In Hawaiian mythology , an okina aumakua no macron except in plural pron en a m ku in English often spelled aumakua is a household deity family god , often a ancestor worship deified ancestor . The Hawaiian plural of okina aumakua is n okina aum kua IPA haw na uma kuw , although in English the plural is usually okina aumakuas . N okina aum kua frequently manifested as animals such as shark s or Pueo owls . N okina aum kua were worshipped at localities often rocks where they were believed to dwell . The appearance of an animal one regarded as an okina aumakua was often believed to be an omen of good or ill . There are also many stories of n okina aum kua in animal form intervening to save their descendants from harm. It was extremely bad luck to harm a manifested okina aumakua. Some families had many okina aumakua. Mary Kawena Pukui s family had at least fifty known okina aumakua. ref Pukui, Mary Kawena E. W. Haertig, Catharine A. Lee June 1983 . Nana I Ke Kumu Look to the Source . Hui Hanai. Special BookSources 978 0961673802 ISBN 978 0961673802 . ref Manifestations Traditionally, the okina io Hawaiian Hawk hawk is regarded as the special okina aum kua for the ali i ali okina i nobility . Consequently, to see a hawk flying overhead was considered a good sign for nobles, and harming one was very bad luck. N okina aum kua were thus animals, places or rocks, and people. Ancient Hawaiians would have seen no contradiction in a powerful spirit being able to appear as all three, switching from form to form as convenient as is indeed seen in many stories of gods and demigods. A symbiotic relationship exists between person and okina aumakua, the personal guardians of each ... Aumakua can manifest in nature. The form varies family to family. Whatever its form, the okina aumakua ... of family members. If family okina aumakua, these manifestations were not harmed or eaten in turn, okina aumakua warned and reprimanded in dreams, visions, and calls. okina Aum kua are intimate members ... more details
DISPLAYTITLE Aumakua moth Taxobox image regnum Animal ia phylum Arthropod a classis Insect a ordo Lepidoptera familia Noctuidae genus Aumakua genus authority Hayes & Sattler 1980 species A. omaomao binomial Aumakua omaomao binomial authority Hayes & Sattler 1980 synonyms Aumakua is a genus of moth s of the Noctuidae family, consisting of one species Aumakua omaomao , which is endemic to Hawaii . Adults are known to fly at dusk. The larvae feed on Clermontia fauriei and Trematolobelia kauaiensis . They cut the plant early instars create discs in the leaf, while later instars cut along the edge , thus allowing the latex to drain before consuming the plant material. References http www.nhm.ac.uk jdsml research curation projects butmoth GenusList3.dsml?searchPageURL index.dsml&SUPERFAMIL &FAMILYqtype starts with&FAMILY noctuidae&SUBFAMILYqtype starts with&SUBFAMILY &TRIBEqtype starts with&TRIBE &SUBTRIBEqtype starts with&SUBTRIBE &GENUSqtype starts with&GENUS &AUTHORqtype starts with&AUTHOR &YEARqtype equals&YEAR &sort GENUS Natural History Museum Lepidoptera genus database http onlinelibrary.wiley.com doi 10.1111 j.1365 3113.1980.tb00415.x abstract Aumakua omaomao gen.n., sp.n. Noctuidae Cuculliinae from the Hawaiian Islands is described the adults, wing venation and genitalia of both sexes are illustrated. The systematic position of Aumakua gen.n. is discussed, its status as a Hawaiian endemism is considered and the habitats of A.omaomao sp.n. are described http www.umwestern.edu shares envirosci share laurie lepidoptera aumakua.htm Life history images and detailed information DEFAULTSORT Aumakua Moth Category Cuculliinae Category Endemic moths of Hawaii Cuculliinae stub ... more details
contribs nowiki free game screenshot nowiki 2006 04 21T14 57 48Z User AumakuaAumakua User talk Aumakua Talk Special Contributions Aumakua contribs nowiki Summary wikify nowiki 2006 04 21T14 56 19Z User AumakuaAumakua User talk Aumakua Talk Special Contributions Aumakua contribs nowiki Summary emulator, not simulator nowiki 2006 03 30T01 46 17Z User AumakuaAumakua User talk Aumakua Talk Special Contributions Aumakua contribs nowiki Summary nowiki 2006 03 30T01 35 26Z User AumakuaAumakua User talk Aumakua Talk Special Contributions Aumakua contribs nowiki Title page of version 8 of the game ... more details
