-
Olifant (also
known as oliphant) was the name
applied in the
Middle Ages to a type of
carved ivory hunting horn
created from
elephant tusks.
Olifants were...
-
local Paparāmu
Marae and Te
Apunga meeting house are
affiliated with the Ngāti
Raukawa hapū of Ngāti Mōtai and Ngāti Te
Apunga.
Statistics New
Zealand describes...
- Ngāti
Raukawa is a Māori iwi with
traditional bases in the Waikato, Taupō and Manawatu/Horowhenua
regions of New Zealand. In 2006, 29,418 Māori registered...
- Te
Apunga-o-Tainui /
McLennan Hills,
Painting by G.H. Cooper, 1861,
Auckland Art Gallery...
-
Waharoa Rengarenga Marae No
wharenui Ngāti
Raukawa (Ngāti Mōtai, Ngāti Te
Apunga) Te Poi
Rukumoana / The Top Pā
Werewere Waikato Tainui, Ngāti Hauā (Ngāti...
- (Ngati Te Kohera),
Ongaroto marae (Ngati Whaita),
Paparamu marae (Ngati Te
Apunga), Te
Ruapeka marae (Ngati Tukorehe),
among others South Waikato District...
- the
hands of Tama-te-rangi and Rakaipaaka. He had one
younger brother, Te
Apunga,
whose daughter, Tauapare,
later married Te Whatuiāpiti’s son Te Hikawera...
- two sons
Hikawera Te Whatuiāpiti,
ancestor of Ngāti Te Whatuiāpiti. Te
Apunga Tauapare, who
married Te Whatuiāpiti's son Te
Hikawera (II). Te Matoe, father...
- (which
became Napier)
Hikawera later married Tauapare, the
daughter of Te
Apunga (a
younger brother of his
paternal grandfather), and had two daughters:...
-
Raukawa hapū.
Rengarenga Marae is
affiliated with Ngāti Mōtai and Ngāti Te
Apunga. Te
Omeka Marae and
Tiriki Teihaua meeting house are
affiliated with Ngāti...