established his dynasty upon unifying the districts of Tahiti to become the
Kingdom of Tahiti. The ancestors of the family ultimately descended from an individual named Tu from the island of
Fakarava in the
Tuamotus who was adopted as heir by Mauaihiti, Ari'i of Pare. Settling in Tahiti, the dynasty became the district chieftains or ari'i rahi of Porionuʻu (including the smaller districts of Pare and Arue) and intermarried with the Tamatoa family from the island of
Raiatea. With foreign weapons, chief Tu gradually took over control of the other parts of the island of
Tahiti, and then brought the islands of
Moorea,
Mehetia, and
Tetiaroa into a single entity. Chief Tu later adopted the name Pōmare. Pō-mare means 'night cougher', a nickname he took, as was common in that time, in honor of his daughter Teriinavahoroa who died from
tuberculosis in 1792. Through subsequent inheritance, adoptions, and marriage alliances, the dynasty at its peak included all the Society Islands with a member of the family ruling in Tahiti,
Raiatea and
Bora Bora. Tahiti also controlled some of the outlying islands of the
Austral Islands and the
Tuamotu Archipelago. Tahiti and its dependencies were made a French
protectorate in 1842, and largely annexed as a colony of France in 1880. The monarchy was abolished by France and Tahiti annexed in 1880. The last reigning monarch of the dynasty was
Teriimaevarua III, Queen of Bora Bora, who abdicated in 1895. There are still
pretenders and many
Tahitians still wish for a return of the monarchy, some of whom claim that the act of abolishing the monarchy was either outright illegal, or outside of certain jurisdictions. == Pōmare Monarchs ==