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The word (Māori pronunciation: [ˈpaː]; often spelled pa in English) can refer to any Māori village or defensive settlement, but often refers to hillforts – fortified settlements with palisades and defensive terraces – and also to fortified villages. Pā sites occur mainly in the North Island of New Zealand, north of Lake Taupō. Over 5,000 sites have been located, photographed and examined, although few have been subject to detailed analysis. No pā have been yet located from the early colonization period when early Polynesian-Māori colonizers lived in the lower South Island. Variations similar to pā occur throughout central Polynesia, in the islands of Fiji, Tonga and the Marquesas Islands.

Terraces on Maungawhau / Mount Eden, marking the sites of the defensive palisades and ditches of this former pā

In Māori culture, a great pā represented the mana (prestige or power) and strategic ability of an iwi (tribe or tribal confederacy), as personified by a rangatira (chieftain). Māori built pā in various defensible locations around the territory (rohe) of an iwi to protect fertile plantation-sites and food supplies.

Description

Almost all pā were constructed on prominent raised ground, especially on volcanic hills. The natural slope of the hill is then terraced. Dormant volcanoes were commonly used for pā in the area of present-day Auckland. Pā are multipurpose in function. Pā that have been extensively studied after the New Zealand Wars and more recently were found to safeguard food- and water-storage sites or wells, food-storage pits (especially for kūmara),[1] and small integrated plantations, maintained inside the pā.

Recent studies have shown that in most cases, few people lived long-term in a single pā, and that iwi maintained several pā at once, often under the control of a hapū (subtribe). Early European scholarly research on pā typically considered pā as isolated points settlements, analogous to European towns. Typically pā were a part of a greater area of seasonal occupation.[2] The area in between pā were primarily common residential and horticultural sites. Over time, some pā may have become more important as places of display and as a symbol of status (tohu rangatira), rather than purely defensive locations.[3][2]

Traditional designs

 
Pūtiki pā on the Whanganui River in 1850

Traditional pā took a variety of designs. The simplest pā, the tuwatawata, generally consisted of a single wood palisade around the village stronghold, and several elevated stage levels from which to defend and attack. A pā maioro, general construction used multiple ramparts, earthen ditches used as hiding posts for ambush, and multiple rows of palisades. The most sophisticated pā was called a pā whakino, which generally included all the other features plus more food storage areas, water wells, more terraces, ramparts, palisades, fighting stages, outpost stages, underground dug-posts, mountain or hill summit areas called "tihi", defended by more multiple wall palisades with underground communication passages, escape passages, elaborate traditionally carved entrance ways, and artistically carved main posts.

An important feature of pā that set them apart from British forts was their incorporation of food storage pits; some pā were built exclusively to safely store food. Pā locations include volcanoes, spurs, headlands, ridges, peninsulas and small islands, including artificial islands.

Standard features included a community well for long term supply of water, designated waste areas, an outpost or an elevated stage on a summit on which a pahu would be slung on a frame that when struck would alarm the residents of an attack. The pahu was a large oblong piece of wood with a groove in the middle. A heavy piece of wood was struck from side to side of the groove to sound the alarm.[4] The whare (a Māori dwelling place or hut) of the rangatira and ariki (chiefs) were often built on the summit with a weapons storage. In the 17th and 18th centuries the taiaha was the most common weapon. The chief's stronghold on the summit could be bigger than a normal whare, some measuring 4.5 meters x 4 meters.

Artifacts

Pā excavated in Northland have provided numerous clues to Māori tool and weapon manufacturing, including the manufacturing of obsidian (volcanic glass), chert and argillite basalt, flakes, pounamu chisels, adzes, bone and ivory weapons, and an abundance of various hammer tools which had accumulated over hundreds of years.

