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… and Te Urewera (to around 1920) after the abolition of the Pākehā provinces was a transitional phase. It was the …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Colonial and provincial government
… people are buried in the cemetery, including the Pākehā soldier Captain Gilbert Mair. The Kotahitanga (Māori …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Volcanic Plateau places
… (treasures), imbued with the spirits of ancestors. However, Pākehā viewed them as colourful relics of a bygone age, and …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: New Zealand culture overseas
… the ‘woman-church’ movement, its members were predominantly Pākehā, middle-class and well-educated. Small groups of …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Women’s movement
… attacked the settlement at Mōhaka, killing several Pākehā and many Māori. Balfour was fortuitously absent, but …
Type: Biography
… Balzac, and puts it in a New Zealand context. Macalister, a Pākehā artist who had trained under Francis Shurrock, won …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Sculpture and installation art
… different groups, including urban-based Māori and their Pākehā supporters. The return of tribal land formed a …
Type: Story Page
… petroleum industry dates back to the first decades of Pākehā settlement. Since 1865 attempts have been made to tap …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Taranaki region
… Pork and potatoes When Pākehā settlers arrived in New Zealand, Māori quickly …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Māori foods – kai Māori
… on the Manawatū River estuary. After the 1855 earthquake Pākehā settlers abandoned Paiaka, upriver, and moved to …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Manawatū and Horowhenua places
… violent times. As a trader he was a link between Maori and Pakeha. Leading Maori often exchanged a daughter and a piece …
Type: Biography
… and introduced potatoes in the late 1700s. In the 1800s Pākehā settlers arrived in New Zealand, bringing with them …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Acclimatisation
… Church and its Protestant rivals, which they now viewed as Pākehā institutions. Pompallier left New Zealand in 1868, a …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Catholic Church
… 3 The war also saw a full acceptance by both Māori and Pākehā of their joint identity as New Zealanders. This time …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: The New Zealanders
… as a site for a Church of England school for both Māori and Pākehā children. He banned alcohol from his jurisdiction, …
Type: Biography
… earth), by the mid-19th century it was being used by Pākehā writers referring to mudstone, and in 1905 it was …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Rock and mineral names
… Brett Graham’s sculpture draws on a diversity of Māori, Pākehā and wider Pacific (including Japanese) sources, using …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Sculpture and installation art
… have been a dominant theme for New Zealand painters. Early Pākehā artists often depicted mountain landscapes, and 30 of …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Mountains
… god named Io in New Zealand was a surprise to Maori and Pakeha alike.’ 1 Other supernatural beings Supernatural …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Traditional Māori religion – ngā karakia a te Māori
… hill above. Moeraki was the district’s first port, and a Pākehā township developed along the road and branch rail …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Otago places