(Redirected from Salote Tupou III)
'Sālote Mafile‘o Pilolevu Tupou III, Queen of Tonga',
GCMG,
GCVO,
GBE (
13 March 1900–
16 December 1965), but usually named only: Sālote, was queen of
Tonga from
5 April 1918 to her death in 1965. She was the daughter of king
George Tupou II and his first wife, queen Lavinia Veiongo. Married to
Viliami Tungī Mailefihi and the mother of
Siaosi Tāufa‘āhau Tupoulahi - later king Tāufa‘āhau Tupou IV - , Uiliami Tuku‘aho (5 November 1919–28 April 1936), and
Sione Ngū Manumataongo - later Tu‘i Pelehake (Fatafehi) -, plus 3 miscarriages.
From a traditional point of view she was also (the 21st)
Tu‘i Kanokupolu and as such only grudgingly accepted by followers of the
Tu‘i Tonga, that is the people of
Mu‘a. The first years of her reign she spent a lot of effort in reducing their suspicions. Her marriage to Tungī Mailefihi had been a masterstroke of her father, as Tungī was a direct descendant of the
Tu‘i Ha‘atakalaua, which at that time was seen as belonging to the
Tu‘i Tonga's ''kauhala‘uta''. Their children therefore combined the blood of the three grand royal dynasties in Tonga.
In
1920-
1921, she assisted the
Bernice P. Bishop Museum's Bayard-Dominick expedition with their mapping of Tongan
archaeological sites by providing access to localities and information. The expedition's reports on the Tongan past - including a large volume of material which still remains unpublished even today - which were primarily compiled by
Edward Winslow Gifford provided the groundwork for comprehensive studies of the pre-contact history of the Tongans (Burley 1998).
She put unknown Tonga in the limelights of the world's attention when she attended the
1953 coronation of Queen
Elizabeth II in London. She won the admiration of many when she rode through the streets in an open carriage in the pouring rain. This was a symbol of respect to the Queen, illustrating that no one is more important than the Queen on the day of her coronation. She was a keen writer and author of countless dance songs and love poems (''hiva kakala'') as well as majestic ''
lakalaka''. She served as Chairman of the Tonga Traditions Committee
1954–
1965, patronised the Tonga
Red Cross Society, was appointed a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in 1932, advanced to Dame Grand Cross (GBE) in 1945, appointed a Dame Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order (GCVO) in 1953 and was the first Dame Grand Cross to be appointed to the Order of Saint Michael and Saint George (GCMG) in January 1965. She died
16 December 1965 at
Aotea Hospital,
Auckland, after a long illness.
Trivia
★ Queen Salote was known for being a tall woman. ''
Time'' magazine
[1] states that she was 1.91 meters or 6 foot 3 inches.
See also
★
List of famous tall women
References
★ (1998): Tongan Archaeology and the Tongan Past, 2850-150 B.P. ''Journal of World Prehistory'' '12'(3): 337-392.
(HTML abstract)
★ (2004): ''Songs and poems of Queen Sālote''.
ISBN 978-982-213-008-9