Hawaiian Antiquities
eBook - ePub
Available until 27 Dec |Learn more

Hawaiian Antiquities

Moolelo Hawaii

  1. 366 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Available until 27 Dec |Learn more

Hawaiian Antiquities

Moolelo Hawaii

About this book

Hawaiian Antiquities (1898) is an ethnography by David Malo. Originally published in 1838, Hawaiian Antiquities, or Moolelo Hawaii, was updated through the end of Malo's life and later translated into English by Nathaniel Bright Emerson, a leading scholar of Hawaiian mythology. As the culmination of Malo's research on Hawaiian history, overseen by missionary Sheldon Dibble, Hawaiian Antiquities was the first in-depth written history of the islands and its people. "The ancients left no records of the lands of their birth, of what people drove them out, who were their guides and leaders, of the canoes that transported them, what lands they visited in their wanderings, and what gods they worshipped. Certain oral traditions do, however, give us the names of the idols of our ancestors." As inheritor of this ancient oral tradition, David Malo, a recent Christian convert who studied reading and writing with missionaries, provides an essential introduction to the genealogies, history, traditions, and stories of his people. Engaging with the legends passed down from ancient generations as well as the flora and fauna of the islands in his own day, Malo links the Hawaii of the past to the world in which he lived, a time of political and religious change introduced by missionaries from the newly formed United States. With a beautifully designed cover and professionally typeset manuscript, this edition of David Malo's Hawaiian Antiquities is a classic work of Hawaiian literature reimagined for modern readers.

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Yes, you can access Hawaiian Antiquities by David Malo in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & Australian & Oceanian History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. List of Illustrations
  7. Biographical Sketch of David Malo
  8. Preface by the Author
  9. Introduction by W.D. Alexander
  10. I. General Remarks on Hawaiian History
  11. II. Formation of the Land
  12. III. The Origin of the Primitive Inhabitants of Hawaii nei
  13. IV. Of the Generations Descended from Wakea
  14. V. Names Given to Directions or the Points of the Compass
  15. VI. Terms Used to Designate Space Above and Below
  16. VII. Natural and Artificial Divisions of the Land
  17. VIII. Concerning the Rocks
  18. IX. Plants and Trees
  19. X. Divisions of the Ocean
  20. XI. Eating Under the Kapu System
  21. XII. The Divisions of the Year
  22. XIII. The Domestic and Wild Animals
  23. XIV. Articles of Food and Drink in Hawaii
  24. XV. The Fishes
  25. XVI. The Tapas, Malos, Paus and Mats of the Hawaiians
  26. XVII. The Stone Ax and the New Ax
  27. XVIII. The Aliis and the Common People
  28. XIX. Life in the Out-Districts and at the King’s Residence
  29. XX. Concerning Kauwa
  30. XXI. Wrong Conduct and Right Conduct
  31. XXII. The Valuables and Possessions of the Ancient Hawaiians
  32. XXIII. The Worship of Idols
  33. XXIV. Religious Observances Relating to Children
  34. XXV. Concerning the Circumcision of Children
  35. XXVI. Religious Worship for Healing of the Sick
  36. XXVII. Concerning Dead Bodies
  37. XXVIII. Concerning the Ceremony of Kuni
  38. XXIX. Concerning the Ceremonies on the Death of a King
  39. XXX. The Medical Treatment of the Sick
  40. XXXI. Necromancy
  41. XXXII. Concerning Obsession (Akua Noho)
  42. XXXIII. The House—Its Furniture and Its Consecration
  43. XXXIV. The Hawaiian Canoe
  44. XXXV. Religious Ceremonies Performed by the Aliis for Secure Off-Spring
  45. XXXVI. Concerning the Makahiki
  46. XXXVII. Concerning the Luakini
  47. XXXVIII. The Civil Polity
  48. XXXIX. Agriculture
  49. XL. Concerning Fishing
  50. XLI. Sports and Games, Ume
  51. XLII. Sports and Games (Kilu)
  52. XLIII. Puhenehene, or Pa-Puhene
  53. XLIV. Kukini—Running Foot-Races
  54. XLV. The Game of Maika
  55. XLVI. The Game of Pahee
  56. XLVII. Canoe-Racing
  57. XLVIII. He’e-nalu, Surf-Riding
  58. XLIX. Holua-Sledding
  59. L. Noa
  60. LI. Pukaula, Juggling
  61. LII. Pa-Pua, or Kea-Pua
  62. LIII. Hoo-Haka-Moa, Cock-Fighting
  63. LIV. The Hula
  64. LV. Mokomoko or Boxing
  65. LVI. Hakoko—Wrestling
  66. LVII. Sundry Minor Sports
  67. LVIII. The Flood
  68. LIX. Traditions Regarding the Ancient Kings
  69. LX. Haloa, the Son of Wakea
  70. LXI. Waia, the Son of Haloa
  71. LXII. Kapawa
  72. LXIII. Kalapana
  73. LXIV. Kalaunuiohua
  74. LXV. Kauholanuimahu
  75. LXVI. Liloa
  76. LXVII. Umi
  77. A Note About the Author
  78. A Note from the Publisher