- Emma
Ahuena Davison Taylor (November 13, 1867 –
November 8, 1937) was a part-Native
Hawaiian high
chiefess during the 20th century. She was a cultural...
-
hundreds of years.
North of the pier is the
Kamakahonu royal residence and
Ahuʻena Heiau, and
nearby now
stands the King Kamehameha's Kona
Beach Hotel. Another...
- (1810–1819) here. The
residential compound included the
personal shrine,
ʻAhuʻena heiau, of the King. The name
means "temple of the
burning altar" in the...
- children's
writer Emma
Adler (1858–1935),
Austrian journalist and
writer Emma
Ahuena Taylor (1867–1937), part-Native
Hawaiian high
chiefess Emma
Albani (1847–1930)...
- such as King Kamehameha's Kona
Beach Hotel. The
historical sites are:
Ahuena Heiau where King
Kamehameha spent his
retired life, the
Hulihee Palace which...
- for the
heiau have
continued the
tradition of
caring for them.
Hawaii ʻAhuʻena Heiau Hale o
Kapuni Heiau Mailekini Heiau Moʻokini
Heiau Pakaʻalana heiau...
- Emma
Taylor may
refer to: Emma
Ahuena Taylor (1867–1937),
Hawaiian historian and
genealogist Emma Taylor-Isherwood (born 1987),
Canadian actress Emma Taylor...
-
Princess Elizabeth Kahanu Kalanianaʻole (Moʻi of Māmakakaua) and Emma
Ahuena Taylor (Kuhina Nui of Māmakakaua) led the watches. The
funeral services...
- 15th-century King Līloa. Her
siblings included William Compton Malulani, Emma
Ahuena,
Henry Fayerweather, and
Marie Hope Kekulani. Her
father died in 1875 and...
-
resided in California. On
November 5, 1902, he
married his
second wife Emma
Ahuena Davison at her
mother Mary Jane
Kekulani Fayerweather Davison Montano's...