Tehaapapa II

Maerehia of Raiatea and Tahaa (1824  28 May 1893), was a princess of Raiatea and Tahaa from the Tamatoa dynasty family, a Polynesian royal family. She was wife of Ari'imate of Huahine, founder of the Teururai dynasty which reigned on the Tahitian island of Huahiné and Maia'o during the 19th century. She was Queen of Huahine and Maia'o and later Queen regnant in her own right. Comteporary sources seems to call her Tehaapapa I instead, disregarding the ruling queen by the same name at the time Captain Cook visited the island.

Teha'apapa II
Queen regnant of Huahine
Queen of Huahine and Maia'o
Reign26 June 1868 – 28 May 1893
PredecessorAri'imate
SuccessorTehaapapa III
Reign1852 - 26 June 1868
Born1824
Opoa, Raiatea
Died(1893-05-28)May 28, 1893 (aged 68-69)
Faré, Huahine
Burial
Maeva
SpouseKing Ari'imate
IssueTeuhe
Princess Tapiria
Marama Teururai
Princess Vairaatoa
Tamatoa VI
Prince Tériitéporouarai
Prince Fatino
Princess Turaiarii
Princess Téri'inavahoro'a
Princess Téfaaora
Full name
Princess Té-ri'i-té-po-rou-a-ra'i, Maéréhia of Rai'atea and Taha'a
HouseHouse of Teururai
FatherTamatoa IV of Ra'iatea and Taha'a
MotherMahuti of Vaiari
(in Tahiti)

Se was installed as Queen of Huahine in 1868 until her death in 1893.

Background

Born in Raiatea, princess Maerehia was the only surviving daughter of King Tamatoa of Ra'iatea (1797–1857) and his commoner wife Mahuti of Vaiari. Thus, she belongs to the Tamatoa family, the most powerful royal family of the Society Island. She was the last member of the Tamatoa dynasty.[1]

By her father's elder sister, Queen consort Tere-moe-moe of Tahiti, she is the only first cousin to Queen Pomare of Tahiti.

Queen consort

In the beginning of the 1850 year, a civil war deposed her father's other elder sister, Teri'itaria II. The main dignitaries chose chief Ari'imate to be king and that's why he assumed the sovereignty on 18 March 1852.

He was installed as king of Huahine in 1852. His crowning took place on March 18, 1852.

Princess Maerehia became Queen consort to her husband.

Queen regnant

Twenty year later, a new civil war deposed her husband in 1868.[2] She succeeded him and took the reign name of Teha'apapa II.

In 1890, she accepted the French protectorate on her kingdom. She died among her family in 1893. Her granddaughter succeeded her under the name of Te-ha'apapa III.

Marriage and issue

She married in 1840 Chief Ari'imate of Té-faré-ri-i, and had twelve children:

  • Princess Témari'i Teururai (1848–1891), the future queen of Huahine.
  • Princess Tapiria Teururai (1850–1888)
  • Crown Prince Marama Teururai (1851–1909), Head of the royal family of Huahine and father of Queen Tehaapapa III of Huahine.
  • Princess Vai-ra'a-toa Teururai, she had issue three children's.
  • Prince Ari'imate Teururai (1853–1907), or Tamatoa VI, last king of Ra'iatea and Taha'a.
  • Prince Téri'i-té-po-rou-ara'i Teururai (1857–1899), His family established in Tahiti.
  • Prince Fatino Marae-ta'ata Teururai (1859–1884), He had issue eight children.
  • Princess Tu-rai-ari'i Teururai (1862-?), she had issue two children through an irregular union.
  • Princess Téri'i-na-va-ho-ro'a Teururai (1863–1918), she had eleven children.
  • Princess Té-fa'a-ora Teururai (1868–1928), she had issue two daughters.

Their children remain member to the royal family of the former kingdom of Huahine-Maia'o and Raiatea-Tahaa since the end of the monarchy.

Ancestry

Tehaapapa II
Born: 1824 Died: 1893
Preceded by
Ari'imate
Queen of Huahine
18681893
Succeeded by
Tehaapapa III

Family

See also

References

  1. Genealogy
  2. Teuira Henry, John Muggridge Orsmond (1928). Ancient Tahiti. 48. Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum. p. 258.
  • La lignée royale des Tamatoa de Ra'iatea (îles Sous-le-Vent), Papeete, ministère de la Culture, 229 p., B.SAURA.
  • Chefs et notables au temps du protectorat: 1842 - 1880, Société des Etudes Océaniennes, Raoul TEISSIER, réédition de 1996.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.