Religious authority—defined as the power to influence the mode, location, and timing of worship—is inherently difficult to decipher from archaeological evidence. There is a strong preference among scholars to focus on the construction of religious architecture based on the notion that it reflects the capacity of a leader to direct labor and, by extension, to dictate what is orthodox religious practice (e.g., Trigger Reference Trigger1990). The Hawaiian Islands represent a textbook case of this approach (see Hommon Reference Hommon2013; Kirch Reference Kirch2010). In Hawai`i, oral histories and archaeological evidence document the emergence of four powerful kingdoms in the archipelago around AD 1600. An island's ruler was considered divine and acted as the head of a state religion. The clearest material signal of the rise of state-level authority over religion is a sharp increase in the number of temples (heiau) dated by uranium series (230Th/U) to between AD 1550 and 1700 (Kirch and Sharp Reference Kirch and Sharp2005; Kirch et al. Reference Kirch, Mertz-Kraus and Sharp2015:222).
To understand religious authority, however, we must look beyond the construction of monuments. As DeMarrais and coauthors (Reference DeMarrais, Castillo and Earle1996:16) note, the materialization of ideology involves “the transformation of ideas, values, stories, myths, and the like, into a physical reality—a ceremonial event, a symbolic object, a monument, or a writing system.” These physical manifestations—events, objects, texts—offer another record of the way in which segments of a society can, in certain times and places, create and maintain religious authority.
One promising avenue of research in Hawai`i is religious activities linked to agriculture. Many but not all the rituals at temples were focused on agriculture. This preoccupation with food production is understandable, given that multiple lines of evidence suggest this was when the population—which had been growing rapidly since first colonization around AD 1000—peaked, and the threat of shortfall may have been more extreme than any ever before. At the same time, commoner households lost rights to hold land (Field et al. Reference Field, Ladefoged, Sharp and Kirch2011), there was an increased capacity for extracting surplus food as offerings (Kolb Reference Kolb, Bacus and Lucero1999), and the collection of food surpluses and other goods as taxes was regularized as part of the annual harvest ceremony known as Makahiki (McCoy Reference McCoy2018). Through these processes, elites leveraged controls over land and subsistence wealth (i.e., surplus food) to create power and authority over nearly all aspects of social life.
We report here on a previously undocumented aspect of religious activity associated with food production in the Hawaiian Islands: corals left as garden offerings. Our excavations in a particularly well-preserved section of the Kona Field System, a rich upland agricultural zone, uncovered abundant small pieces of coral and waterworn stones that were likely to have been left as offerings in gardens (Figure 1). It is inherently difficult to associate a particular material type with religious ritual (e.g., Hawkes Reference Hawkes1954), and both these kinds of items were used for other purposes—as paving stones (‘ili‘ili) and as coral abraders for shaping bone fishhooks. But it is well established that in Hawai`i coral was “used as dedicatory offerings” in temples and shrines (Kirch and Sharp Reference Kirch and Sharp2005:103). Coral is found not only “on temple altars, on top of walls, or on pavements” but also was placed during construction in “wall fill . . . or . . . beneath the basal stones of walls” (Kirch et al. Reference Kirch, Mertz-Kraus and Sharp2015:167). The historian David Malo (Reference Malo1903:229), writing in the nineteenth century, describes people carrying “pieces of coral, which they piled outside the heiau [temple].”
We initially dated two coral samples with high-precision uranium series dating (230Th/U) and found that the practice dated back to AD 1517–1547, immediately before an increase in temple construction elsewhere in the archipelago (McCoy et al. Reference McCoy, Mulrooney, Horrocks, Cheng and Ladefoged2017). Our expanded sample of coral dates (N = 20) reported here allows us to discuss the practice of depositing coral in gardens within the broader context of the rise of state religious authority in the Hawaiian Islands. We find that the earliest samples date to around AD 1422–1459, a time before the transition to an archaic state society when farming first began in this zone (for discussions of the classification of Hawaiian society as an archaic state, see Bayman et al. Reference Bayman, Dye and Rieth2021 and commentary; Hommon Reference Hommon2013; Kirch Reference Kirch2010). The practice ended in the early seventeenth century, with no evidence for coral offerings after AD 1635. We suggest this cessation indicates that a long-lived tradition, likely focused on productivity, was disrupted in AD 1600–1700 by a shift in religious authority.