Chert, a fine-grained, easily worked stone, familiar to Māori from its extensive use in Polynesia, was the most commonly used stone, with thousands of pieces being found in some Northland digs. Chips or flakes of chert were used as drills for pā construction, and for the making process of other industrial tools like Polynesian fish hooks. Another find in Northland pā studies was the use of what Māori call "kokowai", or red ochre, a red dye made from red iron or aluminium oxides, which is finely ground, then mixed with an oily substance like fish oil or a plant resin. Māori used the chemical compound to keep insects away in pā built in more hazardous platforms in war. The compound is still widely used on whare and waka, and is used as a coating to prevent the wood from drying out.

Storage

Pā studies showed that on lower pā terraces were semi-underground whare (huts) about 2.4 m x 2 m for housing kūmara. These houses or storage houses were equipped with wide racks to hold hand-woven kūmara baskets at an angle of about 20 degrees, to shed water.

These storage whare had internal drains to drain water.[5] In many pā studies, kūmara were stored in rua (kūmara pits). Common or lower rank Māori whare were on the lower or outer land, sometimes partly sunk into the ground by 30–40 cm. On the lower terraces, the ngutu (entrance gate) is situated. It had a low fence to force attackers to slow and take an awkward high step. The entrance was usually overlooked by a raised stage so attackers were very vulnerable.

Most food was grown outside the pā, though in some higher ranked pā designs there were small terraces areas to grow food within the palisades. Guards were stationed on the summit during times of threat. The blowing of a polished shell trumpet or banging a large wooden gong signaled the alarm. In some pā in rocky terrain, boulders were used as weapons. Some iwi such as Ngāi Tūhoe did not construct pā during early periods, but used forest locations for defense, attack and refuge – called pā runanga.[citation needed] Leading British archaeologist, Lady Aileen Fox (1976) has stated that there were about 2,000 hillforts in Britain and that New Zealand had twice that number but further work since then has raised the number of known pā to over 5,000.[citation needed]

Pā played a significant role in the New Zealand Wars. They are also known from earlier periods of Māori history from around 500 years ago, suggesting that Māori iwi ranking and the acquiring of resources and territory began to bring about warfare and led to an era of pā evolution.[6][7]

Fortification

 
Model of a pā on a headland, showing the stepped nature and the wood palisades.
 
Some 19th-century (gunfighter) pā built specifically for defense against gunpowder weapons sometimes even provided overlapping fields of fire for the defenders.
 
An 1863 meeting between Māori and settlers in a pā whakairo (carved pā) in Hawke's Bay Province.

Their main defence was the use of earth ramparts (or terraced hillsides), topped with stakes or wicker barriers. The historically later versions were constructed by people who were fighting with muskets and melee weapons (such as spears, taiaha and mere) against the British Army and armed constables, who were equipped with swords, rifles, and heavy artillery such as howitzers[8] and rocket artillery.

Simpler gunfighter pā of the post contact period could be put in place in very limited time scales, sometimes two to fifteen days, but the more complex classic constructions took months of hard labour, and were often rebuilt and improved over many years. The normal methods of attacking a classic pā were firstly the surprise attack at night when defences were not routinely manned. The second was the siege which involved less fighting and results depended on who had the better food resources. The third was to use a device called a Rou – a half-metre length of strong wood attached to a stout length of rope made from raupō leaves. The Rou was slipped over the palisade and then pulled by a team of toa until the wall fell. Best records that there were cases where children were eaten during sieges – as at Te Whetu Matarua pā on the East coast. Gunfighter pā could resist bombardment for days with limited casualties although the psychological impact of shelling usually drove out defenders if attackers were patient and had enough ammunition. Some historians have wrongly credited Māori with inventing trench warfare with its associated variety of earth works for protection.[9] Serious military earth works were first recorded in use by French military engineers in the 1700s and were used extensively at Crimea and in the US Civil War.[citation needed] Māori's undoubted skill at constructing earthworks evolved from their skill at building traditional pā which, by the late 18th century, involved considerable earthworks to create rua (food storage pits), ditches, earth ramparts and multiple terraces.