In Hawaiian mythology K or K ka ili moku is one of the four great deity gods along with Kanaloa , K ne , and Lono . He is known as the god of war and the husband of the goddess Hina goddess Hina ref Beckwith 1970 p.12 ref . Some have taken this to suggest a complementary dualism , as the word k in the Hawaiian language means standing up while one meaning of hina is fallen down ref name p&e Pukui et al. 1992 p.25 ref . This analysis is not supported by evidence from other Polynesian languages which distinguish the original ng and n . Hina s counterpart in New Zealand for example, is Hina, associated with the moon , rather than Hinga, fallen down . Thus, the Hawaiian name Hina is probably rather connected to the other meaning of hina , denoting a silvery grey color ref name p&e like the full moon indeed the moon is named Mahina in the Hawaiian language . K , K ne, and Lono caused light to shine in upon the world. They are uncreated gods who have existed from eternity ref Tregear 1891 p.540 ref . Image Kuka ilimoku.jpg thumb right 190px K ka ili moku Feathered god images or aumakua hulu manu are considered to represent K . K is worshipped under many names, including K ka ili moku also written K ka okina ilimoku , the Seizer of Land . K ka ili moku was the guardian of Kamehameha I who erected monuments to him at the Holualoa Bay royal center and his residence at Kamakahonu . Rituals included human sacrifice , which was not part of the worship of the other gods. One feathered god image in the Bishop Museum, Honolulu is thought to be Kamehameha I s own image of his god. However it is still unclear whether all feathered god images represent K . ref Cite web title aumakua hulu manu Kuka ilimoku feathered god image work Collections Online publisher Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa url http collections.tepapa.govt.nz objectdetails.aspx?oid 212710 accessdate 16 November 2010 ref The Kailua Kona lighthouse was built on land known as K kailimoku Point . See also T ... more details
Hawaiian mythology refers to the legends, historical tales and sayings of the ancient Hawaii an people. It is considered a variant of a more general Polynesian mythology , developing its own unique character for several centuries before about 1800. It is associated with the Hawaiian religion . The religion was officially suppressed in the 19th century, but kept alive by some practitioners to the modern day. Prominent figures and terms in Hawaiian mythology Aumakua Elepaio Haikili Haumea mythology Haumea Hi iaka Hi okina iaka Hina goddess Hina Kaha i Kah li i Kah okina li okina i Kalamainu u Kalamainu okina u Kamapua a Kamapua okina a Kamohoalii K moho ali okina i Kanaloa K ne K ne Milohai K ne milo hai or K ne hekili Kapo mythology Kapo Kapu Kapua Kaulu Kinilau Iao K or K ka ili moku Kumulipo Laka Lono Mana Kuula, fish deity M ui Hawaiian mythology M ui Menehune Namaka Nightmarchers Nu u Nu okina u Pa ao Pa okina ao Paka a Paka okina a Paliuli Poli ahu P p Pele deity Pele Ukupanipo Wahie Loa Wakea See also Hawaiian religion Polynesian mythology M ori mythology Ghosts in Polynesian culture External links gutenberg no 18450 name Hawaiian Folk Tales, Ed. Thomas G. Thrum http www.sacred texts.com pac hm index.htm Hawaiian Mythology by Martha Beckwith commonscat Mythology of Hawaii Category Hawaiiana Category Hawaiian mythology no Hawaiiansk mytologi pl Mitologia hawajska tl Mitolohiyang Hawayano ... more details
Honolulu Community College is a public, co educational commuter college in Honolulu, Hawaii Honolulu, Hawai okina i . File HonoluluCC.png The campus is located at 874 Dillingham Bloulevard, north of downtown Honolulu between Honolulu harbor and the neighborhood of Kap lama , at coord 21 20 8 N 157 53 5 W type landmark region US HI display inline,title . . It is one of ten branches of the University of Hawaii University of Hawai okina i system anchored by the University of Hawaii at Manoa University of Hawai okina i at M noa and is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges . HCC s strengths are in its industrial programs including such items as automotive and aircraft maintenance. Campus Campus art includes Three Rocks on a Hill , copper and bronze sculpture by Satoru Abe , 1975 Hawaii Iridescence , Glass tiles glass tile mural by Steve Correia , 1979 Na Aumakua , Acacia koa koa wood and resin sculpture by Donald Harvey sculptor Donald Harvey , 1977 Installation by Bruce Hopper , 1975 Just Passing Through , bronze and aluminium sculpture by Ralph Kouchi , 1988 Stage Set Mise En Scene , mixed media installation by Laura Ruby , 1991 Woodscape , koa wood sculpture by Mamoru Sato , 1975 Petroglyphs Interchanging , concrete sculpture by Edward Stasack , 1972 Resources http www.hawaii.edu University of Hawai okina i System http honolulu.hawaii.edu Honolulu Community College University of Hawaii Colleges and universities in Hawaii Category Two year colleges in the United States Category University of Hawaii Category Education in Honolulu, Hawaii Category Schools accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges US west university stub ... more details
