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… (chiefs) and their families. The company’s plan for Pākehā colonists was that the wealthy would purchase land …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Tūranga i te hapori – status in Māori society
… Although some were inspired by Māori subjects, the first Pākehā sculptors followed their own, largely British, …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Sculpture and installation art
… where Māori were more accustomed to interaction with Pākehā. Māori who sold land to the government usually did so …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Te tango whenua – Māori land alienation
… play. The sport of racing waka appealed to both Māori and Pākēha. A regatta organised by Whanganui settlers on 27 …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Canoeing and rafting
… other fruit and vegetables, were also grown for trade with Pākehā. Sheep breeds From the 1840s, most sheep on New …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Agricultural and horticultural research
… service, and is one of the first recorded organisations of Pākeha women. In later years Elizabeth George again …
Type: Biography
… on as important sources of food. In Wairarapa in the 1890s, Pākehā sought to open the spit across the mouth of Lake …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Ngā rōpū tautohetohe – Māori protest movements
… However, later there were clashes over the way Māori and Pākehā viewed hunting. Māori saw birds as part of their food …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Te tāhere manu – bird catching
… land and resources, and greater opportunity to trade with Pākehā for guns. Leaving Kāwhia It was not easy to move, as …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Ngāti Toarangatira
… down. However, about 20 of the troopers were Māori with Pākehā names, and in New Zealand Māori were active in …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: South African War
… for cutting timber or building wharves and jetties. Some Pākehā settlers, whalers and businessmen married to Māori …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Te tango whenua – Māori land alienation
… study of land loss or alienation and other forms of Pākehā–Māori interaction since 1840. It is likely that no …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Waitangi Tribunal – Te Rōpū Whakamana
… to argue their claims to lands before the courts, and Pākehā judges tried to interpret Māori custom. Judges often …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Take whenua – Māori land tenure
… on the flat land adjacent to the coast, while many retired Pākehā live in the streets above. Settlement The Te Arawa …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Bay of Plenty places
… ‘Māori studies focuses on studying Māori society from a Pākehā perspective, while mātauranga Māori is about studying …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Māori Studies – ngā tari Māori
… acres (930,000 hectares) of Māori land were purchased for Pākehā settlers. In 1892 John McKenzie, the minister of …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Sheep farming
… departments of sociology in the 1960s, the structures of Pākehā society were subjected to unprecedented scrutiny. …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Intellectuals
… as a token of unity and lasting peace between Māori and Pākehā. Maihi's account of these events, Ko te pukapuka o te … was that the people should be educated in the ways of the Pākehā. Maihi responded by opening a school in his meeting … Despite such experiences, he strove to live in harmony with Pākehā and to understand the new laws to which he and his …
Type: Biography
… across the first century of contact between Māori and Pākehā. When he died in 1872, estimates of his age varied … was further turmoil in 1854 over the delay in convicting a Pākehā accused of murdering a Maori. It seems that the … Stream and attack Waikato, for this would put the Pākehā in the wrong. The capital was shifted to Wellington …
Type: Biography
… that he understood that the book would only be read by Pākehā, and wrote in October 1856 that if any Māori should … protested: 'what are these four to do among so many Pākehās; where will their voices be as compared with the …
Type: Biography