Book

The nobility and the chiefly tradition in the modern Kingdom of Tonga

The Polynesian Society (42) • Published In 1978 • Pages: 166

By: Marcus, George E..

Abstract
This is a study of the adjustment of Tonga chiefs to modern society. In the traditional Tonga chiefdom, parallel lines of authority and rank passed through male and female lines, respectively. Chiefs controlled land and labor as titled heads of territorial-based bilateral kindreds (KAINGA). In 1875, under Western influence, a constitutional parliamentary monarchy was established to centralize power and control chiefly privilege, although not eradicate it altogether. Twenty chiefly titles with landholding rights and political representation in parliament were retained. Marcus examines the plight of these titleholders in a modernizing society and their status in regard to the old disenfranchised aristocracy and a newly emerging elite of commoners. In what he calls a compromise culture, he shows how chiefly privilege, or what's left of it, is negotiated in a value system that still partly adheres to a sacred honor ('EIKI) but also cleverness (POTO).
Subjects
Real property
Status, role, and prestige
Kindreds and ramages
Government regulation
Chief executive
Religious denominations
Education system
culture
Tongans
HRAF PubDate
2006
Region
Oceania
Sub Region
Polynesia
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard; 2004
Field Date
1972-1975
Coverage Date
1875-1975
Coverage Place
Tonga
Notes
by George E. Marcus
Includes bibliographical references (p. 163-166)
LCSH
Tongans