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  1. Te Rauparaha signed the Herald (Bunbury) sheet of the Treaty of Waitangi on 19 June 1840, on board HMS Herald, anchored off Mana Island. If you have more information about this treaty signatory please add a community contribution below or contact us at webqueries@mch.govt.nz.

  2. 30 de oct. de 2023 · Te Rauparaha : Kei Wareware. Manatū Taonga Ministry for Culture and Heritage. A new 5-part podcast series tells the story of the life and times of Ngāti Toa leader Te Rauparaha, a compelling figure in the history of Aotearoa New Zealand. No. of episodes: 8. Latest episode: 2023-11-26.

  3. 19 de may. de 2024 · In October 1839, Tamihana te Rauparaha and his cousin Matene te Whiwhi (with whom he was later to found the Maori King Movement) went to Waimate to request a missionary for the Kapiti-Waikanae district. As a result, Octavius Hadfield arrived in Otaki in 1840. In 1850, Tamihana travelled with Archdeacon William Williams to England, arriving in ...

  4. The spirit of Te Rauparaha. Wellington, 2010. Smith, S. P. History and traditions of the Maoris of the West Coast, North Island of New Zealand prior to 1840. New Plymouth, 1910. Te Rauparaha, T. He pukapuka tātaku i ngā mahi a Te Rauparaha nui: A record of the life of the great Te Rauparaha. Trans. and ed. by R. Calman. Auckland, 2020

  5. Te Rauparaha probably also took part in the expedition of 1819–20 to find a new home for his people. Their position at Kawhia was becoming untenable as war with the Waikato tribes intensified. While at Cook Strait Te Rauparaha had seen a sailing ship passing through the strait, probably one of the Russian ships of the Bellingshausen expedition.

  6. 22 de ene. de 2014 · The Ngati-Apa claim, with some insistence, that the marriage was the expression of a bond of perpetual peace between them and Te Rauparaha: while the Ngati-Raukawa, to whose lot it fell some fifty years later to contest the point, contend that no such wide construction could be put upon Rangihaeata's action, and that, even if it involved the tribes in a treaty of friendship at the time, the ...

  7. 27 de oct. de 2023 · Te Rauparaha (c.1768 – 27 November 1849) was a Māori rangatira (chief) and war leader of the Ngāti Toa tribe who took a leading part in the Musket Wars, receiving the nickname "the Napoleon of the South". He was influential in the original sale of land to the New Zealand Company and was a participant in the Wairau Affray in Marlborough.