Skip to main content

Story: Te Tau Ihu tribes

Te Rauparaha’s moko

Image
Te Rauparaha’s moko

By the early 1830s an alliance of Tainui and Taranaki tribes, led by Te Rauparaha, had conquered the northern part of the South Island. They were responding to attacks from South Island relatives of people who had lost lands in the Wellington region when Te Rauparaha invaded in the 1820s. This image of Te Rauparaha’s facial moko (tattoo) was on the deed of sale with which a whaler, Captain John Blenkinsopp, tried to defraud the Ngāti Toa chief of his Wairau lands in 1832.

Using this item

Archives New Zealand - Te Rua Mahara o te Kāwanatanga

Reference: NZC 133, 24 (1)

Permission of Archives New Zealand Te Rua Mahara o te Kāwanatanga must be obtained before any re-use of this material.

All images & media in this story

How to cite this page

Hilary Mitchell and John Mitchell, Te Tau Ihu tribes – Coming of the Pākehā, Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, https://teara.govt.nz/en/document/3753/te-rauparahas-moko (accessed 25 June 2026).

Story by Hilary Mitchell and John Mitchell, published 4 March 2009, updated 1 March 2017.