What is Te Ati Awa Waka?
Te Ātiawa is sometimes referred to as the Awa tribes or Ngātiawa. Te Ātiawa connects with the three hapū, Te Kahui Tu, Te Kahui Rangi and Te Kahui Tawake. These hapū originated from the ancestor Rua Taranaki, the first man to climb Maunga Taranaki.
What is Awa of Wellington?
Te Āti Awa of Wellington today It represents the descendants of Te Āti Awa and other Taranaki people who lived in the Wellington area before European settlement. The trust administers the lands given to Māori in the purchase of Wellington.
Where is Te Ati Awa?
Taranaki
The traditional lands of Te Āti Awa of Taranaki stretch from the coast north of New Plymouth, to Mt Taranaki (Mt Egmont), and to the Matemateaonga ranges in the south.
What happened at Parihaka?
5 November 1881 About 1600 troops invaded the western Taranaki settlement of Parihaka, which had come to symbolise peaceful resistance to the confiscation of Māori land. Founded in the mid-1860s, Parihaka was soon attracting dispossessed and disillusioned Māori from around the country.
When did Tokomaru Waka Land?
There can be no question that the Morioris left New Zealand long prior to the date of arrival of the “Tokomaru” canoe in about 1350.
What happened to the Māori after the treaty was signed?
What happened after the Treaty was signed? Shortly after the Treaty was signed, Lieutenant-Governor William Hobson proclaimed British sovereignty over the whole of New Zealand. Under British law, New Zealand became technically a part of the colony of New South Wales.
When did the government Apologise for Parihaka?
The Parihaka Reconciliation Bill was passed in 2017 and included the Crown apology for the invasion of Parihaka by government troops in 1881. “This day cannot go past without again acknowledging the harm that was caused by the Crown before, during and after the invasion of Parihaka .
What were the names of the 7 waka?
The seven waka that arrived to Aotearoa were called Tainui, Te Arawa, Mātaatua, Kurahaupō, Tokomaru, Aotea and Tākitimu.
Who was Hoturoa?
High priest and commander of Tainui canoe. Hoturoa was born in Hawaiki, the son of Auauterangi and Kuotepo, and was distantly related to Tama te Kapua. According to Maori tradition Hoturoa was middle aged when he made the voyage to New Zealand.
What is Article 4 of the Treaty of Waitangi?
It is this promise that in recent decades has been called by some the fourth article of the treaty; a commitment to religious freedom made at the birth of the new nation.
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When did the Te Atiawa settle in Taranaki?
Te Ātiawa settlement of Te Tau Ihu was a gradual process. Land was first settled in 1832, and by 1840 Te Ātiawa occupied land from Totaranui (Queen Charlotte Sound) to Mohua (Golden Bay). Many Te Ātiawa returned to Taranaki in 1848 and subsequent heke occurred after the mid 1850s.
Where does the name Te Atiawa come from?
Te Ātiawa Manawhenua Ki Te Tau Ihu Trust recognises that the Tūpuna of all its Beneficiaries at one time came under the name of Ngāti Awa. Through the years the name of Ngāti Awa has evolved to where many of the descendants of these Tūpuna now go by the tribal name of Te Ātiawa.
Who is the mother of Awanuiarangi Te Atiawa?
One of Toi’s son’s, Ruarangi, married a woman named Rongoueroa. Rongoueroa was the mother of Awanuiarangi, the eponymous ancestor of Te Ātiawa.