Gunfighter pā

Warrior chiefs like Te Ruki Kawiti realised that these properties were a good counter to the greater firepower of the British. With that in mind, they sometimes built pā purposefully as a defensive fortification, like at Ruapekapeka, a new pā constructed specifically to draw the British away, instead of protecting a specific site or place of habitation like more traditional classic pā.[10] At the Battle of Ruapekapeka the British suffered 45 casualties against only 30 amongst the Māori. The British learned from earlier mistakes and listened to their Māori allies. The pā was subjected to two weeks of bombardment before being successfully attacked. Hone Heke won the battle and "he carried his point", with the Crown never tried to resurrect the flagstaff at Kororareka while Kawiti lived.[11] Afterwards, British engineers twice surveyed the fortifications, produced a scale model and tabled the plans in the House of Commons.[12]

The fortifications of such a purpose-built pā included palisades of hard puriri trunks sunk about 1.5m in the ground and split timber, with bundles of protective flax padding in the later gunfighter pā, the two lines of palisade covering a firing trench with individual pits, while more defenders could use the second palisade to fire over the heads of the first below. Simple communication trenches or tunnels were also built to connect the various parts, as found at Ohaeawai Pā or Ruapekapeka. The forts could even include underground bunkers, protected by a deep layer of earth over wooden beams, which sheltered the inhabitants during periods of heavy shelling by artillery.[12]

A limiting factor of the Māori fortifications that were not built as set pieces, however, was the need for the people inhabiting them to leave frequently to cultivate areas for food, or to gather it from the wilderness. Consequently, pā would often be seasonally abandoned for 4 to 6 months of each year.[13] In Māori tradition a pā would also be abandoned if a chief was killed or if some calamity took place that a tohunga (witch doctor/shaman) had attributed to an evil spirit (atua). In the 1860s, Māori, though nominally Christian, still followed aspects of their tikanga at the same time. Normally, once the kūmara had been harvested in March–April and placed in storage the inhabitants could lead a more itinerant lifestyle, trading, or harvesting gathering other foodstuffs needed for winter but this did not stop war taking place outside this time frame if the desire for utu or payback was great. To Māori, summer was the normal fighting season[14] and this put them at a huge disadvantage in conflicts with the British Army with its well-organized logistics train which could fight efficiently year round.[citation needed]

Swamp pā

Fox noted that lake pā were quite common inland in places such as the Waikato. Frequently they appear to have been constructed for whānau (extended family) size groups. The topography was often flat, although a headland or spur location was favoured. The lake frontage was usually protected with a single row of palisades but the landward boundary was protected by a double row. Mangakaware swamp pā, Waikato, had an area of about 3,400 m². There were 137 palisade post holes identified. The likely total number of posts was about 500. It contained eight buildings within the palisades, six of which have been identified as whare, the largest of which was 2.4 m x 6 m. One building was possibly a cooking shelter and the last a large storehouse. There was one rectangular structure, 1.5 m x 3 m, just outside the swampside palisades which was most likely either a drying rack or storehouse. Swamps and lakes provided eels, ducks, weka (swamp hen) and in some cases fish. The largest of this type was found at Lake Ngaroto, Waikato, the ancient settlement of the Ngāti Apakura, very close to the battle of Hingakaka. This was a built on a much larger scale. Large numbers of carved wooden artefacts were found preserved in the peat. These are on display at the nearby Te Awamutu museum.

Kaiapoi is a well-known example of a pā using swamp as a key part of its defense.[15]

Examples

 
This view of Huriawa Peninsula shows how Māori often chose nearly impregnable natural landforms as pā sites.
  • The old pā remains found on One Tree Hill, close to the center of Auckland, represent one of the largest known sites as well as one of the largest prehistoric earthworks fortifications known worldwide.[16]
  • Pukekura at Taiaroa Head, Otago,[17] established around 1650 and still occupied by Māori in the 1840s.
  • Rangiriri (Waikato), a gunfighter pā built in 1863 by Kingites. This pā resembles a very long trench running east west between the Waikato River and Lake Kopuera with swampy margins. At the high point was a substantial earth works with trenches and parapets. The pā was bombarded from ships and land using Armstrong Guns.
  • Nukuhau pā, Waikato River near Stubbs Road. This is a triangular shape pā formed on a flat raised spur with the Waikato River on one side 200m long, a gully with a stream on the long west axis 200 m long and two man made ditches on the narrower southern axis, 107m long. The average slope to the river is 12m at an angle of 70 degrees.
  • Huriawa, near Karitane in Otago, occupied a narrow, jagged, and easily defended peninsula built in the mid 18th century by Kai Tahu chief Te Wera.

