Before the establishment of the office of
Kuhina Nui by Kamehameha, there was a position called Kālaimoku (
kālai meaning "to carve" and
moku being an island). This was an ancient office from the very dawn of Hawaiian civilization. During this time before the
Kuhina Nui Kalanimoku, a trusted chief of Kamehameha, was the Kālaimoku until Kamehameha established the office of the
Kuhina Nui. When
King Kamehameha II assumed the throne in 1819, his father's favorite wife, Queen
Kaʻahumanu, told him
Kamehameha I had wished for her to rule the kingdom alongside him. Whether this was really the will of Kamehameha I is a matter of debate. In either case, Kamehameha II did not object and the office of
Kuhina Nui was created for Kaʻahumanu. According to other sources, Kamehameha I had wanted Kaʻahumanu to succeed her father
Keʻeaumoku Pāpaʻiahiahi as a chief counselor. Kaʻahumanu became the driving force behind the kingdom’s policy during the reign of Kamehameha II. She and another one of Kamehameha I's wives (and Kamehameha II's mother),
Keōpūolani, pressured Kamehameha II into abolishing the old
kapu system of laws and religion. == Conflict between the Kuhina Nui and the king ==