- In
Hawaiian mythology,
Laʻieikawai (Lāʻi.e.-i-ka-wai) and her twin
sister Laʻielohelohe were princesses, and were born in Lāʻie, Oʻahu. They were separated...
- W. Whitney. Beckwith,
Martha Warren (1919). "The
Hawaiian Romance of
Laieikawai".
Annual Report of the
Bureau of
American Ethnology to the
Secretary of...
- a
favorite stock characters in
Hawaiian romance tales. The
story of
Lāʻieikawai tells of five
Maile sisters.
Maile haʻi wale (brittle maile),
Maile lau...
-
environmentally significant through the
Hawaiian oral
history (kaʻao)
entitled Laieikawai. In this history, the term ikawai,
which means "in the water", also belongs...
- of the
Garden of Eden, a
legendary paradise and the home of
Princess Laieikawai (Lā'i.e.-i-ka-wai). It was used for
several place names,
including a sugar...
- Burden, ISEF
awardee in 2003 MPC · 18790 18794
Kianafrank 1999 JG62
Kiana Laieikawai Frank, ISEF
awardee in 2003 MPC · 18794 18796
Acosta 1999 JH64 Iyen Abdon...
- Way is his
sacred ship,
called The-long-shark." The
Hawaiian Romance of
Laieikawai by
Martha Warren Beckwith Hawaiian Mythology by
Martha Warren Beckwith...
-
Museum of
Polynesian Ethnology and
Natural History The
Hawaiian Romance of
Laieikawai Story of
Piimaiwaa - "This was the
famed giant image watchman of Kauiki...
- ISBN 9780313258909. "Waka Mons".
Gazetteer of
Planetary Nomenclature. Haleole, S. N. (1918). The
Hawaiian Romance of
Laieikawai. U.S.
Government Printing Office. v t e...
- Ke Kaao o
Laieikawai (later
translated as The
Hawaiian Romance of
Laieikawai),
based on a
traditional kaʻao
about the
princess Lāʻieikawai, a narrative...