We view this research as part of a growing sensitivity to recognizing and explaining the end of long-lived practices. It is inherently easier for archaeologists to identify materializations of generative acts, such as building a temple or leaving an offering. It is harder to recognize the end of traditions, because doing so requires the judicious use of negative evidence (Wallach Reference Wallach2019). We hope in the future that this discussion expands to also include the destruction of religious sites and iconography. This is rarely the subject of direct empirical study (e.g., Chapman Reference Chapman2018; Graves Reference Graves2008), but it does tell us about the materialization of ideology, albeit expressed through damage and destruction (Latour and Weibel Reference Latour and Weibel2002).
Religious Offerings in the Hawaiian Islands: Ethnohistory and Archaeology
Rituals described in nineteenth-century ethnohistoric sources (e.g., Kamakau Reference Kamakau1991; Malo Reference Malo1903) have been the basis for much of the academic discourse on Hawaiian religion (e.g., Valeri Reference Valeri1985). At the time of European contact, the gods Kāne and Lono, often associated with irrigated and rainfed agriculture, respectively, were central to many of the rituals that took place. Formal locations for rituals included temples and shrines. Agricultural rituals commonly took place at modest temples (e.g., hale o Lono) or at small shrines (pōhaku o Kāne). In some cases, historical information passed down through oral histories gives us the names of temples or shrines and how they were used; in other cases, archaeologists have interpreted remnant architecture as agricultural temples or shrines based on their location within or near fields and the presence of distinctive characteristics in terms of layout, orientation, or the presence of upright stones as focal points of ritual practice (see Kirch Reference Kirch1985, Reference Kirch2004; Kirch and Ruggles Reference Kirch and Ruggles2019; McCoy et al. Reference McCoy, Ladefoged, Graves and Stephens2011; Mulrooney and Ladefoged Reference Mulrooney and Ladefoged2005; Phillips et al. Reference Phillips, Ladefoged, McPhee and Asner2015). These agricultural ritual locations are distinct from other types of temples and shrines, such as those on mountaintops, near the coast, or located within households.
Te Rangi Hiroa [Sir Peter Buck] (Reference Hiroa and Buck1933:64), writing broadly about Polynesian religion, noted, “The gods were jealous gods and became inimical if neglected . . . [to ensure] success in any important enterprise, a particular god had to be placated by a ritualistic phrase or incantation, an offering, or even by an elaborate ritual.” The long list of known emic categories of ritual offerings in Hawai`i varies based on the purpose and type of material used. The terms mōhai or hai, for example, refer to an offering or sacrifice and, when combined with other terms, specify what was being offered. They are so closely semantically linked to the term for temple (heiau; variant of haiau) that the act of making offerings is one of the behaviors that defines these sacred places (Pukui and Elbert Reference Pukui and Elbert1986). Unlike many perishable materials that were used in offerings and degraded quickly, branch coral and small waterworn stones preserve well in the archaeological record. Because these materials only occur naturally along the coastline, they are highly visible at sites as manuports and have been well documented by archaeologists from the first archaeological excavations in the Hawaiian Islands (Kirch Reference Kirch1985).
There is an extraordinarily good chronology for the use of coral as offerings—at shrines or in the dedication of temples—made possible by advances in 230Th/U uranium series dating that often, but not always, yield a date an order of magnitude more precise than radiocarbon dating (for more examples of the application of this technique, see Hellstrom and Pickering Reference Hellstrom and Pickering2015). Kirch and Sharp (Reference Kirch and Sharp2005) reported the first of these dates on fresh branch coral offerings left as dedications at the construction of a dozen temple sites in the Hawaiian Islands, mainly on Maui. Today the list of dates has grown to include more than 100 samples that demonstrate the use of fresh branch coral for offerings in different contexts from AD 1325 through AD 1794 (Kikiloi Reference Kikiloi2012; Kirch et al. Reference Kirch, Mertz-Kraus and Sharp2015; McCoy et al. Reference McCoy, Weisler, Zhao and Feng2009, Reference McCoy, Mulrooney, Horrocks, Cheng and Ladefoged2017; Weisler et al. Reference Weisler, Collerson, Feng, Zhao and Yu2006). This expanded sample—which occasionally includes older water-rolled corals collected on shore (e.g., Field et al. Reference Field, Ladefoged, Sharp and Kirch2011; Kirch et al. Reference Kirch, Mertz-Kraus and Sharp2015)—represents activities on four islands in the Main Hawaiian Islands: Maui (n = 52), Moloka`i (n = 14), Hawai`i (n = 7), and Lehua, a small island off the coast of Kaua`i (n = 2), with no dated samples from O`ahu, Lāna`i, Kaua`i, or Kaho`olawe. Dated samples have also been reported on Nihoa (n = 36) and Mokumanamana (n = 1) in Papahānaumokuākea, also known as the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. These islands were reported in the logs of visiting ships as unoccupied at the time of European contact.
