
israeli arab
king's college, pennsylvania
peter brown (historian)
matt johnson
michael witbrock
java user group
bene israel
bambara groundnut
reserve bank of australia
cochin jews
farnese hercules
vitreous ice
alan dugan
seth finkelstein
the women
signal (bridge)
yokota air base
peggy noonan
michelle meyrink