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  1. New Zealanders ( Māori: Tāngata Aotearoa ), colloquially known as Kiwis [11] [12] ( / kiːwiː / ), [13] are people associated with New Zealand, sharing a common history, culture, and language ( New Zealand English ). People of various ethnicities and national origins are citizens of New Zealand, governed by its nationality law .

    • Māori People

      Māori are the second-largest ethnic group in New Zealand,...

  2. Māori are the second-largest ethnic group in New Zealand, after European New Zealanders (commonly known by the Māori name Pākehā). In addition, more than 170,000 Māori live in Australia. The Māori language is spoken to some extent by about a fifth of all Māori, representing three percent of the total population.

  3. Hace 4 días · HISTORY & CULTURE. The Māori saved their language from extinction. Here’s how. Born from a movement that swept New Zealand in the 1970s, the Māori model has helped cultures around the globe ...

  4. The human history of New Zealand can be dated back to between 1320 and 1350 CE, when the main settlement period started, after it was discovered and settled by Polynesians, who developed a distinct Māori culture.

  5. A few Māori settled in the United Kingdom, and by the 1950s there were enough to form the London Maori Club. Now called Ngāti Rānana (Rānana is a transliteration of London), the group still exists in the early 2000s.

  6. Hace 4 días · When New Zealand established a national day for Matariki, the Māori new year, in 2022, making it the country's first Indigenous public holiday, many New Zealanders didn't know what it was.

  7. New Zealanders: Māori and European. New Zealand got its name (originally Nieuw Zeeland) after the Dutch explorer Abel Tasman reached its shores in 1642. The early European explorers and others who arrived after Tasman referred to Māori, the indigenous people, as ‘New Zealanders’.