gods and goddess akua and the spirits of the departed aumakua who often appear in the form of animals ... in 1936 now in the Hawai i State Archives criticizing his use of the terms unihipili and aumakua. ref ... or ghost, and aumakua are family or personal gods, deified ancestors who might assume the shape ... more details
other uses File Lehua blossoms hawaii 02.jpg thumb Red lehua blossom Metrosideros polymorpha In Hawaiian mythology , Laka is the name of a popular hero from Polynesia n mythology. In other parts of Polynesia he is known as R t , Rata , Lata , Ata , or Lasa . Lengthy legends of his exploits extend throughout the islands, and the kings of Tahiti and Hawai Okina i claimed him as their ancestor. In the Hawaiian legend, Laka is the son of Wahieloa and Hina hawa e . He plans to sail to Hawaii to avenge the murder of his father, but his canoe building is thwarted by the little gods of the forest. Because of his offerings to the great gods, however, they give him two outriggers that he binds together for his long voyage. He and his companions successfully steal the bones of his father from the cave of Kai kapu . In Hawai Okina i, Laka was also a deity identified with the hula and the red lehua blossom and is a deity of fertility. In the story of Hi iaka , Laka is one of Pele s sisters and guardian of the woodland. Sources R.D. Craig, Dictionary of Polynesian Mythology Greenwood Press New York, 1989 , 134. M. Beckwith, Hawaiian Mythology Yale U.P. New Haven, 1948 , 263 75. Hawai i Four deities of this name may be distinguished ref Martha Beckwith Hawaiian Mythology . Yale U Pr, 1940. p. 569 ref 1 Ku ka ohia LAKA, male patron of the hula dance ref Martha Beckwith Hawaiian Mythology . Yale U Pr, 1940. p. 40 ref 2 Papa o LAKA, the aumakua world of Kumu honua ref Martha Beckwith Hawaiian Mythology . Yale U Pr, 1940. pp. 161 162 ref 3 LAKA, goddess of forest growth 4 LAKA, son of Wahie loa Marquesas In the Marquesan version of the myth, Aka is a great voyager, grandson of Kaha i Tafaki . He made a historic voyage to Aotona Rarotonga in what are now the Cook Islands to obtain the highly prized feathers of a red parrot as gifts for his son and daughter. The voyage was done in a great outrigger canoe named Va ahiva that had 140 rowers. Of these, 100 die of hunger before they reach ... more details
Taxobox name Pueo status status system status ref image Starr 090112 0857 Cocos nucifera.jpg image width regnum Animal ia phylum Chordate Chordata classis bird Aves ordo owl Strigiformes familia typical owl Strigidae subfamilia Asioninae genus Asio species Asio flammeus A. flammeus subspecies A. f. sandwichensis trinomial Asio flammeus sandwichensis trinomial authority Andrew Bloxam A. Bloxam , 1827 ref name ITIS cite web url http www.itis.gov servlet SingleRpt SingleRpt?search topic TSN&search value 687200 title Asio flammeus sandwichensis work ITIS Report publisher Integrated Taxonomic Information System accessdate 2009 02 16 ref The Pueo Asio flammeus sandwichensis is a subspecies of Short eared owl that is Endemism endemic to Hawaii . The pueo is one of the various Aumakua n okina aum kua ancestor spirits in Hawaiian culture. Pueo inhabit forests and grasslands throughout the islands of Hawaii, although their numbers are declining rapidly, particularly in the last two decades, and especially on the island of Oahu , upon which they were at one time very prevalent. Pueo are now listed as an endangered species . Taxonomy This taxon was first named by Andrew Bloxam as the species Strix sandwichensis . He saw it, although did not collect a specimen, while in the Hawaiian Islands in 1825 as the naturalist on board HMS Blonde 1819 HMS Blonde . It is now considered to be a subspecies of the Short eared Owl , Asio flammeus , although Storrs Olson does not consider it to be distinct from Asio flammeus flammeus . ref Citation last Olson first Storrs L. year 1996 title The contribution of the voyage of H.M.S. Blonde to Hawaiin ornithology journal Archives of Natural History volume 23 issue 1 pages 1 42 url http si pddr.si.edu dspace bitstream 10088 8385 1 VZ 269 Blonde in Hawaii.pdf author1 link Storrs L. Olson ref Threats to survival Pueo nest on the ground, which makes their eggs and young susceptible to predation by the introduced Small Asian Mongoose and other predator ... more details