See also

References

  1. ^ King, Michael (2003). "First Colonisation". The Penguin History of New Zealand (reprint ed.). Penguin Random House New Zealand Limited. ISBN 9781742288260. Retrieved 18 September 2020. The period of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries has been termed transitional [...]. [...] the practice that developed of preserving kumara tubers in storage pits (a process that had been unnecessary in a tropical climate) meant that communities had to remain with those pits, particularly in an era of larger population when competition for resources meant that less well-provisioned neighbours might be tempted to raid your larder. This last factor more than any other gave impetus to the rise and spread, from north to south, of fortified hilltops which came to be known as pa. They probably originated from a need to protect kumara tubers; but they persisted and became more important when population growth, competition for all resources, the pursuit of mana or authority for one's own group, and a generally more martial culture meant that communities increasingly had to protect themselves from immediate neighbours or from marauding enemies from further afield.
  2. ^ a b Mackintosh, Lucy (2021). Shifting Grounds: Deep Histories of Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland. Bridget Williams Books. p. 32. doi:10.7810/9781988587332. ISBN 978-1-988587-33-2.
  3. ^ Murdoch, Graeme (1992). "Wai Karekare - 'The Bay of the Boisterous Seas'". In Northcote-Bade, James (ed.). West Auckland Remembers, Volume 2. West Auckland Historical Society. p. 22. ISBN 0-473-01587-0.
  4. ^ "The Church Missionary Gleaner, December 1851". The Contrast. Adam Matthew Digital. Retrieved 18 October 2015.
  5. ^ Furey, Louise; Emmitt, Joshua; Wallace, Rod (2017). "Matakawau Stingray Point Pa excavation, Ahuahu Great Mercury Island 1955-56". Records of the Auckland Museum. 52: 39–57. doi:10.32912/ram.2018.52.3.
  6. ^ The prehistory of New Zealand. Davidson, Johnson; Longman, Paul. Auckland, 1987 (ISBN 0-582-71812-0).
  7. ^ The Polynesian Settlement of New Zealand in Relation to Environmental and Biotic Changes. McGlone, M. S.. New Zealand Journal of Ecology, 12(s): 115–129, 1989.
  8. ^ New Zealand History online: First Taranaki war erupts at Waitara
  9. ^ Chris Pugsley.NZ Defence Quarterly.
  10. ^ Cowan, James (1955). "The Capture of Rua-pekapeka". The New Zealand Wars: A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period: Volume I (1845–64). R.E. Owen, Wellington. p. 74. Retrieved 11 November 2010.
  11. ^ Cowan, James (1955). "The Capture of Rua-pekapeka". The New Zealand Wars: A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period: Volume I (1845–64). R.E. Owen, Wellington. p. 87. Retrieved 11 November 2010.
  12. ^ a b Early Māori Military Engineering Skills Honoured - engineering dimension, IPENZ, Issue 70, May 2008, Page 09
  13. ^ (Sutton, Furey and Marshall)
  14. ^ Basil Keane, 'Riri - traditional Māori warfare - Preparations and entering into battle', Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, http://www.TeAra.govt.nz/en/riri-traditional-maori-warfare/page-5 (accessed 19 January 2021)
  15. ^ "History of the Kaiapoi Pa". Waimakariri Library. Retrieved 25 February 2020.
  16. ^ One Tree Hill - Use and value 2008-05-21 at the Wayback Machine (from the Auckland volcanic field website of the Auckland Regional Council)
  17. ^ Pybus, T A (1954). "The Maoris of the South Island". Reed Publishing. p. 37. Retrieved 2009-06-10.

