- Kahungunu. The twin sons of his
nephew Kahutapere seemed to
threaten this plan, so they were murdered.
Kahutapere defeated Rakei-hikuroa at the
Battle of...
- chief) of Ngāti
Kahungunu led to a
conflict with his brother-in-law,
Kahutapere, who
expelled him from the
Gisborne region,
beginning a long-lasting conflict...
- the area. To
achieve that, he or Tūpurupuru
murdered the twin sons of
Kahutapere,
another cousin of Māhaki. Māhaki came to the aid of the latter, with...
-
cousin Kahutapere (son of Tamatea-kota and
grandson of Kahungunu), and
later Tautuhika. Tara-ki-uta and Tara-ki-tai (twin sons of
Kahutapere, murdered...
- Rākei-hikuroa or his son Tūpurupuru
killed the twin sons of
Kahutapere and were
defeated by
Kahutapere and Te Mahaki-a-tauhei at the
Battle of Te
Paepae o Rarotonga...
- Therefore, when
Kahutapere II grew old, he
married his
granddaughters Te Uira and Te Atawhāki to Te Hikawera.
After the marriage,
Kahutapere sent Te Hikawera...
-
Gisborne as far as the Te Ārai River. When Rākei-hikuroa was
defeated by
Kahutapere and Te Māhaki-a-tauhei, he
decided that he had to
leave the
region and...
- his pā at Pāwerawera at
Waikohu (north of
modern Gisborne). He
aided Kahutapere in his war
against Tūpurupuru and Rākei-hikuroa. Later, he
aided Tu-te-kohi...
- Tamatea-kota (son), who
married Rongo-kauae,
daughter of Rongo-whakaata:
Kahutapere,
whose twin sons
Tarakiuta and
Tarakitai were
murdered by Rākei-hikuroa...