Object Details
Donor Name
Princess Abigail W. Kawananakoa
Notes
From card: "Center length 6-3/4"; width at neck 12 1/2"; overall frontal width 24 1/2". Background of black o-o feathers; narrow red border at neck; small spots of red and yellow feathers over body of cape. Black cloth neck ties (torn). Base netting of olona fiber. Note: In Princess Kawananakoa's Will this is referred to as "The Apikaila cape." A photograph and description of this cape appear in Additional Notes on Hawaiian Feather Work by Wm. T. Brigham. Bishop Museum Memoirs. Vol. VII. No. 1. Fig. 49 and p. 54: "APIKAILA CAPE This cape is very small but when used in funereal rites has a way of appering far more prominent that its size warrants .... The name is the Hawaiian form of Abigail". A further statement appears in papers accompanying Clarice B. Taylor's letter of March 17, 1947: "This ... cape ... of authentic ancient manufacture ... The cape was owned by a chiefess named Apikaila ... a descendant of the family of Kauai chiefs and a relative of Kekaulike Kinoki, mother of Prince David Kawanakoa. Apikaila's son, Samuel Maikai, was a kahili bearer at the court of King Kalakau[a]. He wore the cape at the 1883 coronation ceremonies of Kalakaua".
Ahu'ula, feathered cape, olona fiber (Touchardia latifolia), feathers from 'i'iwi (Vestiaria coccinea) and 'o'o (Moho nobilis).
Record Last Modified
21 Apr 2025
Specimen Count
1
Culture
Hawaiian (Kanaka ʻŌiwi, Kanaka Maoli)
Accession Date
14 Jan 1947
Accession Number
170851
USNM Number
E384229-0
Object Type
Cape
Length - Object
17.14 cm
Width - Object
31.8 cm
62.2 cm
Place
Hawaii (Hawaiʻi), United States, Polynesia
See more items in
Anthropology
Data Source
NMNH - Anthropology Dept.
Topic
Ethnology
Link to Original Record
Record ID
nmnhanthropology_8419348