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  1. Charles Philippe Hippolyte de Thierry (April 1793 – 8 July 1864) was a nineteenth-century adventurer who attempted to establish his own sovereign state in New Zealand in the years before the Treaty of Waitangi between the British Crown and the Maori chiefs in 1840.

  2. A Frenchman, Charles de Thierry, [5] who titled himself 'Charles, Baron de Tierry, Sovereign Chief of New Zealand and King of Nuku Hiva ' (in the Marquesas Islands ), sought to establish a colony on a 16,000-hectare (40,000-acre) plot of land that he claimed to have purchased in the Hokianga. [3]

  3. Charles Philippe de Thierrys design for a New Zealand Coat of Arms. A letter sent to James Busby by de Thierry in October 1835 prompted the British Resident to call northern chiefs together to sign a Declaration of Independence.

  4. Charles Philippe Hippolyte, barón de Thierry ( Graves, Países Bajos, Abril 1793 - Auckland, 8 de julio de 1864) es un aventurero francés que se proclamó rey de Nueva Zelanda en 1835. Biografía Hijo de padres franceses que emigraron a Londres, inició la carrera diplomática como agregado en la Embajada de Francia en Londres (1815).

  5. In the spring of 1835, Frenchman Charles de Thierry announced his intention to set up a ‘sovereign state’ in Hokianga. Concerned this might provoke intertribal conflict, Busby called a meeting of chiefs whom he persuaded to sign He Whakaputanga.

  6. charles de thierry. Events In History. 28 October 1835. He Whakaputanga signed by northern chiefs. Thirty-four northern chiefs signed He Whakaputanga (a declaration of independence) at a hui called by the British Resident, James Busby. Read more... Main image: Coat of Arms by Charles Philippe de Thierry.

  7. King of Nukuhiva. One of the more colourful characters buried here. Roving adventurer, big dreams. Born in the Netherlands of French parents, De Thierry was educated in England. He enrolled at Oxford and claimed to have transferred to Cambridge University.