36:
91:, the king of Hawaii, issued an order for all men to till a large plantation for the king. When Nanaue worked, other workers took off his clothing, revealing his shark mouth on his back. He bit many of the other men, and the King deduced that Nanaue was responsible for the disappearances of humans into the Kaneana cave. The King had Nanaue tied to a stake to be burned alive, but Nanaue prayed to his father and escaped, shapeshifting into a shark to swim away.
84:, who is the king of sharks. He was born with a shark's mouth on his back. As a boy, Nanaue's mother, Kalei, told him to never eat meat as it would give him a craving for flesh. However, when he turned seven years old, he ate meat and began to crave human flesh. He took up residence in Kaneana cave where he would leave human bodies to rot before eating them, as he found rotted flesh to be tastiest.
94:
Nanaue swam from the island of Hawaii to Maui. There, he married the sister of a chief, and tried to stop his habit of eating people, but fell to the temptation and resumed his activities. He was caught in the act, and once again fled, this time to
Molokai. There he was caught once again, and
157:
72:. He is described as a man with the mouth of a shark on his back who can shapeshift into a giant shark.
226:
257:
95:
captured in nets. The people of
Molokai prayed to the demigod Unauna, who burned Nanaue alive.
8:
262:
69:
81:
51:
182:
202:
251:
133:
35:
88:
104:
108:
158:"Nanaue - The Shapeshifting Shark-Man Of Makua Cave - Information"
183:""The Shark Man, Nanaue" | USC Digital Folklore Archives"
134:"Hawaiian Folk Tales: XXIV. The Shark-Man, Nanaue"
249:
34:
180:
250:
98:
203:"The Legend of Nanaue the Shark Man"
128:
126:
124:
13:
231:Florida Program for Shark Research
14:
274:
121:
181:Chinn-Liu, Sierra (2013-05-14).
40:A modern illustration of Nanaue
219:
195:
174:
150:
1:
114:
75:
7:
10:
279:
45:
33:
26:
21:
87:When Nanaue was a man,
16:Hawaiian god of sharks
227:"King of the sharks!"
80:Nanaue is the son of
162:lookintohawaii.com
103:Nanaue appears as
99:In popular culture
70:Hawaiian mythology
68:is a demigod from
207:www.to-hawaii.com
107:, a character in
63:
62:
270:
242:
241:
239:
238:
223:
217:
216:
214:
213:
199:
193:
192:
190:
189:
178:
172:
171:
169:
168:
154:
148:
147:
145:
144:
138:sacred-texts.com
130:
38:
19:
18:
278:
277:
273:
272:
271:
269:
268:
267:
248:
247:
246:
245:
236:
234:
225:
224:
220:
211:
209:
201:
200:
196:
187:
185:
179:
175:
166:
164:
156:
155:
151:
142:
140:
132:
131:
122:
117:
101:
78:
41:
29:
17:
12:
11:
5:
276:
266:
265:
260:
244:
243:
218:
194:
173:
149:
119:
118:
116:
113:
100:
97:
77:
74:
61:
60:
59:
58:
57:Kalei (mother)
55:
47:
43:
42:
39:
31:
30:
27:
24:
23:
15:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
275:
264:
261:
259:
258:Hawaiian gods
256:
255:
253:
232:
228:
222:
208:
204:
198:
184:
177:
163:
159:
153:
139:
135:
129:
127:
125:
120:
112:
110:
106:
96:
92:
90:
85:
83:
73:
71:
67:
56:
53:
50:
49:
48:
44:
37:
32:
28:God of sharks
25:
20:
235:. Retrieved
233:. 2021-08-06
230:
221:
210:. Retrieved
206:
197:
186:. Retrieved
176:
165:. Retrieved
161:
152:
141:. Retrieved
137:
102:
93:
86:
79:
65:
64:
89:Umi-a-Liloa
82:Kāmohoaliʻi
52:Kāmohoaliʻi
252:Categories
237:2023-11-17
212:2023-11-18
188:2023-11-18
167:2023-11-17
143:2023-11-17
115:References
105:King Shark
263:Fish gods
109:DC Comics
76:Mythology
54:(father)
46:Parents
66:Nanaue
22:Nanaue
254::
229:.
205:.
160:.
136:.
123:^
111:.
240:.
215:.
191:.
170:.
146:.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.