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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Te_RauparahaTe Rauparaha - Wikipedia

    Te Rauparaha (c.1768 – 27 November 1849) [1] [2] was a Māori rangatira, warlord, and chief of the Ngāti Toa iwi. One of the most powerful military leaders of the Musket Wars, Te Rauparaha fought a war of conquest that greatly expanded Ngāti Toa southwards, receiving the epithet "the Napoleon of the South". He remains one of the ...

    • 1819–1848
  2. Te Rauparaha (~1760 - 27 de noviembre de 1849) fue un rangatira maorí y líder de guerra de la iwi (tribu) Ngāti Toa que tuvo mucha influencia durante la Guerras de los Mosquetes. 2 Fue importante también como vendedor de tierras a los británicos de la Compañía de Nueva Zelanda y tomó parte en la Masacre de Wairau .

    • ~1760
  3. Biography. Te Rauparaha. The Ngāti Toa chief's name is a taunt to an enemy Waikato chief who, when he was an infant, threatened to kill him and roast him with edible rauparaha leaves. Kāwhia-based Te Rauparaha (? -1849) led Ngāti Toa in a lengthy war with the Waikato tribes before defeat forced his tribe out of the area.

  4. Ngāti Toa leader. This biography, written by Steven Oliver, was first published in the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography in 1990. It was translated into te reo Māori by the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography team. Te Rauparaha was the son of Werawera, of Ngāti Toa, and his second wife, Parekōwhatu (Parekōhatu), of Ngāti Raukawa.

  5. TE RAUPARAHA. ( c. 1768–1849). War chief of the Ngati Toa. A new biography of Te Rauparaha appears in the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography on this site. This famous chief of the Ngati Toa was born in 1768 or 1769, probably at Maungatautari, the home of his mother's people. He was the son of Werawera, a chief of the Ngati Toa, and, through ...

  6. 5 de may. de 2024 · He became a leading military and political figure in the affairs of the Ngati Toa early in his life and it was on his counsel that Ngati Toa decided to abandon their ancestral lands at Kawhia and migrate to Kapiti in the early 1820s. Te Rauparaha died at Otaki on the 27 November 1849. He was survived by his son Tamihana and ...

  7. 27 November 1849. Sketch of Te Rauparaha (Alexander Turnbull Library, QMS-0122-140A) The formidable Ngāti Toa leader had dominated Te Moana-o-Raukawa – the Cook Strait region – from his base at Kāpiti Island for nearly 20 years. Te Rauparaha spent the last year of his life at Ōtaki.