The earliest dated coral offerings associated with the construction of religious architecture date to the AD 1300s and 1400s. On Nihoa, a sharp rise in the number of dates in the early AD 1500s suggests an increase in ritual practices in Papahānaumokuākea during that time (see Kikiloi Reference Kikiloi2012). Coral samples dated to the late 1500s and 1600s indicate a massive increase in the frequency of monuments constructed on Maui (Kirch et al. Reference Kirch, Mertz-Kraus and Sharp2015:222). The number of dates reported on coral offerings then decline, because fewer new temples were built in the 1700s. Within the current corpus of dated coral offerings, the last coral offering in the Hawaiian Islands dates to AD 1794, and although the practice may have continued past this time, the disappearance of the material evidence corresponds closely with the state abolition of Hawaiian religion by royal decree in AD 1819.
Methods
We conducted two seasons of excavations within the Amy Greenwell Ethnobotanical Gardens (AGEG) in Kealakekua Ahupua`a, South Kona District, Hawai`i Island (Figure 2). Located about 2 km from the coast, the AGEG are home to a series of upland-to-coast oriented field walls, or kuaiwi, that are the defining characteristic of the Kona Field System. Previous investigations yielded a remarkably early radiocarbon date (ca. AD 1000–1200; Allen Reference Allen2001, Reference Allen2004), but this date has been regarded as unreliable in recent evaluations of the chronology of Hawai`i Island.
In 2015, excavations were conducted to collect material for a more detailed chronology that conforms to current best practices (i.e., Rieth and Athens Reference Rieth and Athens2013). In that season, a 7 × 1 m trench (Trench #1) was excavated, exposing three major phases in the construction of the feature, Kuaiwi I, that yielded two key pieces of information: (1) agricultural infrastructure improvements began by AD 1400, and (2) infrastructure continued to be added in optimal farmland and elsewhere after AD 1700 (McCoy et al. Reference McCoy, Mulrooney, Horrocks, Cheng and Ladefoged2017). No coral offerings were found in Kuaiwi I. Waterworn stones were common but isolated in the trench. We recorded a number of coral samples on the surface of another feature, Kuaiwi 0. Two surface-collected samples place the practice of leaving these offerings within a narrow temporal range: AD 1517–1547 (McCoy et al. Reference McCoy, Mulrooney, Horrocks, Cheng and Ladefoged2017).
In 2016, excavations were conducted to collect material for a more detailed chronology of coral offerings (Figure 3). In that season a 6 × 1 m trench (Trench #2) was excavated across Kuaiwi 0, exposing three major phases: (1) a possible clearing burn prior to the construction of the field wall, (2) construction and use of the main field wall when it was about 3 m wide, and (3) a widening of the field wall to 6 m, with an additional 2 m along the south edge and 1 m on the north edge. Fragments of coral and small waterworn stones were encountered throughout the excavation. The coral was not worked and does not appear waterworn, making it unlikely it was raw material for creating abraders or was used as floor paving. Waterworn stones were found at a remarkably high density (137 per m3), and the density of coral fragments (19 per m3) was high compared with all other previous excavations in this upland setting (Allen Reference Allen2001). We note that it was common practice to use waterworn stones in floor paving (‘ili‘ili), as slingstones, and to mark trails. However, both the waterworn pebbles and corals were not concentrated in any one part of the excavation, suggesting to us that they each could have arrived in the gardens as a separate offering. We focused dating on branch coral (Acropora sp.) that had little or no signs of weathering or wear on the surface to try and avoid dating coral that had been naturally broken, rolled in the surf, and found on the shoreline. An additional 18 samples from Kuaiwi 0 were dated by the uranium series (230Th/U) method at the Xi'an Jiaotong University lab. Complete lab protocols, standardization, and half-lives are described in Cheng and colleagues (Reference Cheng, Lawrence Edwards, Shen, Polyak, Asmerom, Woodhead and Hellstrom2013).
