翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Konoe Tadafusa
・ Konoe Tadahiro
・ Konoe Tadatsugu
・ Konoe Taneie
・ Konoe Tsunehira
・ Konoe Tsunehiro
・ Konoe Tsunetada
・ Konoe Uchisaki
・ Konoglyphus
・ Konoha
・ Konoha Station
・ Konohana
・ Konohana Bridge
・ Konohana-ku, Osaka
・ Konohanasakuya-hime
Konohiki
・ Konoike
・ Konoike Athletic Stadium
・ Konoin Constituency
・ Konojad
・ Konojady
・ Konojedy
・ Konokareha
・ Konokovo
・ Konokovo, Krasnodar Krai
・ Konolfingen
・ Konolfingen District
・ Konomai gold mine
・ Konomala language
・ Konomi


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Konohiki : ウィキペディア英語版
Konohiki
A ''konohiki'' is a headman of a land division or ahupua`a of the Kingdom of Hawaii who administered the land ruled by an ali'i chief.
==Background==
The lands of the Ruling chiefs of Hawaii were divided into radial divisions of land when possible. These divisions were under the control of other smaller chiefs and managed by a steward. Land was divided up in strict adherence to the wishes of the ''Ali‘i Nui''. The island was called the ''mokupuni'' and was split into several ''moku''. The ''moku'' (district) parameters ran from the highest mountain top, down to the sea. These divisions were ruled by an ''aliʻi ʻaimoku'' who would have been appointed by the ruling chief. Each of these ''mokus'' were further split into ''ahupuaau'', named after the dividing boundary alter where taxes were collected for each area during the Makahiki. Each ''ahupuaau'' was then run by a headman or chief called a Konohiki.
In Keelikolani vs Robinson, the term is also defined as a Land Agent. In Territory vs Bishop Trust Co. LTD., when the agent was appointed by a chief they were referred to by the title of ''konohiki''. When referring to the titled person as Konohiki, this meant that they were charged with the care of the division of land for the king or nobility the land was awarded to. The term could also be a designated area of land owned privately as compared to being owned by the government. A chief of lands could not lose life tenure on the land even after being discharged from the position, but a head man overseeing the same land has no such right.
Often ''ali'i'' and ''konohiki'' are referenced together however, while most or all konohiki were ali'i nobility, not all ali'i were konohiki. The Hawaiian dictionary gives the definition as a headman of a land division, but it is also used in describing fishing rights as well. The term when broken in two parts is as follows: Kono being defined as to entice, or prompt and hiki defined as something that can be done. The konohiki was a relative of the ali'i and would oversee the coordination of the property, including water rights, land distribution, agricultural use and any maintenance. The Konohiki would also make sure the right amounts of gifts and tributes to the ali'i were properly made at the right times.
As capitalism was incorporated into the kingdom the konohiki would become the tax collectors, landlords and wardens over the fisheries.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Konohiki」の詳細全文を読む



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