Further reading

  • Potts, Kirsty N. (2014). Murihiku Pa: An Investigation of Pa Sites in the Southern Areas of New Zealand (PDF) (Master of Arts). University of Otago.
  • Prickett, Nigel (2016). Fortifications of the New Zealand Wars (PDF) (Report). Wellington: New Zealand Department of Conservation.

External links

other, uses, word, māori, pronunciation, ˈpaː, often, spelled, english, refer, māori, village, defensive, settlement, often, refers, hillforts, fortified, settlements, with, palisades, defensive, terraces, also, fortified, villages, sites, occur, mainly, north. For other uses see Pa The word pa Maori pronunciation ˈpaː often spelled pa in English can refer to any Maori village or defensive settlement but often refers to hillforts fortified settlements with palisades and defensive terraces and also to fortified villages Pa sites occur mainly in the North Island of New Zealand north of Lake Taupō Over 5 000 sites have been located photographed and examined although few have been subject to detailed analysis No pa have been yet located from the early colonization period when early Polynesian Maori colonizers lived in the lower South Island Variations similar to pa occur throughout central Polynesia in the islands of Fiji Tonga and the Marquesas Islands Terraces on Maungawhau Mount Eden marking the sites of the defensive palisades and ditches of this former pa In Maori culture a great pa represented the mana prestige or power and strategic ability of an iwi tribe or tribal confederacy as personified by a rangatira chieftain Maori built pa in various defensible locations around the territory rohe of an iwi to protect fertile plantation sites and food supplies Contents 1 Description 2 Traditional designs 2 1 Artifacts 2 2 Storage 3 Fortification 3 1 Gunfighter pa 3 2 Swamp pa 4 Examples 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksDescription EditAlmost all pa were constructed on prominent raised ground especially on volcanic hills The natural slope of the hill is then terraced Dormant volcanoes were commonly used for pa in the area of present day Auckland Pa are multipurpose in function Pa that have been extensively studied after the New Zealand Wars and more recently were found to safeguard food and water storage sites or wells food storage pits especially for kumara 1 and small integrated plantations maintained inside the pa Recent studies have shown that in most cases few people lived long term in a single pa and that iwi maintained several pa at once often under the control of a hapu subtribe Early European scholarly research on pa typically considered pa as isolated points settlements analogous to European towns Typically pa were a part of a greater area of seasonal occupation 2 The area in between pa were primarily common residential and horticultural sites Over time some pa may have become more important as places of display and as a symbol of status tohu rangatira rather than purely defensive locations 3 2 Traditional designs Edit Putiki pa on the Whanganui River in 1850 Traditional pa took a variety of designs The simplest pa the tuwatawata generally consisted of a single wood palisade around the village stronghold and several elevated stage levels from which to defend and attack A pa maioro general construction used multiple ramparts earthen ditches used as hiding posts for ambush and multiple rows of palisades The most sophisticated pa was called a pa whakino which generally included all the other features plus more food storage areas water wells more terraces ramparts palisades fighting stages outpost stages underground dug posts mountain or hill summit areas called tihi defended by more multiple wall palisades with underground communication passages escape passages elaborate traditionally carved entrance ways and artistically carved main posts An important feature of pa that set them apart from British forts was their incorporation of food storage pits some pa were built exclusively to safely store food Pa locations include volcanoes spurs headlands ridges peninsulas and small islands including artificial islands Standard features included a community well for long term supply of water designated waste areas an outpost or an elevated stage on a summit on which a pahu would be slung on a frame that when struck would alarm the residents of an attack The pahu was a large oblong piece of wood with a groove in the middle A heavy piece of wood was struck from side to side of the groove to sound the alarm 4 The whare a Maori dwelling place or hut of the rangatira and ariki chiefs were often built on the summit with a weapons storage In the 17th and 18th centuries the taiaha was the most common weapon The chief s stronghold on the summit could be bigger than a