Havea Hikuleʻo
deity earth Tongan single tradition · 3
Havea Hikuleʻo is the goddess of the world, Pulotu, in Tongan mythology. She is credited with creating several volcanic islands by throwing stones from the skies.
↻ synthesized from 3 sources
Relationships
- co occurs with
- Laufakanaʻa, Tamapoʻuliʻalamafoa, Kohai, Koau, Momo, Taufulifonua, Tangaloa ʻEitumātupuʻa, Tangaloa Tufunga, Tangaloa ʻAtulongolongo, Tangaloa Tamapoʻuliʻalamafoa, Tagaloa Eitumatupua
- sibling of
- Māui, Tangaloa, Tangaloa ʻEiki
- child of
- Taufulifonua, Havea Lolofonua
Mentioned by
Sources
wikipedia (3)
Source passages
“In the mythology of Tonga, Havea Hikuleʻo is the goddess of the world, Pulotu. The islands of Kao, Tofua, Hunga Haʻapai, Hunga Tonga, Late and Fonualei came from stones thrown down from the skies by Hikuleʻo.”
#31425 · extracted by deepseek/deepseek-chat
“Either they were thrown down from the sky by Havea Hikuleʻo...All the makafonua (landstones) of Hikuleʻo were full of unevenness, and tended to jump around (that is, they were the source of earthquakes)”
#32308 · extracted by anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5
“The first Tangaloa was the cousin of Havea Hikuleʻo and Maui, or in some sources the brother or son or father of them.”
#32343 · extracted by anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5