Results
A fine-grained chronology of rituals in gardens is now possible based on high-precision dates on coral offerings in the Kealakekua section of the Kona Field System (Table 1; Supplemental Table 1). In this context, we found that the practice of leaving coral offerings in the Kona Field System began around AD 1400 and coincides with the beginning of a continuous record of anthropogenic burning marking the earliest upland farming (McCoy et al. Reference McCoy, Mulrooney, Horrocks, Cheng and Ladefoged2017). Offerings continued into the AD 1600s, with the last securely dated offering in this section of the field system around AD 1635 (± 40), although the practice continued elsewhere in the Hawaiian archipelago until at least AD 1794 (± 4) (Kirch et al. Reference Kirch, Mertz-Kraus and Sharp2015).
Note: Error is 2σ.
* Coral likely dead when collected for offering.
A conspicuous lack of coral offerings dating to after AD 1600 has been found elsewhere. Dye (Reference Dye2016:7) notes that “branch coral harvesting was regularly practiced—from the mid sixteenth century to the turn of the eighteenth century” and goes on to suggest that coral offerings at temples declined after this time. In Figure 4 we summarize the results of major studies of coral offerings in three settings: an isolated island (Nihoa), upland agricultural fields, and the coastal habitation zone. Dates are normalized by 25-year periods, and we note the last date from each study area.
The dates from coastal Maui sites show a continuous use of coral offerings from the early AD 1500s until state abolition of Hawaiian religion in AD 1819. In this context, the average rate of offerings was greatest from AD 1600 to 1700. In the upland agricultural fields of Maui and Hawai`i Island, the period of most intense offerings is earlier—about AD 1500–1600—and the last dated offerings are staggered across the period from around AD 1600 to 1700. A similar pattern is found on isolated Nihoa. Due to potential sampling and preservation biases, we cannot say for certain that the period from AD 1600 to 1700 saw a complete cessation of coral offerings on Nihoa and in upland agricultural settings of other islands. However, given that coral offerings were made in coastal Maui throughout this century and for a century beyond, the lack of coral offerings in upland locations is notable.
Discussion and Conclusion
At the time of the first written accounts of the islands of Papahānaumokuākea in the nineteenth century, the small, isolated island of Nihoa was not occupied. It likely acted as a waystation for voyages from the Main Hawaiian Islands to Mokumanamana, which based on archaeological evidence, never supported a permanent settlement. The last reported date on a coral offering on Nihoa is AD 1606 (± 7), although radiocarbon dating, which is less precise, points to continued visits to Mokumanamana after this date (Kikiloi Reference Kikiloi2012). It seems likely that permanent settlements on Nihoa were abandoned as voyages became less frequent, thus explaining the lack of coral offerings in either the seventeenth or eighteenth centuries AD. Abandonment, however, does not explain the apparent end of coral offerings on Maui and Hawai`i Island. Both the uplands of Kahikinui and Kona continued to be central places for agricultural production well into the nineteenth century AD.
We interpret the cessation of coral offerings in the upland garden features of Kona and in the dedication of new upland temples in Kahikinui as the result of a disruption of individual religious activities directed toward successful subsistence production. Prior to the state-imposed control of religion, where and when to make offerings in the fields or at temples within fields would have been at the discretion of individuals, presumably farmers. With increased levels of political control and demands for surplus, there was an increase in offerings from AD 1500 to 1600. After the transition to an archaic state, in AD 1600–1700, religious practices to ensure agricultural fecundity appear to have been refocused away from gardens. The lack of new temple construction in upland areas while there were continued coral offerings at coastal temples suggests that religious practices were more focused on those temples along the coast.
