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George Tupou II

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George Tupou II
Photograph of George Tupou II
King of Tonga
Reign18 February 1893 – 5 April 1918
Coronation17 July 1893, Nukuʻalofa
PredecessorSiaosi Tupou I
SuccessorSālote Tupou III
Prime MinistersSiosateki Veikune
Sione Mateialona
Tevita Tuʻivakano
Born(1874-06-18)18 June 1874
Neiafu, Tonga
Died5 April 1918(1918-04-05) (aged 43)
Tonga
Burial
SpouseLavinia Veiongo
ʻAnaseini Takipō
IssueAna Fakalelu Kihe Fana, Uaia, Sālote Mafile‘o Pilolevu
ʻElisiva Fusipala Taukiʻonelua
ʻElisiva Fusipala Taukiʻonetuku
HouseTupou
FatherTuʻi Pelehake Fatafehi Toutaitokotaha
MotherʻElisiva Fusipala Taukiʻonetuku
ReligionFree Church of Tonga

George Tupou II (Template:Lang-to; 18 June 1874 – 5 April 1918) was the King of Tonga from 18 February 1893 until his death.[1] He was officially crowned at Nukuʻalofa, on 17 March 1893. He was also the 20th Tuʻi Kanokupolu.

Life

Siaosi Tupou II was the son of Prince Tuʻi Pelehake Fatafehi Toutaitokotaha also Prime Minister of Tonga in 1905), whose mother Sālote Pilolevu was a daughter of Tāufaʻāhau Tupou I, and he was the son of Fusipala Taukiʻonetuku, a daughter of Tēvita ʻUnga who was a son of Tāufaʻāhau Tupou I again: George Tupou I that is, the founder of the united Tongan kingdom. Tupou II's reign was troubled by government corruption and inefficiency. The Tongan Parliament in 1900 was suspicious of the King's governing and had his accounts audited several times, finding discrepancies worth thousands of pounds. The expatriate community in Tonga called for its annexation to New Zealand.[2] He had a close relationship with his daughter Sālote. However, before he was married to Lavinia, he had an intimate relationship with Margaret Cocker, which resulted in two children, Uaia and Ana Fakalelu kihe fana. These two children were kept a secret due to the implications of the King having relations with a commoner from England. Uaia continued to live in the palace while his sister Ana was entrusted into the care of a chieftain of Uiha Malupo (Takapautolo). He shared his common love of writing songs and poems with his earlier Hawaiʻian colleague Kalakaua. He is also known for his support of constructing cement water tanks (vaisima) everywhere in Tonga to provide clean water to the people and improve public health.

The marriage of Siaosi & Lavinia

He ascended the throne at the age of 18, upon the death of his great-grandfather George Tupou I, at which time he was still a bachelor. In 1896, the chiefs of the country urged him to marry and produce an heir. After her death, the chiefs suggested a new wife, ʻOfa-ki-Vavaʻu, the daughter of Māʻatu from Niuatoputapu, who was related to the Tuʻi Haʻatakalaua line. George, however, refused. In 1898, the King intended to marry Jane (Eugenie) von Treskow, the half-caste daughter of the German Vice-Consul Waldemar von Treskow, but Parliament registered its objection to this choice when it presented Tupou with its own nominations. Finally, on 1 June 1899, he took Lavinia Veiongo (1879–1902) as his wife. She was the daughter of Kupuavanua from Vavaʻu and Tōkanga from Niuafoʻou, thus obliging these islands to the throne. Kupuavanua was also, through his mother Lavinia Veiongo (1828–1907), a grandson of the last Tuʻi Tonga Laufilitonga, thus enabling him to claim rights to that line as well. Nevertheless, the marriage almost started a civil war. For years, relations between the king and the rest of the country remained strained. In addition to his inept governance, so different from that of his great-grandfather, this ongoing strain led in 1905 to Tonga's becoming a British protectorate.[citation needed]

The marriage of Siaosi & Takipō

Queen Lavinia died on 25 April 1902 from tuberculosis, leaving one child, Sālote (born 13 March 1900). She was considered unpopular as she was perceived as being born from the 'wrong' mother; so much so that it was not safe for her to go outside the palace garden. When Siaosi married for the second time, on 11 November 1909, to the then 16-year-old ʻAnaseini Takipō Afuha'amango, a half-sister of the rejected ʻOfakivava'u, the chiefs were jubilant. It was customary in pre-modern Polynesia for a defeated chief either to be killed or to be exiled. As such, it was a fortunate excuse that Sālote had to go to school in Auckland and so she could be put on the December steamer to New Zealand.

Queen Anaseini Takipō was the daughter of Tae Manusa and Tevita Ula Afuha'amango. Tae Manusa was the highest ranking woman in Tonga (after the death of the last Tamahā) as she had a direct bloodline to Tu'iHa'atakalaua and Tu'iKanokupolu, which made her daughters the perfect option for Tupou II to marry.

Tae Manusa was the daughter of Penisimani Latuselu Kaho and his wife (also his first cousin) Ilaisa'ane Tupou'ahau (daughter of Maealiuaki Fatukimotulalo Tu'iHa'atakalaua). Penisimani Latuselu was also the son of Nunufa'ikea Tuita and Paluleleva Mulikiha'amea (sister of Maealiuaki and the Mehekitanga of Tupou'ahau). Both Nunufa'ikea and Paluleleva were great-grandchildren of King Ma'afu'o'Tu'itonga Tu'iKanokupolu, which made both Ofakivava'u and Takipō to be the most suitable brides for George Tupou II.

Sālote would remain in exile for 5 years. Queen Takipō had still not brought forth a son. Her first daughter, ʻOnelua (born 20 March 1911), died of convulsions while only six months, on 19 August 1911;[citation needed] her second daughter, ʻElisiva Fusipala Taukiʻonetuku (born 26 July 1912), eventually died from tubercular peritonitis on 21 April 1933 aged 20. The hope the envying chiefs had had on an heir through Takipō was fading, and the hope for supporters of Sālote's rose. The need to find a politically acceptable husband for her became imperative, and he was found in the end in Tungī Mailefihi, a cousin of ʻOfa.

Siaosi had also a few children from other women. Some of these descendants are now prominent politicians in Fiji, and others still high-ranking chiefs in Tonga itself (Vīlai Tupou, father of Baron Vaea). His own government, was ineffective and some ministers were contemplating the British to annex the country. The death of the king was soon followed by his wife Takipō (1 March 1893 – 26 November 1918) from the infamous Spanish flu epidemic raging in Tonga. Siaosi's daughter succeeded him and would lead Tonga out of its political mire.

Honours

He was Grand Master of the Royal Orders of Tonga that he founded:

References

  1. ^ "George Tupou II | king of Tonga | Britannica".
  2. ^ Campbell, I.C (2001). Island Kingdom: Tonga Ancient and Modern. Christchurch, New Zealand: Canterbury University Press. p. 134. ISBN 0-908812-96-5.
  • A.L. Kaeppler, M. Taumoefolau, N. Tukuʻaho, E. Wood-Ellem; Songs and poems of Queen Sālote; 2004; ISBN 978-982-213-008-9
  • Eseta Fulivai Fusitu'a; King George Tupou II and the Government of Tonga; Thesis submitted for the degree of Master of Arts of the Australian National University; 1976;
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Tonga
1893–1918
Succeeded by