- Te
Pūoho-o-te-rangi (died 1836 or 1837), also
known as Te
Pūoho-ki-te-rangi, was a
notable New
Zealand tribal leader. A Māori, he
identified with the Ngāti...
-
ended by
attacks by
North Island tribes. In 1836, the Ngāti Tama
chief Te
Pūoho led a 100-person war party,
armed with muskets, down the West
Coast and...
-
major incursion into Kāi Tahu territory. In 1836, the Ngāti Tama
chief Te
Pūoho led a 100-person war party,
armed with muskets, down the West
Coast and...
- In the last
years of the
Musket Wars, in 1836 the Ngāti Tama
chief Te
Pūoho led a 100-person taua (war party),
armed with muskets, down the West Coast...
-
ended by
attacks by
North Island tribes. In 1836, the Ngāti Tama
chief Te
Pūoho led a 100-person war party,
armed with muskets, down the West
Coast and...
-
ended by
attacks by
North Island tribes. In 1836, the Ngāti Tama
chief Te
Pūoho led a 100-person war party,
armed with muskets, down the West
Coast and...
-
between forces of Ngāi Tahu
leader Tūhawaiki and
those of Ngāti Tama
chief Te
Puoho, who had
followed a
route from
Golden Bay down the West
Coast and across...
-
notorious for its use in 1835 by a war
party led by Te
Pūoho-o-te-rangi; a
surprise crossing enabled Te
Pūoho to
ambush seasonal villages in the
Makarora valley...
- 1810 or as late as 1820. He is said to have
fired the shot that
killed Te
Pūoho-o-te-rangi, who had come to
Southland to
fight Ngāi Tahu. Anderson, Atholl...
- shaken.
Prayers were said. Then, "If the evil
spirit suddenly appears (
puoho) and
possesses the patient, then he or she can be
immediately saved by the...