-
wharenui can
represent the ancestor's head. The
maihi (diagonal bargeboards)
signify arms; the ends of the
maihi are
called raparapa,
meaning "fingers". The...
-
Eruera Maihi Patuone (c. 1764 – 19
September 1872) was a Māori
rangatira (chief), the son of the Ngāti Hao
chief Tapua and his wife Te Kawehau. His exact...
-
Maihi Paraone Kawiti (1807–21 May 1889) was a New
Zealand tribal leader. Of Māori descent, he
identified with the Ngāti Hine hapū of the Ngāpuhi iwi....
- Rangikāheke (ca. 1815-1896), also
known as
Wiremu Maihi (William Marsh) by his
baptismal name or Wī
Maihi Te Rangikāheke was a New
Zealand Māori
tribal leader...
-
Renae Maihi is a New
Zealand film
director and screenwriter. She is best
known for her work on the
films Waru and We Are
Still Here, both of
which premiered...
-
Rehutai Maihi (16
September 1895 – 1967) was a New
Zealand tribal leader, journalist,
newspaper publisher and editor,
political candidate,
community leader...
- with Ngāti Hine and Ngāti Kahu o Torongare.
Kawiti Marae and Te
Tawai Riri
Maihi Kawiti meeting house,
Miria Marae and Te
Rapunga meeting house and Te Kotahitanga...
- Toi Te Rito
Maihi (1937 - 10
December 2022) was a New
Zealand weaver, printmaker, painter,
educator and writer. She
belonged to Ngāti Ipu, Ngāi Te Apata...
- 1858 at the
direction of Kawiti's son
Maihi Paraone Kawiti, as a
signal to
Governor Thomas Gore Browne, that
Maihi did not
follow his father's path. In...
- Cole, Dena Curtis,
Tracey Rigney,
Danielle MacLean, Tim Worrall,
Renae Maihi, Miki Magasiva,
Mario Gaoa,
Richard Curtis and
Chantelle Burgoyne, and span...