Research paper
'Stolen from Its People and Wrenched from Its Roots'? A Study of the Crown's 1867 Acquisition of the Rongowhakaata Meeting House Te Hau ki Turanga
About this item
- Title
- 'Stolen from Its People and Wrenched from Its Roots'? A Study of the Crown's 1867 Acquisition of the Rongowhakaata Meeting House Te Hau ki Turanga
- Content partner
- Victoria University of Wellington
- Collection
- VUW ResearchArchive
- Description
Te Hau ki Tūranga is the oldest meeting house in existence. It was built in the early 1840s at Orakaiapu Pā, just south of Gisborne, by Ngāti Kaipoho (a hapū/subtribe of Rongowhakaata) chief Raharuhi Rukupō. In the nineteenth century whare whakairo (carved houses) were significant symbols of chiefly and tribal mana (prestige, control, power). They were ‗carved histories‘, physical embodiments of tribal history and whakapapa (genealogy) representing a link between the living and the dead. In 1...
- Format
- Research paper
- Research format
- Scholarly text / Thesis
- Thesis level
- Masters
- Date created
- 2009
- Creator
- Waigth, Kesaia L
- URL
- http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/3088
- Related subjects
- NZ politics and government / New Zealand history / Maori history / Crown-Maori relations / Te Hau ki Turanga
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Report this itemDigitalNZ brings together more than 30 million items from institutions so that they are easy to find and use. This information is the best information we could find on this item. This item was added on 28 November 2013, and updated 19 September 2023.
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