PUNYCODEX

The Authentic Orthography

Kānāloa

Ocean, Underworld · Hawaiian god symbolized by the squid or by the octopus, typically associated with Kāne

Tier 1 Kānāloa.com
Kānāloa — Ocean, Underworld
01

The Authentic Name

Unicode restoration and ASCII comparison

Scholarly Transliteration

Kānāloa

The name survives only in scholarly transliteration. Kānāloa is the standard Polynesian romanisation, documented in academic sources — “Hawaiian god symbolized by the squid or by the octopus, typically associated with Kāne”. Its macron-length vowels preserve distinctions lost in plain ASCII.

No indigenous writing system is securely attested for individual polynesian names. The form shown is a modern scholarly transliteration.

ASCII Constraint

kanaloa

Reduced to plain kanaloa, the name loses everything that made it specific: macron-length vowels. What remains is an ASCII string that machines can parse but that no longer speaks with its original voice.

Unicode Restoration

Kānāloa

The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. Kānāloa restores macron-length vowels, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.

Punycode Encoding
Kānāloa.com → xn--knloa-fwab.com

The non-ASCII characters in Kānāloa are encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is Kānāloa.

02

Original Script & Provenance

How Kānāloa is preserved in writing

Kānāloa
Scholarly Transliteration

No indigenous writing system is securely attested for individual polynesian names. The form shown is a modern scholarly transliteration.

Contribute scholarly provenance →
03

Pronunciation

How Kānāloa was spoken

/kaːˈnaːloa/ Hawaiian Reconstruction
K- Voiceless velar stop [k], without aspiration.
-ā- Long open back unrounded vowel [aː], macron marking length.
-na- Alveolar nasal [n] followed by long [aː].
-loa [loa], 'vast' or 'far'; the name evokes the broad ocean.
04

Lord of the Vast Ocean

Sea, Underworld, and Healing

Kānāloa is the Hawaiian god of the deep ocean, the underworld, and healing. He is the companion and sometimes rival of Kāne, the creator; while Kāne governs fresh water and life, Kānāloa rules the salt sea and the mysteries beneath it. He is associated with the octopus, whose arms reach in all directions like ocean currents.

Vast Ocean

The Pacific itself is his body, source of food, travel, and the unknown.

Underworld

He receives the dead into the dark realm beneath land and sea.

Healer

Kānāloa and Kāne together discovered medicinal plants and healing arts.

Octopus Kin

The heʻe (octopus) is his animal, shape-shifting and intelligent.

Sacred Symbols

Octopus (heʻe) The many-armed creature of the deep, Kānāloa's kin or avatar.
Ocean waves The visible movement of his vast body.
Kava plant A plant of ritual and healing associated with him.
Dark depths The mysterious underworld where souls and sea creatures dwell.
05

Mythology

Stories of Kānāloa

Hawaiian myths present Kānāloa as a complementary power to Kāne, the creator. Their partnership structures much of traditional cosmology.

Creation

Kāne and Kānāloa

In Hawaiian cosmogony, Kāne and Kānāloa are paired creator gods. Together they travel across the primordial ocean, striking the earth with their staffs to create springs and bring forth life. Kāne is the fresh water and the sunlight; Kānāloa is the salt sea that surrounds and sustains the islands. Their partnership is not hierarchy but dynamic balance.

Healing

The Discovery of Medicine

Kānāloa fell ill, and no remedy could be found. Kāne prayed and was shown the healing plants of the forest and shore. After Kānāloa was cured, the two gods shared this knowledge with humankind, establishing the practice of lāʻau lapaʻau, traditional Hawaiian herbal medicine. Illness and cure both belong to Kānāloa's watery realm.

Underworld

The Dark Realm

Kānāloa is also the lord of the underworld, the realm beneath the earth and sea where souls journey after death. Unlike the Christian hell, this realm is not primarily punitive; it is the mysterious mirror of the living world, governed by the same god whose waters feed the land above.

Go Deeper

Extended Lore

Kānāloa is the god of what we cannot see from the surface. His realm begins where the light fails and the pressure grows. To think of him is to remember that most of the living world is ocean, and that our small islands of land are exceptions to a watery rule.

Enter Extended Lore
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