enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Nafanua - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nafanua

    In Samoa, the village of Falealupo on the western side of Savaiʻi is the home of Nafanua. [4] Falealupo is also the site of the entryway into the spirit world Pulotu . [ 5 ] : 123 Often chiefs from distant villages and islands would come to Falealupo to seek Nafanua's blessings before beginning any military adventure.

  3. Samoans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samoans

    Samoans or Samoan people (Samoan: tagata Sāmoa) are the Indigenous Polynesian people of the Samoan Islands, an archipelago in Polynesia, who speak the Samoan language.The group's home islands are politically and geographically divided between the Independent State of Samoa and American Samoa, an unincorporated territory of the United States of America.

  4. Samoan proverbs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samoan_proverbs

    The proverbs were collected and authored by Rev George Pratt, an English missionary from the London Missionary Society who lived in Samoa for 40 years, mostly in Matautu on the central north coast of Savai'i Island. [2] Following is a list of proverbs in the Samoan language and their meanings in the English language. Ia lafoia i le fogavaʻa tele.

  5. History of Samoa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Samoa

    Chromograph map of Samoa - George Cram 1896. The Samoan Islands were first settled some 3,500 years ago as part of the Austronesian expansion.Both Samoa's early history and its more recent history are strongly connected to the histories of Tonga and Fiji, nearby islands with which Samoa has long had genealogical links as well as shared cultural traditions.

  6. Samoan mythology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samoan_mythology

    Samoan culture tells stories of many different deities. There were deities of the forest, the seas, rain, harvest, villages, and war. [1] There were two types of deities, atua, who had non-human origins, and aitu, who were of human origin. Tagaloa was a supreme god who made the islands and the people. Mafuiʻe was the god of earthquakes. [2]

  7. Faʻa Sāmoa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faʻa_Sāmoa

    Faʻa Sāmoa consists of the Samoan language, customs of relationships, and culture, that constitute the traditional and continuing Polynesian lifestyle on Samoa and in the Samoan diaspora. It embraces an all-encompassing system of behavior and of responsibilities that spells out all Samoans' relationships to one another and to persons holding ...

  8. Tui Manu'a - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tui_Manu'a

    According to Samoan oral histories, the first Tui Manu'a was a direct descendant of the Samoan supreme god, Tagaloa. In Samoan lore, the islands of Manu'a (Ofu, Olosega, and Ta'u) are always the first lands to be created or drawn from the sea; consequently the Tui Manu'a is the first human ruler mentioned. This "senior" ranking of the Tui Manu ...

  9. Sina and the Eel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sina_and_the_Eel

    The word sina also means 'white' or silver haired (grey haired in age) in the Samoan language. There is also an old Samoan song called Soufuna Sina based on a Sina legend. [5] Coconut shell showing the 'two eyes and mouth' of the eel. Local child taking a drink of water from the Mata o le Alelo pool in Matavai village, Safune village district ...