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  1. Heke's marriage to Ono, daughter of Ngāpuhi leader Te Pahi, occurred during the years of calm spent with the missionaries. They had two children, a son, Hoani (Hōne), and a daughter, Marianne. Heke and Ono were baptised on 9 August 1835, Ono taking the name Riria (Lydia), and Heke the names Hoani (usually rendered as Hōne) and Wiremu ...

  2. Learn about Hone Heke, the missionary-educated nephew of the fearsome warrior chief Hongi Hika, and the first Maori chief to sign the Treaty of Waitangi.

  3. www.ruapekapeka.co.nz › cast-of-characters › hone-hekeHōne Heke | Te Ruapekapeka

    Heke was born in 1807 in Pakaraka in the Bay of Islands and he attended the mission school in Kerikeri. The missionaries found him an intelligent and troublesome child. He grew into an imposing figure, six feet tall and well-built. During the upheaval of the 1830s, Heke made a name for himself as a warrior. When he married Hariata Rongo, the ...

  4. 25 de nov. de 2020 · Hone Heke – The man and the leader.Website: https://www.ruapekapeka.co.nz/This video is protected by copyright owned by the Department of Conservation and T...

    • 5 min
    • 8.5K
    • Te Ruapekapeka
  5. Hone Heke was an important Māori figure in NZ history who signed the Treaty of Waitangi before being involved in the Northern War.

  6. Hone Heke 's character was curiously composite—a mingling of passionate patriotism, ambition, bravado, vanity, and a shrewdness sharpened by his partial civilization.

  7. Hōne Heke Ngāpua. Hōne Heke Ngāpua, of Ngāpuhi, was born in 1869 at Kaikohe. He was named after his great-uncle, Hōne Heke Pōkai, who had opposed Crown sovereignty in the mid-1840s and famously (and repeatedly) cut down the British flagstaff at Russell. Ngāpua attended native schools and St Stephen’s school in Parnell, Auckland.