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* [[Hulihee Palace|Hulihe'e Palace]] – Kailua-Kona home of Princess Ruth
* [[Hulihee Palace|Hulihe'e Palace]] – Kailua-Kona home of Princess Ruth
* [[Keoua Hale]] – Palace of Princess Ruth
* [[Keoua Hale]] – Palace of Princess Ruth

==External Links==
*[http://kapalama.ksbe.edu/archives/historical/wills/ruth.php Princess Ruth's Will]
*[http://starbulletin.com/2004/05/30/features/story1.html Getting to know Ruth]]
*[http://www.keouanui.org/Kamehameha_Descendants_Ruth.html Biography from the Hawai{{okina}}i Royal Family's official site]
*[http://www.huapala.org/Chants/Aia_I_Honolulu.html "There at Honolulu" Chant for Princess Ruth]


[[Category:1826 births|Keelikolani, Ruth]]
[[Category:1826 births|Keelikolani, Ruth]]

Revision as of 04:14, 23 February 2008

Ruth Keʻelikōlani
Princess of the Hawaiian Islands
SpouseAlii William Pitt Leleiohoku
Isaac Young Davis
IssueWilliam John Pitt Kinau
Keola-o-kalani Davis
Names
Ruth Luka Keanolani Kauanahoahoa Keʻelikōlani
HouseHouse of Kamehameha
FatherPrince Alii Kahalaia Luanu'u
MotherPrincess Kalani Pauahi


Princess Ruth Luka Keanolani Kauanahoahoa Keʻelikōlani of Hawaii, also known as Princess Ruth or Ruth Keʻelikōlani (1826-1883), was a member of both the Kamehameha Dynasty and Kalākaua Dynasty (not by blood), and Governor of the Island of Hawai'i. Ruth became the largest landholder in the Kingdom of Hawai'i, owner of lands that would later become part of the present-day Kamehameha Schools/Bernice Pauahi Bishop Estate as well as the estate of Sam Parker. Princess Ke'elikōlani was a staunch traditionalist.

Her father was Prince Alii Kahalaia Luanu'u (died 1826), Royal Highness and Governor of island of Kauai, a grandson of king Kamehameha I, being the only son of the king's third son prince Alii Kahoanuku Kinau and his wife lady Alii Kahakuhaakoi Wahine-pio from Maui; and her mother was his divorced wife Princess Alii Kalani Pauahi (1804-1826), Royal Highness, daughter of lord Alii Pauli Kaoleioku (eldest illegimated but natural son of Kamehameha I) and his second wife Alii Luahine Kahailiopua. Keelikolani was born 9 February 1826, after her mother had on 28 November 1825 already married her next husband, prince Mataio Kekuanaoa (1791-1827). Keelikolani's unorthodox birth was a reason she was regarded somewhat outside the legitimate birth of Hawaiian nobility.

Considered the least understood of the ali'i (the Hawaiian high nobility), or of the royal family of Hawai'i, Ruth was one of the more pivotal and influential characters in Hawaiian history. She was the great-granddaughter of Kamehameha the Great who created the united Kingdom of Hawai'i in 1810. She was probably the half-sister of King Kamehameha IV and King Kamehameha V and Princess Victoria Kamamalu. She was godmother to Princess Ka'iulani. After the death of Princess Likelike, Ruth made it a point to ensure Ka'iulani would be raised properly befitting her role as heir to the throne of Hawai'i after the reign of Queen Lili'uokalani. Unfortunately, events and Ka'iulani's untimely death prevented Ka'iulani from fully assuming that role. (See Republic of Hawaii).

Family

Her first husband, from 1841, was Ali'i William Pitt Leleiohoku (1821-48), Governor of Hawai'i, former husband of Princess Harriet Nahi'ena'ena, a son of Ali'i William Pitt Kalanimoku the Prime Minister of Kamehameha the Great and his wife, Ali'i Kiliwehi.

Her second husband, married 2nd June 1856 and divorced 1868, was Isaac Young Davis (1824-82), son of George Hueu Davis and his wife, Kahaanapilo Papa.

She bore two sons, who both died underage:

  • William John Pitt Kina'u (1842-59), son of Leleiohoku who attended Royal School.
  • Keola-o-kalani Davis (died 1863 aged six months), son of Mr Davis and hanai (adopted) to Bernice Pauahi Bishop.

Her adopted son, another Leleiohoku (1854-77), crown prince of Hawaii, died 1877, when 23 years old.

Kaiulani

She was godmother to Princess Victoria Kaiulani. She gave 10 acres of her land in Waikiki where Archibald Cleghorn built the Ainahau Estate. Kaiulani would call her by the pen name of Mama Nui meaning "great mother". Her death in 1883 was the first of many death that Kaiulani would witness in her short tragic life.

Life of Tragedy

Of all the ali'i, scholars believe that Ruth was most underestimated in the consideration of her vast achievements. She may have been underestimated, they say, because she did not have the beauty and personage that other members of the royal family enjoyed. And while famous for her achievements, Ruth's life was plagued with tragedies. Her mother died giving birth to her. After she got married, her 27-year-old husband died. Her two natural children died before reaching adulthood: Prince William John Pitt Kina'u who was only 17 and her second child with only six months. William Pitt Leleiohoku, heir to the throne of Hawai'i and Ruth's adopted son, was inflicted with rheumatic fever and died at the age of 23.

Defender of Tradition

File:Princessruthofhawaii2.jpg
Ke'elikōlani with Sam Parker, left, and J.H. Cummins. She was an adept land trustee and administrator.

Ruth was a staunch defender of ancient Hawaiian traditions and customs. While the kingdom became Christianized, Anglicized and urbanized, she continued living as an ali'i of antiquity. While her royal estates were filled with elegant palaces and mansions built for her family, she chose to live in a large traditional stone-raised grass house. While she understood English and knew how to speak it with ease and grace, she refused to do so. She used the Hawaiian language exclusively throughout her life, requiring English-speakers to use a translator when speaking with her.

She also refused to accept Christianity and continued to worship the traditional gods and various aumakua, or ancestral spirits. When Mauna Loa erupted in 1880, threatening the city of Hilo with a lava flow, her intercession with the goddess Pele was widely credited by traditional Hawaiians with saving the city.

Ruth disliked modernization. When the ruling monarchs asked her to pose for official photographs, she often refused. Only a dozen photographs of Ruth are known to exist.

She died at Hulihee House, Kailua, Kona, Hawaii Island, 15 May 1883, and was buried in the Kamehameha Crypt, Royal Mausoleum, Mauna 'Ala, Nu'uanu Valley, Oahu.

Legacy

It is on lands owned by Ruth that such sites as downtown Honolulu, Hickam Air Force Base, Honolulu International Airport, Kamehameha Schools, Moana Hotel, Princess Kaiulani Hotel, Royal Hawaiian Hotel, among others, exist today.

See also

External Links

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