-
Āraiteuru (also
written Ārai-te-uru) was a
canoe (waka) of some of Ngāi Tahu's
ancestors in Māori tradition. The
canoe was conve**** to New
Zealand by...
- Niwa or Niua), and
Āraiteuru being two of
these taniwha. Upon Nukutawhiti's
arrival to the Hokianga, he gave
Niniwa and
Āraiteuru each a
strand of seaweed...
-
beside lakes or rivers.
Taniwha can
either be male or female. The
taniwha Āraiteuru is said to have
arrived in New
Zealand with the
early voyaging canoes...
- Region. The name is a
reference to an
ancestral chief who
arrived on the
Āraiteuru migratory waka.
Maungatua features a
diverse range of
plant species. The...
- Tokomaru.
Various traditions name
numerous other canoes. Some,
including the
Āraiteuru, are well known;
others including the
Kirauta and the
sacred Arahura and...
- of eel baskets, calabashes, and kūmara
washed as**** from the
wreck of
Āraiteuru, a
large sailing canoe. This
legend tells of the
rocky shoals that extend...
-
tears turned into
stone upon
hitting the ground. In Māori tradition,
Āraiteuru is the
canoe which brought the
ancestors of the Ngāi Tahu
people of the...
- The
legends of Ngāi Tahu tell of Motuariki, who was an
ancestor of the
Āraiteuru waka that
capsized near Shag
Point on the
Otago coastline.
After the waka...
-
Marae name
Wharenui name Iwi and hapū
Location Āraiteuru Āraiteuru Ngāi Tahu Wakari, Dunedin/Ōtepoti ****rapa /
Puketeraki ****rapa Ngāi Tahu (Kāti ****rapa...
- this belief,
ancestors of Ngāi Tahu
arrived in the area
aboard the waka
Āraiteuru,
which capsized off the
coast near Moeraki. The
remnants of this event...