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・ Deborah Jeane Palfrey
・ Deborah Jeanne Dawkins
・ Deborah Jinza Thayer
・ Deborah Jones
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・ Deborah Joy Corey
・ Deborah Joy LeVine
・ Deborah K. Chasanow
・ Deborah K. Jones
・ Deborah K. Ross
・ Deborah Kafoury
・ Deborah Kampmeier
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・ Deborah Kaplan (disability activist)
Deborah Kapule
・ Deborah Kara Unger
・ Deborah Kass
・ Deborah Kay Davies
・ Deborah Keenan
・ Deborah Kennedy
・ Deborah Kenny
・ Deborah Kerr
・ Deborah Kimmett
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・ Deborah L. Cook


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Deborah Kapule : ウィキペディア英語版
Deborah Kapule

Deborah Kapule Kekaihaʻakūlou (c. 1798 – 1853) was the last Queen of the Kauaʻi before the establishment of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi by King Kamehameha I.
==Life==
Born Kekaihaʻakūlou around 1798, the location of her birth is not known for certain, but since she lived around Waimea and since she received property there from her father in later life, it is assumed that this was her birthplace. Her genealogy is not well documented. According to one source, her father was a High Chief Hāʻupu of Waimea, who was one the chiefs whom King Kaumualiʻi sent to Oahu in 1810.
But according to Hawaiian historian Samuel Kamakau, her (or at least Kekaihaʻakūlou's) parents were Kaiʻawa and Hāwea. Kaiʻawa was a counselor to Kaumualiʻi's father Kāʻeokūlani and was connected to Kāneikaheilani, a chiefess from Kauai who was the grandmother of Haʻalou, the maternal grandmother of Queen Kaʻahumanu, and also to Kaweloamaihunāliʻi, an early King of Kauaʻi. Her mother Hāwea was a relative of Queen Kaʻahumanu from a Maui line of descent.
During her early live she was called Haʻakūlou, which was short for Kekaihaʻakūlou, or Kapule; she was also called ''Tepoora'' or ''Tapoola'', early Western renditions of her name. Deborah Kapule is often identified with Kepola, a name that was given to the last queen Kauai.
One source claims that Kekaihaʻakūlou was another wife of Kaumualii. This would mean the woman that accompanied him to the island of Oahu in 1810 to surrender to King Kamehameha I and was later given to King Liholiho Kamehameha II as his sixth wife was not Kapule.
Her first husband was King Kaumualiʻi (married around 1817) and was proclaimed Queen of Kauaʻi. Her home was near the Russian Fort Elizabeth. Her reign was short-lived, when, in 1821 King Kamehameha II arrested Kaumualiʻi and proclaimed Kauaʻi as part of Hawaiʻi. Kaʻahumanu then married Kaumualiʻi to dissolve any claims to power. Deborah Kapule then married Abner Keliʻiahonui, who was Kuamualiʻi’s son by Kaʻapuwai Kapuaʻamohu. But Kaʻahumanu married Keliʻiahonui. In spite the monarchy taken her two husbands (metaphorically speaking, Kaʻahumanu was the Head of State at the time) Deborah remained faithful to the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi. When Humehume’s (Kaumualiʻi’s son) men arrived at the Russian Fort to try and reinstate the Kingdom of Kauaʻi, Deborah fought against them.
Deborah then married Simeon Kaʻiu, Kaumualiʻi’s half-brother. Her husband was a devout Christian, and she converted in 1825. She later became excommunicated from the church for having an affair with a married man, Oliver Chapin. She was later reinstated in the 1840s. In 1835, Deborah and Simeon moved to Wailua with 16 others and founded a new church. Though Simeon died shortly after on September 11, 1835.
Around 1836, Governor Kaikioʻewa of Kauaʻi became jealous of her popularity and she was arrested and taken Oʻahu. It was until 1838, when Kamehameha III granted an appeal, and Deborah was returned to Kauaʻi by Reverend William Richards.
In the latter part of her life, Deborah Kapule lived in Waimea, where she assisted in the construction of the Waimea Stone Church and help convert the Malae heiau into a cattle corral.
Deborah Kapule died in Waimea on August 26, 1853, her remains and burial place still remain unknown.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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