In May 1819, King Kamehameha I died, leaving the throne to his son
Kamehameha II. In August that year, the French corvette
Uranie under Captain
Louis de Freycinet visited the Hawaiian Islands during its circumnavigation expedition. When the
Uranie landed on
Kawaihae, on the island of Hawaii, Likelike accompanied Kalanimoku to his meeting and feast with the explorer. Because of the
ʻai kapu (
taboo) which prohibited men and women from eating meals together, Likelike was not allowed to dine at the same table with Kalanimoku and the captain, as well as others. She remained on deck eating scraps brought up to her, but after her husband finished and left the table, she took his place at the table with the rest of the diners. Freycinet observed she "made up for the temporary restraint that had been forced upon her by swallowing several glassfuls of brandy one after the other with remarkable gusto". On August 14, Kalanimoku was baptized in the
Roman Catholic faith by ship chaplain
Abbé de Quélen while anchored off of
Lāhainā,
Maui, then the capital of Hawaii. It is not noted if Likelike was on board during the ceremony.
J. Alphonse Pellion, an artist aboard the
Uranie, made several engraving sketches of the Hawaiians who visited the ship, including one of Likelike titled
Rikériki, femme du chef Kraïmokou (above). He sketched two other chiefesses: Queen
Kamāmalu (
Kamahamarou), the favorite wife of Kamehameha II, and Keōuawahine (
Kéohoua), the wife of
Kuakini, Governor of the island of Hawaii. Some of his sketches also depicted traditional signs of mourning such as head shaving and body marking for the recently deceased king. Freycinet's wife
Rose de Freycinet, who accompanied him on the expedition, gave a brief description of Likelike after meeting her: "This woman is quite young and has a rather pleasant face; she is less corpulent than the other women I have encountered, and the scantiness of her clothing is less shocking." cloth with her husband standing over her After the arrival of the
American Protestant missionaries in 1820, Kalanimoku allowed Reverend
Elisha Loomis to set up a
mission school in Kawaihae on the island of Hawaii where Likelike became a student of the new faith. Loomis's wife Maria Loomis recounted how the chiefess professed her love of the
palapala (Bible). Under the reign of the new King Kamehameha II, the court had moved away from his father's former seat of
Kailua-Kona, Hawaii Island at the end of 1820 and passed by Lāhainā before transitioning to
Honolulu, on the island of Oahu in the early part of 1821. Leaving Kawaihae, Likelike and Kalanimoku also moved along with the rest of the royal court although the couple would precede the king to Oahu due to Likelike’s pregnancy. According to Loomis, Likelike was reportedly looking forward to continue her missionary education at the mission in Honolulu where Hiram Bingham preached. With much fanfare and cannon fire, the king arrived aboard his new royal yacht
Haʻaheo o Hawaiʻi into the port of Honolulu, on February 3, 1821. == Death and funeral ==