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Kingdom of Tahiti

The Kingdom of Tahiti or the Tahitian Kingdom was a Polynesian monarchy founded by paramount chief Pōmare I, who, with the aid of British missionaries and traders, and European weaponry, unified the islands of Tahiti, Moʻorea, Teti‘aroa, and Mehetiʻa. The kingdom eventually annexed the Tuamotus, and the Austral Islands (Rapa Iti, Rurutu, Rimatara, Tubuai, Raivavae).

Kingdom of Tahiti
Basileia no Tahiti (Tahitian)
Royaume de Tahiti (French)

Independent Kingdom (1788/91-1842)
French Protectorate (1842–1880)

Papeete (from 1847)

 

Pōmare I (first)

Pōmare V (last)

 

1788/91

12 November 1815

9 September 1842

1843–1847

1 January 1847

29 June 1880

Its leaders were Christian following the baptism of Pomare II. Its progressive rise and recognition by Europeans allowed Tahiti to remain free from a planned Spanish colonization as well as other European claims to the islands.


The kingdom was one of a number of independent Polynesian states in Oceania, alongside Ra'iātea, Huahine, Bora Bora, Hawai‘i, Samoa, Tonga, Rarotonga and Niue in the 19th century. The kingdom is known for bringing a period of peace and cultural and economic prosperity to the islands over the reign of the five Tahitian monarchs. Tahiti and its dependencies transformed into French protectorates in 1842 and largely annexed as a colony of France in 1880 after Pomare V was convinced to give Tahiti and its dependencies to France. The monarchy was therefore abolished shortly after the annexation, though there are still pretenders.

Current status[edit]

As of February 2009, Tauatomo Mairau claimed to be the heir to the Tahitian throne, and attempted to re-assert the status of the monarchy in court. His claims were not recognised by France.[6][7]


In 2010, he became pretender to the throne and claimed the title Prince Marau of Tahiti.[8] He was working to have royal trust lands returned to him and his family. The French government mortgaged the land after World War II, and in doing so violated the terms of the agreement signed with Pomare V in 1880 which reserved control of the trust lands for the royal family of Tahiti. The banks may be in the process of freezing the assets, and Mairau sued to prevent native Tahitians from being evicted from his trust lands, and wished for them to retain their usage rights over the land.[9] He died in May 2013.


On 28 May 2009, Joinville Pomare, an adopted member of the Pomare family, declared himself King Pomare XI, during a ceremony attended by descendants of leading chiefs but spurned by members of his own family.[10] Other members of the family recognise his uncle, Léopold Pomare, as heir to the throne.[11]

King of Tahiti.

Pōmare I

King of Tahiti.

Pōmare II

Teriʻitoʻoterai Teremoemoe, Queen-Regent of Tahiti.

Queen-Regent of Tahiti, Queen regnant of Huahine.

Teriʻitaria Ariʻipaeavahine

King of Tahiti.

Pōmare III

Queen regnant of Tahiti.

Pōmare IV

Prince consort of Tahiti.

Ariʻifaʻaite

King of Tahiti.

Pōmare V

Queen consort of Tahiti.

Marau Salmon

Prince of Tahiti, later King of Raiatea.

Tamatoa V

Teriʻiourumaona, Princess of Tahiti and Raiatea, designated heir as Pōmare VI.

Princess of Tahiti and Raiatea, heiress presumptive of her uncle.

Teriʻivaetua

Princess of Tahiti and Raiatea, later Queen of Bora Bora.

Teriʻimaevarua III

Prince of Tahiti.

Teriʻitapunui Pōmare

Prince of Tahiti.

Teriʻitua Tuavira Pōmare

Hinoi Pōmare, Prince of Tahiti.

Tati the Great, head chieftain of the Teva clan of Pare district, counselor to Pōmare III and Pōmare IV.

Ariʻitaimai, head chiefess of the Teva clan of Pare district.

Titaua Salmon Brander, daughter of Ariʻitaimai.

Moetia Salmon , daughter of Ariʻitaimai.

Atwater

Tute Tehuiariʻi, Tahitian chief and missionary.

Mauli Tehuiariʻi, Tahitian chiefess who married into Hawaiian nobility.

Tahitian chiefess who married into Hawaiian nobility.

Manaiula Tehuiariʻi Sumner

Tahitian chiefess who married into Hawaiian nobility.

Ninito Teraiapo Sumner

Tahitians

History of Tahiti

Hawaii–Tahiti relations

Gonschor, Lorenz Rudolf (August 2008). (PDF) (MA thesis). Honolulu: University of Hawaii at Manoa. hdl:10125/20375. OCLC 798846333. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 January 2020. Retrieved 29 December 2019.

Law as a Tool of Oppression and Liberation: Institutional Histories and Perspectives on Political Independence in Hawaiʻi, Tahiti Nui/French Polynesia and Rapa Nui

Fsmitha

Media related to Kingdom of Tahiti at Wikimedia Commons