Taxobox name okina Alal status EW status system iucn3.1 status ref ref name iucn IUCN2009.2 assessors BirdLife International year 2008 id 146673 title Corvus hawaiiensis downloaded 31 January 2010 ref image Corvus hawaiiensis FWS.jpg image width 220px regnum Animal ia phylum Chordate Chordata classis Bird Aves ordo Passeriformes familia Corvidae genus Crow Corvus species C. hawaiiensis binomial Corvus hawaiiensis binomial authority Titian Peale Peale , 1848 range map Corvus hawaiiensis map.svg range map width 200px range map caption okina Alal range The okina Alal or Hawaiian Crow Corvus hawaiiensis is a species of bird in the crow Family biology family , Corvidae . It is about the size of the Carrion Crow at convert 48 50 cm in in length, but with more rounded wings and a much thicker bill. It has soft, brownish black plumage and long, bristly throat feathers the feet, legs and bill are black. Some Native Hawaiians consider the okina alal an Aumakua okina aumakua Household deity family god . ref cite encyclopedia url http bna.birds.cornell.edu bna species 648 articles introduction first Paul C. last Banko coauthors Donna L. Ball Winston E. Banko title Hawaiian Crow Corvus hawaiiensis encyclopedia Birds of North America The Birds of North America Online editor A. Poole publisher Cornell Lab of Ornithology year 2002 accessdate 2009 03 20 ref Distribution and habitat The okina alal is now extinct in the wild. Prior to this, the species was found only in the western and southeastern parts of the Hawaii island island of Hawai okina i . ref name FactSheet cite web url http www.state.hi.us dlnr dofaw cwcs files NAAT 20final 20CWCS Chapters Terrestrial 20Fact 20Sheets Forest 20Birds alala 20NAAT 20final2 20 .pdf format PDF title okina Alal or Hawaiian Crow work Hawaii s Comprehensive Wildlife Conservation Strategy publisher State of Hawai okina i date 2005 10 01 accessdate 2009 03 20 ref It inhabited Hawaiian tropical dry forests dry and Hawaiian tropical rainforests ... more details
to be Gods of the sea, also known as aumakua, protectors of humans, and cleaners of excessive ... to be one of the most respected sharks of the ocean, an aumakua. Every Hawaiian family believes that they have an aumakua watching over them and protecting them from the niuhi. The hammerhead shark is known ... more details
Infobox royalty name Keaoua Kekua o kalani title image caption native name father Kealiimaikai mother Ki okina ilaweau spouse Manono br probably others Issue date of birth place of birth date of death December 1819 place of death Kuamo o Burials Kuamo okina o Keaoua Kekua o kalani sometimes known as Kaiwi kuamo okina o Kekua o kalani was a nephew of Kamehameha I , the chief from the Hawaii island Big Island of Hawai okina i who had unified the Hawaiian islands. He was the son of Kamehameha s half brother Keali okina imaikai and Kamehameha s half sister Ki okina ilaweau. After Kamehameha died in 1819, Keaoua rebelled against Kamehameha s successor, his son Liholiho . Keaoua s rebellion was brief he was killed in battle about 21 December 1819. The okina Ai Noa After Kamehameha died, on 8 May 1819, power was officially assumed by Kamehameha s son Liholiho . Liholiho, at the urging of powerful female chiefs such as Kaahumanu Ka okina ahumanu , abolished the kapu system that had governed life in Hawai okina i for centuries. Henceforth, men and women could eat together, women could eat formerly forbidden foods, and official worship at the stone platform temples, or heiau s, was discontinued. This event is called the okina Ai Noa , or free eating. As the historian Gavan Daws points out Daws, 1967, pp.  54 59 , this was a decision taken by the chiefs, and it primarily affected the state religion. Commoners could still worship their family protective deities, their aumakua hula teachers could make offerings to Laka and Big Island Hawaiians could make offerings to the Pele mythology goddess Pele . Rebellion Nonetheless, some of the chiefs felt that if they were to abandon the kapus and the services at the heiaus, they would lose the religious justification and support for their rule. Liholiho, they felt, was courting disaster, and must be opposed, lest he take down everyone with him. Keaoua Kekuaokalani was a Big Island noble. He was the son of Kamehameha s younger brothe ... more details
with certain professions family gods, okina aumakua , associated with particular families Mythology ..., aumakua, or akua, was, in family seances, always one to whose lineage the haka belonged ... more details
Dunford, Roy Alameida. 21 22 ref The owl, acknowledging Kapoi s kindness, became Kapoi s aumakua personal ... on the altar and in such a place Kapoi was placed and guarded. Kapoi s aumakua went to the king ... more details
dolorosa small Walker, 1865 small Condica illecta small Walker, 1865 small Cuculliinae Aumakua moth Aumakua Neogalea sunia small Guen e, 1852 small Eustrotiinae Image Eublemma anachoresis Noctuidae ... more details