Tui Manuʻa Confederacy
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Fijian
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Cook Islands Māori
i-Kiribati
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Rotuman
Pukapukan
Tui Manuʻa Confederacy | |||||||
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Flag (1880s) | |||||||
Pre-950 AD Sphere of Influence | |||||||
| Capital | Fitiuta | ||||||
| Common languages | Samoan Fijian Tongan Futunan Niuean Uvean Tuvaluan Tokelauan Cook Islands Māori i-Kiribati Tahitian Rotuman Pukapukan | ||||||
| Religion | Samoan mythology | ||||||
| Government | Monarchy | ||||||
| Tuʻi Manuʻa | |||||||
| Historical era | Pre-Tagaloa | ||||||
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| Today part of | Samoa Fiji American Samoa Tonga Niue Wallis and Futuna Tuvalu Tokelau Cook Islands Kiribati Rotuma French Polynesia | ||||||
The Tui Manuʻa Confederacy, or Samoan Empire, are descriptions sometimes given to Samoan expansionism and projected hegemony in Oceania which began with the founding of the paramount chief Tui Manuʻa title. Traditional oral literature of Samoa and Manuʻa talks of a widespread Polynesian network or confederacy (or "empire").[1][2][3]
Tui Manuʻa was the title of the ruler or paramount chief of the Manuʻa Islands in present-day American Samoa. The Tui Manuʻa is the oldest title of ancient Samoa and all Polynesia. According to Samoan oral histories, the first Tui Manuʻa was the son of the Samoan supreme god, Tagaloa. In Samoan lore, the islands of Manuʻa (Ofu, Olosega, and Taʻu) are always the first lands to be created or drawn from the sea; consequently the Tui Manuʻa is the first human ruler mentioned. This "senior" ranking of the Tui Manuʻa title continues to be esteemed and acknowledged by Samoans despite the fact that the title itself has not been occupied since the American takeover in the early 20th century.[4]
History
Traditional oral literature of Samoa and Tonga speaks of a wide spread Samoa’atoa empire that was ruled by the successive Tui Manuʻa dynasties. Manuʻa genealogies and religious oral literature also suggest that the Tui Manuʻa had long been one of the most prestigious and powerful paramounts of the Pacific and the first pre-eminent ruler of all Samoa. Oral history suggests that the Tui Manuʻa chiefdom ruled Samoa, Tonga, parts of Fiji, Rarotonga and Hawai’i.[5][6]
Decline and isolation
Eventually, the maritime empire began to decline and a new empire rose from the south headed by the first Tu’i Tonga ʻAhoʻeitu[7][8] who according to the oral traditions of the noble Ata family in Tonga, was a son of the Tui Manu’a.[9] Other oral traditions suggest that ʻAhoʻeitu was the son of Tangaloa ‘Eitumatupu’a from Manu’a and a Tongan woman ‘Ilaheva Va’epopua of Niuatoputapu.[10] Around 950 AD, Tuʻi Tonga ʻAhoʻeitu started to expand his rule outside of Tonga. Samoa's Savaii, Upolu and Tutuila islands were to eventually succumb to Tongan rule, and would remain part of the empire for almost 400 years. However, as the ancestral homeland of the Tuʻi Tonga dynasty and the abode of deities such as Tagaloa ʻEitumatupuʻa, Tonga Fusifonua, and Tavatavaimanuka, the Manuʻa islands of Samoa were considered sacred by the early Tongan kings and thus were never occupied by the Tongans, allowing for it to remain under Tui Manuʻa rule.[11]
By the time of the tenth Tuʻi Tonga Momo, and his successor, Tuʻitātui, the Tuʻi Tonga's empire had grown to include much of the former domains of the Tui Fiti and Tui Manuʻa. The expulsion of the Tongans in the 13th century from neighbouring Upolu and Savaii would not lead to the islands returning to Tui Manuʻa but to the rise of a new dominant polity in the western isles: the Malietoa, whose feats in liberating Samoa from the Tongan occupants led to the establishment of a new political order in Upolu and Savaii which remained unchallenged for nearly 300 years. Although the Tui Manuʻa would never again regain rulership of the surrounding islands, it is permanently held in high esteem as the progenitor of the great Samoan and Tongan lineages.[12]
Colonization and the "abolition" of the Tui Manuʻa title
The Manuʻa islands were grouped with Tutuila and Aunuʻu as the United States possession now called American Samoa. The presidency of the United States, and the military authorities of the US Navy, supplanted the native administrative role of the Tui Manuʻa, through the arrests of chiefs of the Tui Manuʻa and two trials of the Tui Manuʻa, one on an American warship off the coast of Taʻu, called the "Trial of the Ipu".[13] On 6 July 1904, Tui Manuʻa Elisala officially ceded the islands of Manuʻa to the United States through the signing of the Treaty of Cession of Manuʻa. He was relegated the office of Governor of Manuʻa for the term of life and the understanding that the Tui Manuʻa title would follow him to the grave. He died on 2 July 1909.[citation needed]
List of Tui Manuʻa
- Satiailemoa
- Tele (brother of Satiailemoa)
- Maui Tagote
- Maugaotele
- Folasa or Taeotagaloa
- Faʻaeanuʻu I or Faʻatutupunuʻu
- Saoʻioʻiomanu (Saʻo or eldest son of Faʻaeanuʻu I)
- Saopuʻu (second son of Faʻaeanuʻu I)
- Saoloa (third son of Faʻaeanuʻu I)
- Tuʻufesoa (fourth son of Faʻaeanuʻu I)
- Letupua (fifth son of Faʻaeanuʻu I)
- Saofolau (sixth son of Faʻaeanuʻu I)
- Saoluaga
- Lelologatele (eldest son of Saofolau)
- Aliʻimatua (eldest son of Lelologatele)
- Aliʻitama (second son of Lelologatele)
- Tui Oligo (grandson or son of Aliʻitama's daughter)
- Faʻaeanuʻu II (eldest son of Tui Oligo)
- Puipuipo (second son of Tui Oligo)
- Siliʻaivao (third son of Tui Oligo)
- Tuimanufili (daughter of Faʻaeanuʻu II)
- Faʻatoʻalia Manu-o-le-faletolu (eldest son of Tuimanufili)
- Segisegi (son of Faʻatoʻalia)
- Siliave (daughter of Faʻatoʻalia)
- Tui-o-Pomelea (son of Siliave)
- Tui-o-Lite (or Tui Aitu) (son of Tui-o-Pomelea)
- Toʻalepai (son of Tui-o-Lite)
- Seuea (daughter of Toʻalepai)
- Salofi (brother of Seuea)
- Levaomana (son of Salofi)
- Taliutafapule (son of Salofi and brother of Levaomana)
- Taʻalolomana Muaatoa
- Tupalo
- Seiuli
- Uʻuolelaoa (killed in a war with Fitiuta)
- Fagaese
- Tauveve
- Visala
- Alalamua
- Matelita or Makelita (1872–1895), r. 1891–1895
- Elisala or Elisara (died 1909), r. 1899–1909[14]
- Chris (Kilisi) Taliutafa Young (1924)[15]
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