Religious reform is not unknown in Hawaiian history. In AD 1810, King Kamehameha became the first to rule the entire archipelago. After Kamehameha's death in AD 1819, his son, Liholiho (King Kamehameha II) immediately used his power to break with tradition and prohibit many Hawaiian religious practices. In the following weeks many temples were destroyed, there was a brief insurrection, and the priestly class was disbanded (Sissons Reference Sissons2014). This is just one of many historical examples of rulers enacting sweeping religious reforms (Freeman Reference Freeman2009; Trigger Reference Trigger1993). The lack of coral offerings in Hawai`i dated to the nineteenth century is undoubtedly associated with the 1819 prohibitions, which was immediately followed by the arrival of Christian missionaries and additional legal barriers to public displays of Hawaiian religious practices, such as chanting.
Our suggestion that the absence of coral offerings in upland fields after AD 1600–1700 is not just a byproduct of sampling and uneven preservation but also of religious reform is inherently founded on negative evidence. We recognize the weakness of negative evidence. It is nonetheless a commonplace and, to some degree, a necessary part of interpreting the archaeological record (Wallach Reference Wallach2019). Further, if we accept that the lack of samples dated to the nineteenth century is associated with state prohibitions on religious practices, then we must at least entertain the possibility that the absence of coral offerings in upland fields after AD 1600–1700 is not just a byproduct of sampling and uneven preservation but may also be an expression of religious authority.
The discovery of a shift in religious practices in agricultural fields has several implications for future research in the Hawaiian Islands. First, and most obviously, a larger sample of dates on coral offerings is necessary to determine whether there was a single end to the practice, as is often assumed to have occurred in AD 1819, or if, as we have hypothesized, it ended earlier in certain settings. Second, more research is needed to determine whether the apparent earlier end of the practice of making coral offerings signifies only the end of one practice or whether it is also the rise of a new practice, such as offerings made of different materials, or a shift in the context of rituals. For example, in the leeward North Kohala Field System on Hawai`i Island, we have suggested that the introduction of the notched-styled temple (heiau) to the Kohala region dates to AD 1600–1700 (McCoy et al. Reference McCoy, Ladefoged, Graves and Stephens2011). Bayesian models have been applied to the problem of refining the date of this tradition (Dye Reference Dye2012), but they yield wildly different and misleading results depending on the “end” date selected (i.e., 1778, 1819; McCoy et al. Reference McCoy, Ladefoged, Bickler, Stephen and Graves2012:Figure 1). We would also add the complication that changes may have occurred at different rates in more rural areas (Ladefoged et al. Reference Ladefoged, McCoy and Graves2020). Finally, given the fact that radiocarbon dating places the onset of construction of monumental architecture in coastal Kealakekua at AD 1640 (McCoy et al. Reference McCoy, Casana, Chad Hill, Laugier, Mulrooney and Ladefoged2021), we need to entertain the possibility that there was a broader shift away from rituals within fields to the coast. Each of these possibilities has its own particular challenges that will be necessary to address if archaeology is going to contribute to our long-term understanding of Hawaiian religion.
Acknowledgments
This research was carried out with permission and support from Bishop Museum and funded by the University Research Fund at Southern Methodist University and the Faculty Research Development Fund at the University of Auckland. Our research benefited from parallel collaborative research on remote sensing with Jesse Casana, Austin Chad Hill, and Elise Jakoby Laugier. Special thanks to Scott Belluomini, Bobby Camara, Christina Carolus, Veerle de Ridder, Ann Horsburgh, Hayley Glover, Jen Huebert, David Ingleman, Adam Johnson, Ben Jones, Patrick Kirch, Gordon Leslie, Sarina Pearson, Hannah Springer, Tracy Tam-Sing, Neil J. Tabor, Ben Teele, Ryan Terry, Peter Van Dyke, Charmaine Wong, Rose Young, and Martha Yent. We thank the reviewers and copyeditor for their attention to detail and suggestions for improving this article.
Data Availability
Primary field and survey data are on file with the Bishop Museum and State of Hawai'i, Department of Land and Natural Resources, State Historic Preservation Division.
Supplemental Material
For supplemental material accompanying this article, visit https://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2022.3.
Supplemental Table 1. Full results of 230Th/U Series Dating.
Competing Interests
The authors declare none.