-
Kurahaupō was one of the
great ocean-going,
voyaging canoes that was used in the
migrations that
settled New
Zealand in Māori tradition. In
Taranaki tribal...
- made in
legendary canoes, the best
known of
which are Aotea, Te Arawa,
Kurahaupō, Mātaatua, Tainui, Tākitimu, and Tokomaru.
Various traditions name numerous...
-
Islands Unknown 585 942 738 996 Muaūpoko Manawatū-Whanganui,
Wellington Kurahaupō 1,836 2,499 2,694 3,375 Ngā Pōtiki / Ngā Pōtiki ā Tamapa**** Bay of Plenty...
-
whakapapa (ancestry) back to Pōhurihanga, the
captain of the waka (canoe)
Kurahaupō. Kurī, in Māori,
means "dog". The rohe (tribal area) of the iwi is focused...
-
ancestors of Rangitāne Rohe (region) Manawatū, Wairarapa, Horowhenua, Tamaki-nui-a-Rua and
Wairau Waka (canoe)
Kurahaupō Website www.rangitaane.iwi.nz...
- Tūmatakōkiri is a Māori iwi (tribe) of New Zealand, who
arrived on the
Kurahaupō waka. In the 1600s the iwi
settled northwestern South Island, becoming...
-
first Māori to
discover the
gorge was Whātonga, an
explorer from the
Kurahaupō canoe, who
found the
gorge in
about the 12th century.
Europeans began...
- the
first European explorers clashed with Ngāti Tūmatakōkiri (of the
Kurahaupō)
during mid-December 1642, the iwi may have
interpreted the newcomers...
- Tākitimu waka (Māori
migration canoe), and Popoto, the
commander of the
Kurahaupō waka. In Māori tradition,
Rongomaiwahine was
known to have had two husbands:...
-
marae affiliated with Te Uri o Tai, a hapū of Te Rarawa: Mōrehu
Marae and
Kurahaupō meeting house; Ōhākī
Marae and Te
Urunga Moutonu or Maru o te ****a meeting...