normal whare some measuring 4 5 meters x 4 meters Artifacts Edit Pa excavated in Northland have provided numerous clues to Maori tool and weapon manufacturing including the manufacturing of obsidian volcanic glass chert and argillite basalt flakes pounamu chisels adzes bone and ivory weapons and an abundance of various hammer tools which had accumulated over hundreds of years Chert a fine grained easily worked stone familiar to Maori from its extensive use in Polynesia was the most commonly used stone with thousands of pieces being found in some Northland digs Chips or flakes of chert were used as drills for pa construction and for the making process of other industrial tools like Polynesian fish hooks Another find in Northland pa studies was the use of what Maori call kokowai or red ochre a red dye made from red iron or aluminium oxides which is finely ground then mixed with an oily substance like fish oil or a plant resin Maori used the chemical compound to keep insects away in pa built in more hazardous platforms in war The compound is still widely used on whare and waka and is used as a coating to prevent the wood from drying out Storage Edit Pa studies showed that on lower pa terraces were semi underground whare huts about 2 4 m x 2 m for housing kumara These houses or storage houses were equipped with wide racks to hold hand woven kumara baskets at an angle of about 20 degrees to shed water These storage whare had internal drains to drain water 5 In many pa studies kumara were stored in rua kumara pits Common or lower rank Maori whare were on the lower or outer land sometimes partly sunk into the ground by 30 40 cm On the lower terraces the ngutu entrance gate is situated It had a low fence to force attackers to slow and take an awkward high step The entrance was usually overlooked by a raised stage so attackers were very vulnerable Most food was grown outside the pa though in some higher ranked pa designs there were small terraces areas to grow food within the palisades Guards were stationed on the summit during times of threat The blowing of a polished shell trumpet or banging a large wooden gong signaled the alarm In some pa in rocky terrain boulders were used as weapons Some iwi such as Ngai Tuhoe did not construct pa during early periods but used forest locations for defense attack and refuge called pa runanga citation needed Leading British archaeologist Lady Aileen Fox 1976 has stated that there were about 2 000 hillforts in Britain and that New Zealand had twice that number but further work since then has raised the number of known pa to over 5 000 citation needed Pa played a significant role in the New Zealand Wars They are also known from earlier periods of Maori history from around 500 years ago suggesting that Maori iwi ranking and the acquiring of resources and territory began to bring about warfare and led to an era of pa evolution 6 7 Fortification Edit Model of a pa on a headland showing the stepped nature and the wood palisades Some 19th century gunfighter pa built specifically for defense against gunpowder weapons sometimes even provided overlapping fields of fire for the defenders An 1863 meeting between Maori and settlers in a pa whakairo carved pa in Hawke s Bay Province Their main defence was the use of earth ramparts or terraced hillsides topped with stakes or wicker barriers The historically later versions were constructed by people who were fighting with muskets and melee weapons such as spears taiaha and mere against the British Army and armed constables who were equipped with swords rifles and heavy artillery such as howitzers 8 and rocket artillery Simpler gunfighter pa of the post contact period could be put in place in very limited time scales sometimes two to fifteen days but the more complex classic constructions took months of hard labour and were often rebuilt and improved over many years The normal methods of attacking a classic pa were firstly the surprise attack at night when defences were not routinely manned The second was the siege which involved less fighting and results depended on who had the better food resources The third was to use a device called a Rou a half metre length of strong wood attached to a stout length of rope made from raupō leaves The Rou was slipped over the palisade and then pulled by a team of toa until the wall fell Best records that there were cases where children were eaten during sieges as at Te Whetu Matarua pa on the East coast Gunfighter pa could resist bombardment for days with limited casualties although the psychological impact of shelling usually drove out defenders if attackers were patient and had enough ammunition Some historians have wrongly credited Maori with inventing trench warfare with its associated