- The pouākai (also
spelled poukai) is a
monstrous bird in Māori mythology. In some of
these legends, the Pouākai
kills and eats humans. The myth may refer...
- are 29
Poukai every year and King Tūheitia
attended each one.
Poukai are a
critical event in the Kīngitanga calendar. A
unique element of
Poukai is their...
-
Maungatautari and Maungakawa. Tāwhiao also
instituted a
system of
annual poukais—visits by the King to Kīngitanga marae,
which he
devised as a
means of...
- The
title of her 1995 master's
thesis was Te
poukai o Waahi : an
historical background to the
Waahi poukai. She also
worked at the
university as a researcher/archivist...
-
secondary marae, Pōhara, on the
south side of the mountain, is the host of a
poukai, one of the
annual **** of the Kīngitanga. List of Māori iwi "Ngāti Korokī...
- to
cater for the
large numbers that
visit for
occasions such as
annual poukai,
tangi and ****. The
marae is
affiliated to
Waikato through the hapū of Ngāti...
- England) Hræsvelgr – jötunn who
takes the form of an
eagle (Norse mythology)
Poukai (Māori) –
monstrous predatory bird,
likely based on an
extinct species Shahbaz...
- Whakakitenga, the
bicameral legislature of
Waikato Tainui, and the
annual Poukai conference, as well as the
initial Kīngitanga Bank,
which collapsed, and...
-
Saxum Odile, the
Black Swan from Swan Lake 42.74°S 294.08°E
Pouakai Saxum Poukai,
monstrous bird from
Maori mythology 40.45°S 166.75°E Roc
Saxum Roc, giant...
- Ngā Wai Hono i te Pō is now the monarch.
Historic traditions such as the
poukai (annual
visits by the
monarch to marae) and the
koroneihana (coronation...