Talk:James Kaliokalani
{{GA|08:26, 1 January 2017 (UTC)|topic=Royalty, nobility and heraldry|page=1|oldid=757712317}}
{{DYK talk|15 October|2016|entry= ... that James Kaliokalani and his brother, the future King Kalākaua, reportedly witnessed the execution of their grandfather Kamanawa II when they were children?|nompage=Template:Did you know nominations/James Kaliokalani}}
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Burial
Quote from Ii
More trouble occurred some months later. It was customary for the pupils and teachers to go to Kapena Falls on holidays. One day a child was missing when they returned, for he had been detained by Kaiahua and remained at her house, where they had visited before returning to school. At the supper table, one of the children remarked, "Kaliokalani has been detained by Kaiahua." Ii left immediately and went to Kaiahua to ask why the child had been detained. He was told that it was because her mo'opuna had been asked to water the plants in the school yard. Ii replied, "Not only is it asked of your mo'opuna but of all the boys, of me, and of their teachers. This strengthens the body like all other kinds of exercise, to the benefit of the child. You have no right in this matter, as the children are placed in my care by the king, and only the personal needs of the child are your affair." The child was sitting in Kaiahua's lap, and Ii seized the child at once, placing his left foot on Kaiahua's lap as she reached up. They returned to the school with Kapaakea, the boy's father. The children were all glad at the return of the boy. That night, Kaiahua complained to Kekuanaoa about her mo'opuna and wanted him brought back to her. But Kekuanaoa said to her, "We have no power to do anything, for I have tried, without success. He has the power from the chiefs, so here we are."..........In 1841 a government conference was held at Luaehu, Maui. Accompanying the teachers were
Measles
I removed the fact he died "in a measles epidemic." No reliable source mentions this. And there is no evidence there was even a measles epidemic in Hawaii in 1852. His death seems situated between the measles epidemic of 1848 and the smallpox epidemic of 1853. --KAVEBEAR (talk) 07:15, 5 October 2016 (UTC)
- [http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/152545682?searchTerm=%22Queen%20Liliuokalani%22&searchLimits=exactPhrase=Queen+Liliuokalani Account of his death in 1917 Australian Newspaper] Very racist sounding and not verifiable
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