variety of earth works for protection 9 Serious military earth works were first recorded in use by French military engineers in the 1700s and were used extensively at Crimea and in the US Civil War citation needed Maori s undoubted skill at constructing earthworks evolved from their skill at building traditional pa which by the late 18th century involved considerable earthworks to create rua food storage pits ditches earth ramparts and multiple terraces Gunfighter pa Edit Warrior chiefs like Te Ruki Kawiti realised that these properties were a good counter to the greater firepower of the British With that in mind they sometimes built pa purposefully as a defensive fortification like at Ruapekapeka a new pa constructed specifically to draw the British away instead of protecting a specific site or place of habitation like more traditional classic pa 10 At the Battle of Ruapekapeka the British suffered 45 casualties against only 30 amongst the Maori The British learned from earlier mistakes and listened to their Maori allies The pa was subjected to two weeks of bombardment before being successfully attacked Hone Heke won the battle and he carried his point with the Crown never tried to resurrect the flagstaff at Kororareka while Kawiti lived 11 Afterwards British engineers twice surveyed the fortifications produced a scale model and tabled the plans in the House of Commons 12 The fortifications of such a purpose built pa included palisades of hard puriri trunks sunk about 1 5m in the ground and split timber with bundles of protective flax padding in the later gunfighter pa the two lines of palisade covering a firing trench with individual pits while more defenders could use the second palisade to fire over the heads of the first below Simple communication trenches or tunnels were also built to connect the various parts as found at Ohaeawai Pa or Ruapekapeka The forts could even include underground bunkers protected by a deep layer of earth over wooden beams which sheltered the inhabitants during periods of heavy shelling by artillery 12 A limiting factor of the Maori fortifications that were not built as set pieces however was the need for the people inhabiting them to leave frequently to cultivate areas for food or to gather it from the wilderness Consequently pa would often be seasonally abandoned for 4 to 6 months of each year 13 In Maori tradition a pa would also be abandoned if a chief was killed or if some calamity took place that a tohunga witch doctor shaman had attributed to an evil spirit atua In the 1860s Maori though nominally Christian still followed aspects of their tikanga at the same time Normally once the kumara had been harvested in March April and placed in storage the inhabitants could lead a more itinerant lifestyle trading or harvesting gathering other foodstuffs needed for winter but this did not stop war taking place outside this time frame if the desire for utu or payback was great To Maori summer was the normal fighting season 14 and this put them at a huge disadvantage in conflicts with the British Army with its well organized logistics train which could fight efficiently year round citation needed Swamp pa Edit Fox noted that lake pa were quite common inland in places such as the Waikato Frequently they appear to have been constructed for whanau extended family size groups The topography was often flat although a headland or spur location was favoured The lake frontage was usually protected with a single row of palisades but the landward boundary was protected by a double row Mangakaware swamp pa Waikato had an area of about 3 400 m There were 137 palisade post holes identified The likely total number of posts was about 500 It contained eight buildings within the palisades six of which have been identified as whare the largest of which was 2 4 m x 6 m One building was possibly a cooking shelter and the last a large storehouse There was one rectangular structure 1 5 m x 3 m just outside the swampside palisades which was most likely either a drying rack or storehouse Swamps and lakes provided eels ducks weka swamp hen and in some cases fish The largest of this type was found at Lake Ngaroto Waikato the ancient settlement of the Ngati Apakura very close to the battle of Hingakaka This was a built on a much larger scale Large numbers of carved wooden artefacts were found preserved in the peat These are on display at the nearby Te Awamutu museum Kaiapoi is a well known example of a pa using swamp as a key part of its defense 15 Examples Edit This view of Huriawa Peninsula shows how Maori often chose nearly impregnable natural landforms as pa sites The old pa remains found on One Tree Hill close to the center of Auckland represent one of the largest known sites as well