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  2. Māori people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Māori_people

    Māori (Māori: [ˈmaːɔɾi] ⓘ) [i] are the indigenous Polynesian people of mainland New Zealand.Māori originated with settlers from East Polynesia, who arrived in New Zealand in several waves of canoe voyages between roughly 1320 and 1350. [13]

  3. Pre-Māori settlement of New Zealand theories - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pre-Māori_settlement_of...

    The mainstream view of the Polynesian settlement of New Zealand and the Chatham Islands as representing the end-point of a long chain of island-hopping voyages in the South Pacific. Since the early 1900s it has been accepted by archaeologists and anthropologists that Polynesians (who became the Māori ) were the first ethnic group to settle in ...

  4. Māori history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Māori_history

    The Māori settlement of New Zealand represents an end-point of a long chain of island-hopping voyages in the South Pacific.. Evidence from genetics, archaeology, linguistics, and physical anthropology indicates that the ancestry of Polynesian people stretches all the way back to indigenous peoples of Taiwan.

  5. History of New Zealand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_New_Zealand

    New Zealand was first settled by Polynesians from Eastern Polynesia. Linguistic and archaeological evidence suggests that humans emigrated from Taiwan via southeast Asia to Melanesia and then radiated eastwards into the Pacific in pulses and waves of discovery which gradually colonised islands from Samoa and Tonga all the way to Hawaii, the ...

  6. Polynesians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polynesians

    New Zealand had the highest population of Polynesians, estimated at 110,000 in the 18th century. [ 10 ] Polynesians have acquired a reputation as great navigators, with their canoes reaching the most remote corners of the Pacific and allowing the settlement of islands as far apart as Hawaii, Rapanui (Easter Island), and Aotearoa (New Zealand ...

  7. Māori culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Māori_culture

    Māori cultural history intertwines inextricably with the culture of Polynesia as a whole. The New Zealand archipelago forms the southwestern corner of the Polynesian Triangle, a major part of the Pacific Ocean with three island groups at its corners: the Hawaiian Islands, Rapa Nui (Easter Island), and New Zealand (Aotearoa in te reo Māori). [10]

  8. Demographics of New Zealand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_New_Zealand

    East Polynesians were the first people to reach New Zealand about 1280, followed by the early European explorers, notably James Cook in 1769 who explored New Zealand three times and mapped the coastline. Following the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840 when the country became a British colony, immigrants were predominantly from Britain, Ireland and ...

  9. Moriori - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moriori

    Moriori are Polynesians who came from the New Zealand mainland around 1500 CE, [4] [5] which was close to the time of the shift from the archaic to the classic period of Polynesian Māori culture on the mainland. [6] [7] Oral tradition records migration to the Chathams in the 16th century.