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Story: Māori newspapers and magazines – ngā niupepa me ngā moheni

Whakapapa in Te Toa Takitini

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Whakapapa in <em>Te Toa Takitini</em>

On 25 February 1927 a carved meeting-house named Uenuku-mai-Rarotonga was opened at Punawhakareia in Te Rotoiti. It had been moved from where it first stood in Maketū. A report on the hui in the newspaper Te Toa Takitiniincluded whakapapa – a common occurrence in Māori newspapers. Often whakapapa were used to link deceased rangatira to the major waka and iwi of New Zealand. In this case it was employed to explain the tribal linkages to the meeting-house.

Using this item

Niupepa: Maori newspapers

Reference: Te Toa Takitini, 1 Aperira (April), 1927, p. 574

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How to cite this page

Jane McRae, Māori newspapers and magazines – ngā niupepa me ngā moheni – Philanthropist and church newspapers, Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, https://teara.govt.nz/en/document/42411/whakapapa-in-te-toa-takitini (accessed 4 June 2026).

Story by Jane McRae, published 26 August 2013.