īīԴDZ

Inoa | Name(s)

īīԴDZ

Hōʻuluʻulu manaʻo

He akua wahine ʻo īīԴDZ pili i ka ua noe ma nā mauna o Ჹ𲹰첹 a me Maunakea. ʻO īīԴDZ kekahi o nā kaikaina o ʴDZʻ me Waiau a me Kahoupokāne.

Wahi a nā moʻolelo kahiko, he mana kā īīԴDZ e hoʻokū i ka pele a me ke ahi e kahe hou ana mai mai nā puʻu pele o ka mauna2. Wahi a kekahi moʻolelo he kōkoʻolua pili aloha paha ʻo ia iā Nuʻu, ka mea i hoʻohālike ʻia me Noa ma ka Baibala Kalikiano2.

Description

īīԴDZ is a goddess associated with the mists of Ჹ𲹰첹 and Maunakea. īīԴDZ is one of the younger sisters of ʴDZʻ along with Waiau and Kahoupokāne.

According to ancient stories, īīԴDZ had the ability to stop the lava and fires from the cinder cones on mountain2. According to one story she was possibly the wife of Nuʻu, who was compared to with Noah in the Christian Bible2.

ʻŌlelo kuhikuhi

E koho i kēia huaʻōlelo no nā kumuwaiwai pili iā īīԴDZ, ke akua wahine a ke kaikaina hoʻi o ʴDZʻ.

Instructions

Use this term for resources regarding īīԴDZ, the goddess and younger sister of ʴDZʻ.

Moʻokūʻauhau | Genealogy

Akua | Deity: ʴDZʻ1; Nananuu; Waiau; Kahoupokāne

ʻĀina | Land/sea: Maunakea2; Ჹ𲹰첹; Mānā, Kauaʻi; Puʻu īīԴDZ (Maunakea)

Kinolau | Form: Noe; Dead fires2; Desolation; Snow

ūmole | Source(s)

(1) Armitage, Kimo. Akua Hawaiʻi : Hawaiian Gods and Their Stories. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bishop Museum Press, 2005.

(2) Westervelt, W. D. (William Drake). Hawaiian Legends of Volcanoes (Mythology) Collected and Translated from the Hawaiian. Boston, Mass: Ellis Press, 1916.

(3) Pukui, Mary Kawena, and Samuel H. (Samuel Hoyt) Elbert. Hawaiian Dictionary : Hawaiian-English, English-Hawaiian. Rev. and enl. Ed. Honolulu: Ӱҵ Press, 1986.

Hoʻopili ʻia i | Applied to: , ,

Mea haku | Created by: Puaokamele Dizon; Annemarie Paikai.