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Te Huehue Marae: Te Huehue: Ngāpuhi (Ngāi Tāwake ki te Waoku) Otaua: Te Hungāiti: No wharenui: Ngāpuhi (Ngāti Moerewa, Ngāti Rangi) Tautoro: Te Hūruhi: Ngāti Māhia: Ngāpuhi (Ngāti Hine, Ngāti Māhia) Awarua: Te Iringa / Parihaka: Parihaka: Ngāpuhi (Ngāti Hinemutu, Ngāti Tautahi) Kaikohe: Te Kauhanga: Te Poho o Ngāti Kahu ...
Tara Te Irirangi was the paramount chief during the early years of Pākehā settlement in the Tāmaki region, and also during the Musket Wars of the 1820s. One notable incident involving Te Irirangi occurred in 1821 during the Musket Wars, when a Ngāpuhi detachment led by Patuone, a Ngāti Hao chief, arrived in Maraetai with the intention of attacking Ngāi Tai.
Te Kiore Marae and Te Kiore meeting house are affiliated with Ngāti Whakaminenga. Te Iringa or Parihaka Marae and its Parihaka meeting house are affiliated with Ngāti Hinemutu and Ngāti Tautahi. Ōkorihi Marae is affiliated with Ngāti Hinemutu, Ngāti Tautahi and Ngāti Ueoneone; its meeting house burned down in 2003. [19] [20]
Te Rere Marae and Te Iringa meeting house is a meeting place of the Whakatōhea hapū of Ngāti Ngahere. [13] [14] In October 2020, the Government committed $744,574 to upgrade it and two other marae, creating 30 jobs. [15] Rongopopoia Marae, also known as Te Kahikatea Marae, is a meeting place of the Tūhoe hapū of Upokorehe. [13] [14]
Māori woman with a representation of the Waikato Ancestress "Te Iringa" Whakapapa (Māori pronunciation:, ), or genealogy, is a fundamental principle in Māori culture. Reciting one's whakapapa proclaims one's Māori identity, places oneself in a wider context, and links oneself to land and tribal groupings and their mana. [1]
Te Ihinga-a-rangi was a Māori rangatira (chieftain) of Ngāti Raukawa in the Tainui tribal confederation from the Waikato region, New Zealand and is the ancestor of the Ngāti Hauā and Ngāti Korokī Kahukura iwi and the Te Ihinga-a-rangi hapu of Ngāti Maniapoto. He probably lived in the first half of the seventeenth century.
Te Ata-inutai was the son of Upoko-iti, a descendant of Raukawa and, through him, a direct descendant of Hoturoa, captain of the Tainui canoe. [2] Upoko-iti participated in the Ngāti Raukawa–Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga War alongside his cousin Whaita and brothers Tama-te-hura, Wairangi, and Pipito, in which Ngāti Raukawa conquered the stretch of the Waikato River between Maungatautari and ...
Ōtūwhare Marae: Te Poho o Rūtāia: Te Whānau-ā-Apanui (Te Whānau a Rutaia) Omāio: Pāhāōa Marae: Kahurautao: Te Whānau-ā-Apanui (Te Whānau a Kahurautao) Te Kaha: Te Rere Marae: Te Iringa: Whakatōhea (Ngāti Ngahere) Ōpōtiki: Roimata Marae: Te Ao Marama: Whakatōhea (Te Ūpokorehe) Kutarere: Rongopopoia or Te Kahikatea ...