Original settlers Between 200 and 600 AD, the first settlers arrived in Kaua‘i from the
Marquesas Islands. It is not clear why the voyagers sought a new homeland. They brought
taro, sweet potato, pigs, fowl, and seeds. They were experienced farmers and fishermen, with advanced irrigation techniques that allowed them to thrive on the land. Around 1000 AD,
Tahitian explorers arrived in Hawai‘i and conquered the Marquesans. According to Hawaiian legend, the small-in-stature Marquesans were chased into the hills by the Tahitians and became the "Menehune", thought to be responsible for bad luck. The Tahitians brought with them a social and political hierarchy with distinct rules and taboos, also called "kapu". It was forbidden for women and men to eat together, for women to eat pork or bananas, and for anyone to step on the shadow of a royal. This kapu system, with kings (ali‘i), thrived and ruled for hundreds of years before Western explorers first made contact in the Islands.
First Western contact stands in Waimea, Kauai commemorating his first contact with the Hawaiian islands at the town's harbor in January 1778. On January 20, 1778, the British explorer
James Cook and his ships, HMS
Discovery and
Resolution, arrived at the mouth of the
Waimea River on the western side of
Kauaʻi. Originally, Cook sent three small craft to Waimea so that his men could determine whether the ships could dock there. They found a freshwater lagoon alongside a native village, so Cook and his men anchored their ships and went ashore on smaller craft. Cook's mission is thought to be one of scientific and social exploration. His men documented the flora and fauna of the Waimea area and tried to translate the language of the natives. Cook's first contact with the islands was friendly and is responsible for a vast resource of information about the flora, fauna, and culture of Hawai‘i, but it also marks the beginning of the period of colonization of Hawai‘i and its people. The arrival of Europeans also introduced
venereal disease and
tuberculosis, which decimated the native Hawaiian population. == Economy ==