Queen Salamasina (floruit in the 1500s) was a powerful and high-ranking woman in Samoan social history. She held the four papā (district) titles which gave her the paramount status of Tafa‘ifā ('one supported by four') on the western islands of Samoa.[1] Contrary to popular belief she was not the first Tafa'ifā, as these titles were willed to her by their previous possessor, Nafanua (Tonumaipe'a Nāfanua).[2][3] She is the titular ancestor of two of the four paramount titles of Samoa, Tupua Tamasese of Falefa and Salani[4] and the Amaile Mataafa line.[5]
Family History
Salamāsina descended from several powerful royal bloodlines. Her mother, Vaetoefaga, was an extremely highborn noblewoman who enjoyed a lofty position in both Samoan and Tongan societies. Vaetoefaga's father was the Tu‘i Tonga Kau‘ulufonua II (a son of Tu'i Tonga Kau'ulufonua I and the Samoan noblewoman Vainu'ulasi) and her mother was Taupoimāsina (the daughter of high chief Lefono of Amoa, Savai'i).
As a teenager Vaetoefaga became the tenth and last wife of the Samoan paramount sovereign chief of Ā'ana, Tui Ā‘ana Tamaalelagi, with whom she conceived their daughter Salamāsina. One of Tamaalelagi's royal attendants named Utufanunutunutu traveled to the Tongan island of Tongatapu with the intent of securing Vaetoefaga as Tamaalelagi's wife. He deceived her family with fantastical stories about the land and people of Samoa and succeeded in arranging the marriage and an impressive dowry. As part of the arrangement, Vaetoefaga's brother Ulualofaigā was given political concessions in Fagaloa (in Atua district). Vaetoefaga prompted the construction of the Tui Ā‘ana's "unofficial" residence (akin to a vacation home) near Vaialua in Nofoali‘i, A‘ana after being threatened by the families of Tamaalelagi's other wives. Vaetoefaga left Nu‘uausala (the Tui Ā‘ana's residence in Leulumoega) to seek refuge among her Tongan relatives who had settled in the villages allotted to her brother (Tamasese 2004:10). Her home was named Afeafe-o-Vaetoefaga ("refuge of Vaetoefaga") to commemorate this fearful time of persecution and conflict between the budding Tongan community and the established Samoan factions.
Life
Salamāsina’s mother, Vaetoefaga, returned to Tonga and entrusted Salamāsina to the safe-keeping of Levalasi So‘oa‘emalelagi. So'oa'emalelagi was the principal wife of the paramount sovereign of the Atua district, Tui Ātua Māta‘utia, and Salamāsina was raised as their own daughter.
Adulthood and reign
She was betrothed as a youth to marry a chief named Tonumaipe‘a Tapumanaia in order to form a political alliance with the influential Tonumaipe‘a faction of Savai‘i. However, Salamāsina eloped with the man of her choice, the untitled Alapepe. Their relationship brought forth a daughter named Lupefofoaivaoese, who grew to become Tui Ā‘ana and the ancestress of several prominent Samoan families, including the line that would rule Samoa until the death of Safeofafine. Alapepe was pursued by the furious Tonumaipe‘a clan to Tongatapu, where he was killed for "defiling" the taupou.
Salamāsina also had a son by Tapumanaia, who was named after his father. He later received the Sātele title of the Salani and Sālesātele villages in Falealili, Atua, ‘Upolu.
Queen Salamāsina goes back to Lotofaga because her father is from Lotofaga and she stayed there until she died. She had attained the lofty status of Tafa‘ifā during her lifetime and both her son (by Tapumanaia) and her daughter (by Alapepe) inherited high rank and prestige through her. Her reign is notable in Samoan history for its absence of warfare and many Samoans today feel pride in tracing their ancestry to Queen Salamasina.
Legacy
Scholars have been particularly interested in Salamāsina's life (and the fact that her supreme titles passed on to her chiefly descendants primarily through her daughter Lupefofoaivaoese) because ancient Samoa has often been portrayed as a male dominated society.[1]
Penelope Schoeffel and Gavan Daws point to Salamāsina's significance as the ancestor of many powerful Samoan rulers:
Salamasina's historical significance was that she was the means of drawing together all the great aristocratic bloodlines and links to supernatural power in a period of political transformation, to create a basis of legitimacy for the new power-brokers of Samoa, the orator group Tumua of A'ana and Atua. For the next four centuries or so, they were to manipulate the new dynasty she gave birth to through control of the paramount titles which they were empowered to bestow.[1]
References
- 1 2 3 Schoeffel, Penelope (1987). "Rank, gender and politics in ancient Samoa:The genealogy of SalamāsinaO Le Tafaifā". The Journal of Pacific History. 22 (4): 174–193. doi:10.1080/00223348708572566. ISSN 0022-3344.
- ↑ Queen Salamasina, More Women Rulers - Women in World History Curriculum
- ↑ "Samoa". Archived from the original on 2002-06-06. Retrieved 2011-03-09.
- ↑ So'o, Asofou (2008). Democracy & Custom in Samoa: the uneasy alliance. Suva, Fiji: IPS Publications, University of the South Pacific. pp. 7–8. ISBN 9789820203907.
- ↑ Efi, Tui Atua Tupua Tamasese Ta'isi (2009). Su'esu'e Manogi = In Search of Fragrance: Tui Atua Tupua Tamasese Ta'isi and the Samoan indigenous reference. Lepapaigalagala, Samoa: The Centre for Samoan Studies, National University of Samoa. p. 34. ISBN 9789829003324.
- Notes
- Watson, Robert M. (1918). History of Samoa. Whitcombe & Tombs.
- Meleisea, Malama (1987). Lagaga: A Short History of Western Samoa. University of the South Pacific.
- Henry, Brother F. (1979). History of Samoa. Commercial Printers Ltd.
- Hart, Wright & Patterson (1971). History of Samoa. Pesega LDS Press.
- Schoeffel, Penelope (1987). "Rank, Gender and Politics in Ancient Samoa: The Genealogy of Salamasina o le Tafa'ifa". Journal of Pacific History. 22 (3–4): 174–193. doi:10.1080/00223348708572566.
- Gunson, Neil (1987). "Sacred Women Chiefs and Female "Headmen"". Journal of Pacific History. 22: 139–172. doi:10.1080/00223348708572563.