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  1. Tauihu-o-te-Waka, Te. 1. (location) northern South Island and the name for the group of tribes living there.

  2. tauihu. 1. (noun) bow, prow, figurehead (of a canoe). Ko te puhi o runga o te waka, arā, o te , ka ingoatia tērā ko Puhi-maroke. Ko te puhi o raro o te o te waka, ka ingoatia tērā ko Puhi-mākū (JPS 1957:221). / The upper plume at the bow was called Puhi-maroke (Dry plume). The lower plume of the bow was called Puhi-mākū (Wet plume).

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    • Tribes
    • Early History
    • European Contact
    • Land Loss
    • The Tribes Today

    There are now eight tribes in Te Tau Ihu (Nelson–Marlborough): 1. Ngāti Kuia, Rangitāne and Ngāti Apa (from the Kurahaupōcanoe) 2. Ngāti Koata, Ngāti Rārua and Ngāti Toa (from the Tainuicanoe) 3. Ngāti Tama and Te Āti Awa (from Taranaki).

    Home to many tribes over the centuries, Te Tau Ihu (the top of the South Island) was rich in minerals such as argillite, prized for weapons and tools. The legend of Kaiwhakaruaki, the man-eating monster, may have kept people from stealing these treasures, and protected important routes to greenstone resources further south. The early tribe Waitaha ...

    Māori encountered Europeans for the very first time in 1642, when the Dutch explorer Abel Tasman arrived at present-day Golden Bay. It ended in bloodshed: the Ngāti Tūmatakōkiri people killed four of his crew members. But when James Cook arrived in the 1770s, relations were mostly friendly – Cook stayed for over six months in Queen Charlotte Sound....

    From 1842 European settlers arrived. At first they got on well with Māori, and trade flourished, but questionable purchases of land caused trouble. Māori continued to lose ownership of their land for over 100 years, and tribal ways of life suffered.

    The Wakatū Incorporation was established in 1977. It has regained lands and started fishing, forestry and other ventures. They run many community projects, including maraerestoration and health centres. In 2013, more than 8,800 people claimed affiliation with the Te Tau Ihu tribes.

  4. Jan 24, 2020 · The Tauihu is a physical representation of the whakapapa recorded by our ancestors during the nineteenth-century. Our female tupuna, Hinepango, Ruamate, and Hinerewha are all present. Another important tupuna depicted in the Tauihu is Te Heiwi. Like T ūkauā e, she is a unifying figure, bringing together the multitudes of Rangit ā ne whanau.

  5. There are eight iwi which are tangata whenua in Te Tau Ihu - or Te Tauihu as it is now more commonly known: Rangit ā ne o Wairau, Ngāti Kuia and Ngāti Apa ki te Rā Tō are of Kurahaupō waka origins. They were the tangata whenua of Te Tau Ihu when the Kawhia–Taranaki tribes migrated to the district. Ngāti Toa Rangatira, Ngāti Koata ...

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  7. Te Tau Ihu o Te Waka-a-Māui is the prow of the demigod Māui ’s canoe – the top of the South Island. Many different iwi (tribes) have migrated to these fertile, mineral-rich lands: the elusive ‘fairy folk’ of ancient times; the descendants of the navigator Kupe; and powerful Ngāti Tūmatakōkiri, who ruled for 200 years. Today, eight ...

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