-
chieftainess Te Atairehia, a
granddaughter of the
founding Te Wai-o-Hua
chief Te
Huakaiwaka and
daughter of Huatau. She was
given land in
Waiuku after helping the...
- were
united as a
single unit by
Huakaiwaka (from
which the name of the tribe, The
Waters of Hua, can be traced).
Huakaiwaka lived and died at Maungawhau...
- the 13th or 14th centuries.
Maungawhau was the prin****l pā
settled by
Huakaiwaka, the
eponymous ancestor of Waiohua, and
remained an
important area for...
-
occupied by
various iwi over time, such as Ngā Oho,
before being occupied by
Huakaiwaka,
which was made up by
various iwi and hapū. In 18th century, the pā site...
- Ngā Oho and Ngā Riki,
joined to form the
Waiohua under the
rangatira Huakaiwaka. The
union lasted for
three generations, and was
centred around the pā...
- Iwi, Ngā Oho and Ngā Riki,
joined to form Waiohua, led by the
rangatira Huakaiwaka. The
union lasted for
three generations, and was
centred around the pā...
- home to the Ngāi
Huatau hapū of Waiohua,
settled by Huatau,
daughter of
Huakaiwaka. The
chief Huarangi was
based at Matukutūruru with his wife
Takawai of...
- century, Ngāti Kahukōkā were led by Te Ata-i-Rehia,
granddaughter of
Huakaiwaka, the
eponymous ancestor of the Waiohua, a
major confederation of iwi of...
- Zealand. Te Ākitai
Waiohua are
descended from Kiwi Tāmaki, the
grandson of
Huakaiwaka,
himself the
ancestor of the
Waiohua iwi, who
lived in Tāmaki (the Auckland...
- the Te Wakatūwhenua and Moekākara waka. The name
refers to the
ancestor Huakaiwaka, who in the 1600s
joined Ngā Oho, Ngā Riki and Ngā Iwi to form a confederation...