In Hawaiian mythology, Nuakea is a beneficent goddess of milk and lactation. [1]
This name was also a title for a wet nurse of royal prince, according to David Malo. [2]
Nuakea was appealed to staunch the flow of milk in the mother's breasts.
There was a chiefess named after the goddess— Nuʻakea, wife of Keʻoloʻewa, chief of Molokai.
Martha Warren Beckwith suggested that Nuʻakea was deified. [3]
According to the myth, Nuʻakea was a goddess who came to Earth and married mortal chief Keʻoloʻewa, but it is known that historical Nuʻakea was born on Oahu.