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Lodge at Kukui`ula Club. Nestled in a peaceful setting on Kauai, family-centric accommodations at this lodge include residences with separate bedrooms. For multigenerational or extended families ...
Mokuʻula was a tiny island in Maluʻulu o Lele Park, Lahaina, Hawaiʻi, United States.It was the private residence of King Kamehameha III from 1837 to 1845 and the burial site of several Hawaiian royals.
"A ʻohe ia e loaʻa aku, he ulua kapapa no ka moana" (Hawaiian for: "He cannot be caught for he is an ulua fish of the deep ocean") is the first part of the two-part ...
Pukui was born on April 20, 1895, in her grandmother's home, named Hale Ola, in Haniumalu, Kaʻu, on Hawaiʻi Island, to Henry Nathaniel Wiggin (originally from Salem, Massachusetts, of a distinguished shipping family descended from Massachusetts Bay Colony governor Simon Bradstreet and his wife, the poet Anne Bradstreet) [6] and Mary Paʻahana Kanakaʻole, descendant of a long line of kahuna ...
Heiau were made in different shapes depending upon their purpose, varying from simple stone markers to large stone platforms and often included high stacked stone walls surrounding an open central enclosure. [4]
The Kukui Heiau, near Wailua, Hawaii, also known as 'A'A Kukui is a historic archeological site that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It is the site of a heiau —a Hawaiian temple—on state land that was donated by neighboring condo developers.
Also known as Akua, he was the (god) of war, politics, farming and fishing. As the husband of the goddess Hina, [3] it's [who?] been supposedly suggested a form of complementary dualism exists, as the word kū in the Hawaiian language means "to stand" while one meaning of hina is "to fall". [4]
In 1892 it was renamed the Pacific Club. After moving around Honolulu, in 1926 it finally acquired the former estate of Archibald Scott Cleghorn , the birthplace of Princess Kaʻiulani . In 1959 Vladimir Ossipoff designed a new building with an open lanai which won the Hawaii American Institute of Architects award in 1965. [ 2 ]