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  1. Ngataua Omahuru (c. 1863 – 1918), also known as William Fox, was a Māori lawyer. He and his family lived in Mawhitiwhiti near Mount Taranaki in New Zealand's North Island.

    • Being kidnapped as a child
    • 1864, New Zealand
    • Lawyer
  2. Ngataua Omahuru foi um advogado Māori. Ele e a sua família moravam em Mawhitiwhiti, perto do Monte Taranaki, na Ilha do Norte da Nova Zelândia. Em 1869, quando Omahuru tinha cinco anos, ele foi sequestrado durante a batalha de Te Ngutu o te Manu por maoris leais e levado para Whanganui.

  3. 28 de jul. de 2001 · Colonial kidnap. Ngataua Omahuru was a Maori child remade as a mini-English 19th-century gentleman. Emily Perkins admires Peter Walker's poignant tale of survival in the face of civilisation...

  4. Ngātau Omahuru, the son of Te Karere and Hinewai Omahuru of Ngā Ruahine in Taranaki, was kidnapped by colonial forces in 1868 during the New Zealand wars, at the age of six. He spent three years in a Wellington hostel before he came to the attention of Premier William Fox and his wife Sarah.

  5. 4 de feb. de 2005 · In the midst of war, Ngātau Omahuru, a small brown boy from Māwhitiwhiti near Hāwera, is plucked from the Taranaki bush and whisked to the capital of Wellington, to be adopted by the Prime Minister Sir William Fox.

  6. One boy was killed, and the other, Ngatau Omahuru, was given by Māori scout, Pirimona, to Herewini of the Ngāti Te Ūpokoiri Iwi. While in Whanganui the boy came to the attention of the magistrate Walter Buller , who purchased him a set of European clothes and boots.

  7. Ngā Ruahine leader Riwha Tītokowaru is known as one of Aotearoa New Zealand's best military leaders. In the South Taranaki campaign (fought over the confiscation of land) between 1868-69, he never lost a battle. SCIS no. 1966268.