Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Part of Te Kooti's War: Mohaka massacre: 10 April 1869: Mohaka, Hawke's Bay: 68: Part of Te Kooti's War: Pukearuhe massacre 13 February 1869: Pukearuhe, Taranaki: 8: Attack on Pukearuhe Redoubt by a Ngāti Maniapoto war party Ngatapa massacre: 5 January 1869: Ngatapa, Gisborne: 120: Part of Te Kooti's War: Poverty Bay massacre: 10 November 1868 ...
A total of 85 people were executed under New Zealand's capital punishment system while it was in force. An additional five New Zealand soldiers were executed under military regulations in France during World War I, though they subsequently received posthumous pardons under the Pardon for Soldiers of the Great War Act 2000. [1]
Pages in category "New Zealand war crimes" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. F.
This category lists individual people who were murdered, raped, tortured, or otherwise victimized by wartime atrocities, but do not list articles about war crime incidents that are not specifically focused on the victims themselves.
STORY: Photographs and memories are what Kateryna Shelipova has left to remember her husband of 36 years.62-year-old Oleksandr Shelipov was shot dead on February 28 in Chupakhivka, located in ...
It has come to be seen by historians as a major and consequential miscarriage of justice by the Government of New Zealand during the New Zealand Wars. The event led to the arrest and execution of several major chieftains, and the confiscation of 85,000 acres of Māori land.
The Moriori genocide was the mass murder, enslavement, and cannibalism [1] of the Moriori people, the indigenous ethnic group of the Chatham Islands, by members of the mainland Māori New Zealand iwi Ngāti Mutunga and Ngāti Tama from 1835 to 1863. The invaders murdered around 300 Moriori and enslaved the remaining population. [2]
The Boyd massacre occurred in December 1809 when Māori of Ngāti Pou from Whangaroa Harbour in northern New Zealand killed and ate between 66 and 70 European crew members from the British brigantine ship Boyd. [1] This was the highest number of Europeans killed by Māori in a single event in New Zealand.