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Polynesian Island Monarchy


Article # : 15242 

Section : CULTURE
Issue Date : 8 / 1989  5,675 Words
Author : Lowell and Ellen Holmes
Lowell Holmes is professor of anthropology at Wichita State University, and Ellen Holmes (also an anthropologist) is assistant professor of health, administration, and gerontology at the same school

       Edwin N. Ferndon, the author of Early Tonga, writes that "other than the kingdom of Tonga there is no Polynesian island or island group that has not been controlled and variously managed by one or another nation of the western world," but "that is not to say that Tonga has been totally free from forced culture change."
       
        My (Lowell's) attention was first drawn to the Kingdom of Tonga in 1954 when I had the good fortune to be included in a malaga (ceremonial visit) to the Samoan islands of Manu'a with Crown Prince Taufa'ahau, son of the revered Tongan sovereign Queen Salote. During the four days of that visitation to locations significant to Tongan-Samoan mythology, I shared meals, sleeping quarters, ceremonial events, and even a surfboat accident with the crown prince. This six-foot, four-hundred-pound Polynesian nobleman proved an excellent traveling companion, for we shared many anthropological interests. For several years he had been active in a project to develop a Tongan grammar. He was also a student of Tongan traditional music, and he had personally investigated the numerous archaeological phenomena in his country, such as the ancient pyramidal tombs of early kings and the Tongan equivalent of Stonehenge, known as the "Triliithon."
       
        Over the years I remained in contact with the crown prince--congratulating him when he became King Taufa'ahau Tupou IV in 1965 and sending him copies of my anthropological publications on Samoa from time to time. In 1977 I visited the king during a sabbatical leave and had a very pleasant audience with His Majesty reminiscing about the pleasures and tribulations of our 1954 malaga to Manu'a. My wife--Ellen--and I returned to Samoa again in the summer of 1988 and scheduled a side trip to Tonga to ... (2000 of 33433 Characters)
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