Tuna (Polynesian mythology) explained
In Polynesian mythology, Tuna is a god of eels. In Hawaiian mythology he fights with Māui, who is having an affair with his wife Hina. Māui kills him, cuts off his head, and plants it near his home. A green shoot emerges from the spot where the head was buried, and grows into the first coconut palm.[1] In the mythology of Mangaia Tuna is the lover of Hine, and asks that his head be cut off and planted in order to stop a flood. A coconut shoot grows from the head.[2] [3] A variant of the story is told in the Samoan myth of Sina and the Eel.[4] [5]
See also
Notes and References
- Book: The Lessons of Nature in Mythology . Rachel S. McCoppin . McFarland . 41 . 2015.
- Book: Flood . Bo . Strong . Beret E. . Flood . William . Adams . Connie J. . Pacific Island legends : tales from Micronesia, Melanesia, Polynesia, and Australia . 1999 . Honolulu, Hawaiʻi : Bess Press . 978-1-57306-084-4 . 182–185 .
- Alpers, Anthony. Legends of the South Sea. London: John Murray, 1970.
- Web site: The Legend Of Sina and The Eel . Taumeasina Island Resort . 10 August 2021.
- Web site: Sina and the Eel: The Origin of the Coconut . Sheila Lamb . 10 August 2021.