. . . "6267"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Keohohiwa"@en . "Keaweaheulu Kalua\u02BBapana (sometimes Keawe-a-Heulu, died 1804) was a Hawaiian high chief and maternal great-grandfather of King Kal\u0101kaua and Queen Lili\u02BBuokalani. He was among Kamehameha I's council of chiefs and was one of the Five Kona chiefs."@en . . . "1123654641"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . "High Chief Heulu"@en . "Keawe-a-Heulu"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Keawe-a-Heulu"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "High Chiefess Ikua\u02BBana"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "16886356"^^ . . . "Keawe-a-Heulu"@en . "1804"^^ . "Keaweaheulu Kalua\u02BBapana (sometimes Keawe-a-Heulu, died 1804) was a Hawaiian high chief and maternal great-grandfather of King Kal\u0101kaua and Queen Lili\u02BBuokalani. He was among Kamehameha I's council of chiefs and was one of the Five Kona chiefs. He was known as a High Chief of the Wai\u02BBanae district of the island of O\u02BBahu.His father was the High Chief Heulu, descendant of the \u02BBI family of Hilo, and his mother the High Chiefess Ikua\u02BBana, descendant of the Mahi family of Kohala. He was also cousin to Kamehameha's father Ke\u014Dua Nui. His father was the half-brother of Kamakaimoku, the grandmother of Kamehameha I. He assisted Kamehameha in the overthrow of his cousin Kiwala\u02BBo, and then as his strategist and general in his compaigns. In 1791 he assisted Kamehameha in defeating Ke\u014Dua Kuahu\u02BBula the chief of Ka\u02BB\u016B and Puna. Kamehameha had summoned him and gave him this order: \"Go to Ke\u014Dua Kuhau\u02BBula and tell him that great is my desire to make friends. You are the best one to bear the message, for you are related to his mother, and he will heed your words sooner than anything I could say to him.\" Keaweaheulu on arrival at Ka\u02BB\u016B made known his errand and at once hastened to Ke\u014Dua's camp. The chief consented to become friends and boarded a canoe with him back to Kona and Kawaihae. When he arrived at the Pu\u02BBukohol\u0101 Heiau Ke\u014Dua was killed as a sacrifice by Kamehameha, uniting the Big Island for the first time since the days of Keawe\u02BB\u012Bkekahiali\u02BBiokamoku.He died in 1804 on Oahu of the \u02BBOku\u02BBu pestilence, which was said to resemble cholera. He was the last of Kamehameha's five Kona chiefs to die. Their sons succeed to their father's post; his son Naihe took his positions in Kamehameha's council of chiefs. He married Ululani, chiefess of Hilo, and had a son and a daughter. His son Naihe succeeded him as councilor to Kamehameha, also serving as chief orator, and married Chiefess Kapi\u02BBolani; Naihe is believed to have descendants to this day, although not with Kapi\u02BBolani. His daughter Keohohiwa married Kepo\u02BBokalani and mothered \u02BBAikanaka, the grandfathers of Kal\u0101kaua and Liliuokalani, and the House of Kal\u0101kaua claimed their high ranks from the Keawe-a-Heulu line. His family originally had the right to care for the remains of Kamehameha I but because they had not kept the secrecy of his father Keoua's burial place, the task of hiding the remains of the conqueror king was given to Hoapili and his brother Hoolulu."@en . . . . . "Ka\u02BBa\u02BBawa, Ko\u02BBolauloa, Oahu"@en . . . . . . . . . .