Ratu Seru Epenisa Cakobau (1815-1883) was King of Fiji from 8 December1852 to 10 October1874, when he ceded his country to Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. He became the Tui Bau (Paramount Chief of Bau) on 8 December1852; as Bau had nominal suzerainty over the remainder of Fiji, he asserted that he was in fact the King of Fiji. Cakobau's claim was not universally accepted, however, and he engaged in constant warfare for almost nineteen years to unify the islands under his authority. He finally succeeded, and in June 1871, he established Levuka as the capital of his united kingdom. He decided to set up a constitutional monarchy, and the first legislative assembly met in November of that year. Both the legislature and the Cabinet were dominated by foreigners.
Once a fierce cannibal, Cakobau renounced cannibalism upon his conversion to Christianity. Partly to pay a debt that he had incurred to the United States, and partly in the hope that the British would bring civilization and Christianity to Fiji, Cakobau decided to cede the islands to the United Kingdom in 1874. He remained Fiji's Paramount Chief, and lived quietly until his death in 1883.
The Cakobau name is an honoured one in Fiji today, as many of the country's leading figures have been direct descendants of Cakobau's. His great-grandson, Ratu Sir George Cakobau, served as Fiji's first native-born Governor-General from 1973 to 1983. Another descendant, Ratu Epeli Nailatikau, is the present Speaker of the Fijian House of Representatives. Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara, modern Fiji's founding father, is also a descendant of Cakobau's, though not through the male line. Fiji's political, academic, and military elites are dotted with high-achieving Cakobau descendants.
Ratu SeruEpenisaCakobau (1815-1883) was a Fijian chief and warlord who united his country's warring tribes under his leadership and reigned as Tui Viti (King of Fiji) from 5 June 1871 to 10 October1874, when he ceded his country to Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom.
However, Cakobau's claim was not accepted by other chiefs, who regarded him as merely the first among equals, if that, and he engaged in constant warfare for almost nineteen years to unify the islands under his authority.
Cakobau, a former cannibal, had himself converted to Christianity and renounced cannibalism in 1854.
A great-grandson of Ratu SeruEpenisaCakobau, the King of Bau who had unified all the tribes of Fiji under his reign in the mid-1800s and subsequently ceded the islands to the United Kingdom in 1874, Ratu Cakobau was Fijis highest-ranking traditional chief.
Ratu Cakobau, was appointed Governor General in 1972, becoming the first indigenous Fijian to serve as the representative of Queen Elizabeth.
Ratu Cakobau was awarded this honour as a sign of the special relationship between Fiji and the British Monarchy, following the visit of Queen Elizabeth II in 1982.