as one of the largest prehistoric earthworks fortifications known worldwide 16 Pukekura at Taiaroa Head Otago 17 established around 1650 and still occupied by Maori in the 1840s Rangiriri Waikato a gunfighter pa built in 1863 by Kingites This pa resembles a very long trench running east west between the Waikato River and Lake Kopuera with swampy margins At the high point was a substantial earth works with trenches and parapets The pa was bombarded from ships and land using Armstrong Guns Nukuhau pa Waikato River near Stubbs Road This is a triangular shape pa formed on a flat raised spur with the Waikato River on one side 200m long a gully with a stream on the long west axis 200 m long and two man made ditches on the narrower southern axis 107m long The average slope to the river is 12m at an angle of 70 degrees Huriawa near Karitane in Otago occupied a narrow jagged and easily defended peninsula built in the mid 18th century by Kai Tahu chief Te Wera See also EditNew Zealand Wars Strategy and tacticsReferences Edit King Michael 2003 First Colonisation The Penguin History of New Zealand reprint ed Penguin Random House New Zealand Limited ISBN 9781742288260 Retrieved 18 September 2020 The period of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries has been termed transitional the practice that developed of preserving kumara tubers in storage pits a process that had been unnecessary in a tropical climate meant that communities had to remain with those pits particularly in an era of larger population when competition for resources meant that less well provisioned neighbours might be tempted to raid your larder This last factor more than any other gave impetus to the rise and spread from north to south of fortified hilltops which came to be known as pa They probably originated from a need to protect kumara tubers but they persisted and became more important when population growth competition for all resources the pursuit of mana or authority for one s own group and a generally more martial culture meant that communities increasingly had to protect themselves from immediate neighbours or from marauding enemies from further afield a b Mackintosh Lucy 2021 Shifting Grounds Deep Histories of Tamaki Makaurau Auckland Bridget Williams Books p 32 doi 10 7810 9781988587332 ISBN 978 1 988587 33 2 Murdoch Graeme 1992 Wai Karekare The Bay of the Boisterous Seas In Northcote Bade James ed West Auckland Remembers Volume 2 West Auckland Historical Society p 22 ISBN 0 473 01587 0 The Church Missionary Gleaner December 1851 The Contrast Adam Matthew Digital Retrieved 18 October 2015 Furey Louise Emmitt Joshua Wallace Rod 2017 Matakawau Stingray Point Pa excavation Ahuahu Great Mercury Island 1955 56 Records of the Auckland Museum 52 39 57 doi 10 32912 ram 2018 52 3 The prehistory of New Zealand Davidson Johnson Longman Paul Auckland 1987 ISBN 0 582 71812 0 The Polynesian Settlement of New Zealand in Relation to Environmental and Biotic Changes McGlone M S New Zealand Journal of Ecology 12 s 115 129 1989 New Zealand History online First Taranaki war erupts at Waitara Chris Pugsley NZ Defence Quarterly Cowan James 1955 The Capture of Rua pekapeka The New Zealand Wars A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period Volume I 1845 64 R E Owen Wellington p 74 Retrieved 11 November 2010 Cowan James 1955 The Capture of Rua pekapeka The New Zealand Wars A History of the Maori Campaigns and the Pioneering Period Volume I 1845 64 R E Owen Wellington p 87 Retrieved 11 November 2010 a b Early Maori Military Engineering Skills Honoured engineering dimension IPENZ Issue 70 May 2008 Page 09 Sutton Furey and Marshall Basil Keane Riri traditional Maori warfare Preparations and entering into battle Te Ara the Encyclopedia of New Zealand http www TeAra govt nz en riri traditional maori warfare page 5 accessed 19 January 2021 History of the Kaiapoi Pa Waimakariri Library Retrieved 25 February 2020 One Tree Hill Use and value Archived 2008 05 21 at the Wayback Machine from the Auckland volcanic field website of the Auckland Regional Council Pybus T A 1954 The Maoris of the South Island Reed Publishing p 37 Retrieved 2009 06 10 Further reading EditPotts Kirsty N 2014 Murihiku Pa An Investigation of Pa Sites in the Southern Areas of New Zealand PDF Master of Arts University of Otago Prickett Nigel 2016 Fortifications of the New Zealand Wars PDF Report Wellington New Zealand Department of Conservation External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Maori pa Archaeological Remains of Pa from Heritage New Zealand website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pa amp oldid 1136788673, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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