- Jane
Loeau (December 5, 1828 – July 30, 1873) was a
Hawaiian chiefess during the
Kingdom of
Hawaii who
attended the Chiefs' Children's School, also known...
- the many
issues of Keaweʻīkekahialiʻiokamoku; and his wife High
Chiefess Loeau. Her name
means "heartsick queen" in the
Hawaiian language. She had no siblings...
- Kalākaua,
Lydia Kamakaʻeha,
Bernice Pauahi,
Elizabeth Kekaʻaniau, Jane
Loeau,
Abigail Maheha,
Peter Young Kaeo,
James Kaliokalani, John Pitt Kīnaʻu and...
- grandfather's cousin, Kahekili,
daughters of
Liliha with Kalaniulumoku: Jane
Loeau; and with Namaile:
Abigail Maheha. It was run by Amos
Starr Cooke and Juliette...
-
Cooke and his wife,
Juliette Montague Cooke,
alongside her half-sister Jane
Loeau and
fourteen of her
royal cousins.
Maheha was the
daughter of High Chief...
- (1626–1689), pla**** a
heroic role in the
escape of
Charles II in 1651 Jane
Loeau (1828–1873),
Hawaiian noble lady Jane
Seymour (1508–1537),
Queen and wife...
- by the Polynesian, the
official government journal;
Moses Kekuaiwa, Jane
Loeau,
Alexander Liholiho,
Abigail Maheha,
James Kaliokalani, Mary Paaaina, David...
- Kekūāiwa, Lot Kapuāiwa,
Alexander Liholiho,
William Charles Lunalilo, Jane
Loeau,
Bernice Pauahi,
Abigail Maheha and
Elizabeth Kekaʻaniau who had attended...
-
Richold ter Schegget,
Bangliauw house (variously
written as
Bangleu or Bank
Loeau) to Paul Bergman, and the
easternmost and the most
imposing of all Cilincing...
-
mother of
Leleiohoku I. She had many half-siblings
including sisters: Jane
Loeau (1828–1873),
Abigail Maheha (1832–1861), and Kailinoa, and brothers: Pius...