-
Uruaokapuarangi (also Te Waka a Rangi;
often known simply as Uruao) was one of the
great ocean-going,
voyaging canoes (waka) that was used in the migrations...
- as
arrivals from Te Patunui-o-āio in
Eastern Polynesia aboard the
Uruaokapuarangi canoe (waka), of
which Rākaihautū had been the captain. He was accompanied...
- the
traditions of Ngāi Tahu's
Waitaha descendants, Rākaihautū of the
Uruaokapuarangi was the
first man to set foot in the
South Island by
digging up the...
- Rākaihautū was the
captain of the
Uruaokapuarangi canoe (waka) and a
Polynesian ancestor of
various iwi, most
famously of
Waitaha and
other southern groups...
-
South Island's
earliest iwi, Waitaha,
traces its
ancestors back to the
Uruaokapuarangi,
captained by Rākaihautū who
sailed from Te Patunuioāio to New Zealand...
- the canoe.
Myths portal New
Zealand portal Arahura (canoe) Tākitimu
Uruaokapuarangi In pan-Māori his name is Mangaatua: 179 White, John (1887). "XI"....
- Auckland,
Northland Ngāi Tāhuhu Tūwhenua Bay of
Plenty Bay of
Plenty -
Uruaokapuarangi Boulder Bank,
Clutha River South Island Te Kā**** Waitaha, Te Kā****...
- II. Wellington:
Government Printer. p. 179.
Retrieved 15 June 2020.
Myths portal New
Zealand portal Āraiteuru
Ngahue Tākitimu
Uruaokapuarangi v t e...