-
Penetana Papahurihia (died 1875), also
called Te Atua Wera ("the
fiery God"), was a Māori tohunga, war
leader and prophet. He
belonged to Ngā Puhi, by...
- and non-traditional Māori philosophies.
These include: Nākahi cult of
Papahurihia, 1830s Pai Mārire ("Hauhau"), 1863 Ringatū, 1868
Church of the Seven...
-
Hauraki (died 1839),
rangatira of
Ngapuhi based at Te
Mahia Penetana Papahurihia (Te Atua Wera; died 1875),
tohunga of
Ngapuhi Ngāti Te Wera, a hapū of...
- of
Waitangi to
Tainui in 1840. In the 1830s Te Atua Wera
started the
Papahurihia Faith in
opposition to the missionaries. It
mixed Christian,
Judaic and...
- 20: 117. 1870.
Retrieved 1
December 2013. Binney, Judith. "Penetana
Papahurihia".
Dictionary of New
Zealand Biography.
Ministry for
Culture and Heritage...
- "place of Manaia" for Ōmanaia. In the 1830s, the
Omanaia Maori chief Papahurihia led a
nationalist movement to
oppose the
spread of
Christianity through...
-
themselves through the
syncretic Te
Nakahi movement,
whose leaders such as
Papahurihia,
later known as Te Atua Wera or Wero,
claimed descent from Moses. First...
-
completed Atua Wera, a long poem of
almost 300
parts largely about Penetana Papahurihia (also
known as Te Atua Wera), an
early 19th-century Ngā Puhi religious...
- three-cornered hat to help
explain the Holy Trinity. The
Maori leader Papahurihia and his
followers were
sympathetic to the
French Catholics and saw them...
- 20: 115. 1870.
Retrieved 1
December 2013. Binney, Judith. "Penetana
Papahurihia".
Dictionary of New
Zealand Biography.
Ministry for
Culture and Heritage...