he thought someone else could overtake him.
The group that did not receive land was the foreigner.From:Meleena:-)
The great Mahele occurred primarily as a result of the dominance of foreign capitalistic interests, the weakened immunity system of the native Hawaiians causing often epidemics that diminished the population and the lack of good,sound advisors to the ruling class of hawaiians.
The Great Mahele occurred in Hawaii in 1848 as a major land redistribution effort. It was initiated by King Kamehameha III to divide the land among the monarch, nobles, and common people to establish private land ownership, modernize the economy, and conform to Western practices.
Jon J. Chinen has written: 'The Great Mahele' -- subject(s): Land tenure
what happen on the T-20 match ha..................! ?......!The latest news is the T-20 cricket match which was held in srilanka. west indies won the championship of the T-20 match. srilanka looses the match. Mahele Jayawardene was the leader of the T-20 match.T.M.Dilshan scored 0 and mahele got scolding from the cricket council so he was removed from the leadership.
Aloha: This would require a total history lesson. One could say that there have been 2 others, although neither were called mahele. One was with respect to the first (late 1800's), and the other was with respect to the American government making right some serious wrongs against HI (mid 1900s). I am not going to do your homework for you, but this will help you get started, yes?
mahalo mai ku'uhanau [mahalo my koo ooh hay-now]
Prior to 1839, no one owned any land in Hawaii. No native Hawaiian, no missionaries, not even the monarchy. Hawaiians saw themselves as stewards of the land. They cared for it, used it to cultive their crops, lived on it and off of it, even wars fought were about people, feeding people, gaining crops, gaining wild game, acquiring slaves, and not about land. The common knowledge was how can a man own land, something that will outlive him, his children, his grandchildren, all of his decendants. In 1839, King Kamehameha III instilled the Great Mahele. From this point on, anyone could aquire land. They just had to see the Konohiki (the guy in charge of land division for that area) and they would acquire a 1/4 acre plot of land for him and his family. Upon his death, the land would revert back to the government unless someone made a claim for it, i.e. his family. Larger land parcels were given for agricultral use. Since 1898, Hawaii has been controlled by the US and all land ownership has become lease hold or fee simple. In other words, one rents the use of a place or one can purchase the ownership of it.