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Whakatōhea

Te Whakatōhea is a Māori iwi of the eastern Bay of Plenty region of New Zealand.[1][2] Their traditional territory extends along the coastline eastwards from Ōhiwa Harbour to Opape, and inland to Mātāwai, and is centred in the area around the town of Ōpōtiki. These lands have long held an abundance of food resources, particularly seafood. All their historical were situated near the coast, to defend the marine resources.[3]

Te Whakatōhea
Iwi (tribe) in Māoridom
Ōpōtiki township
Rohe (region)Bay of Plenty
Waka (canoe)Arautauta, Mātaatua, Nukutere
Population9,948

In the 2006 Census, 12,072 people claimed an affiliation with Te Whakatōhea.[4]

History edit

Pre-European history edit

One of Te Whakatōhea's earliest ancestors was chief Tarawa and his brother Tuwharanui, who had been left behind when the Te Tohorā waka left Hawaiki, and so built Te Arautauta waka to join the rest of their people in New Zealand. They arrived at Paerātā, east of the Waiōtahe River. Tarawa released two pet tanahanaha fish into a spring on the eastern bluff above Waiōtahe Beach, which came to be known as Ōpōtiki-mai-tawhiti.[5][6][7][8] Tarawa continued up the Mōtū River and married Manawa-ki-aitu.[9]

The tribe's next prominent ancestor was Tautūrangi of his own Te Wakanui tribe, who arrived with the Nukutere waka around 26 generations before 1900CE. It made landfall on a rocky cove and was moored to a flat white rock now known as Te Rangi. Tautūrangi then sailed the waka around to Te Kōtukutuku and went ashore, where he went up the Waiaua Valley to a high point named Kapuarangi where he installed his atua, Tamaīwaho.[5][8]

Nine generations after the arrival of Nukutere, the next waka to arrive was Mātaatua which landed at Whakatāne with kūmara, and carried the ancestress Muriwai, the eldest daughter of Wekanui and Irākewa whose other two children, sons, were Toroa and Puhi. The three siblings also had a half brother, Tāneatua. In Te Whakatōhea's traditions Muriwai spoke the famous words "kia tū whakatāne au i ahau", or "ka whakatāne au i ahau", which is roughly translated to "make me stand like a man" as Mātaatua was being swept back out to sea, while Muriwai's brothers and their men were scouting the land. It was these words that gave her the right to pull the waka back to safety, and from these words being spoken at the landing place that Whakatane gets its name.[5][8] Toroa's daughter Wairaka was an ancestress of Ngāti Awa and Ngāi Tūhoe.[9]

Muriwai's son Rēpanga went to Ōpōtiki and married Ngāpoupereta, their descendant Ruatakena became the ancestor of Ngāti Ruatakena. Muriwai's daughter Hine-i-kauia followed Rēpanga and married Tūtāmure, born eight generations after Tautūrangi's arrival in New Zealand. He established the eastern boundary between the tribes of Te Wakanui and Ngāi Tai at Tōrere, and inland from Te Rangi cove to Ōroi.[5][8] He led an attack against Ngāti Kahungunu's at Maungakāhia to avenge the murder of his sister Tāneroa, murdered by her husband. Tautūrangi's attacks were so vicious that he broke his weapon, a mere, and had to swap it for another more durable mere made of whalebone. With this he smashed the heads of his enemies, and buried them in the ground. For this his people became known as Te Panenehu ("the buried heads").[5][8]

Tautūrangi established the Poutōtara pā inland at Waiaua to defend against further attacks from Ngāti Kahungunu. The ancestral house at Omarumutu marae is named Tutamure and the dining room is named Hine-i-kauia, and behind the marae Tautūrangi occupied another pā on the Mākeo hill. Their descendants would become Te Whakatōhea.[5][8]

Tautūrangi's western counterpart was Kahuki of the Whakatāne hapū. Kahuki conquered the nearby territory in revenge for the killing of his father Rongopopoia, after which he returned to Waiōtahe and constructed a pā close to the river. Whakatāne and Ngāti Raumoa, including the Te Ūpokorehe hapū, were living on Waiōtahe and Ōhiwa land which were under Kahuki's control. Te Ūpokorehe were subjected to attacks from Ngāti Awa on the western border, and sought refuge at Ōpōtiki. Ngāti Awa and their ally Ngāi Tūhoe would meet with Whakatōhea and their chief Te Rupe for one final battle at Ōhope. Te Rupe was able to boost his peoples' moral with the haka Te kōtiritiri te kōtaratara, and won the battle.[5][8]

Before the arrival of the Europeans, the final, defining battle against Ngāi Tai was done at Awahou under Punāhamoa's leadership. Ngāi Tai's leader Tūterangikūrei was killed, and his head preserved as a trophy. Ngāi Tai were able to take Tūterangikūrei's head back in exchange for the pounamu adze Waiwharangi, which today is held in the Whakatāne Museum.[5][8]

Modern history edit

The iwi initially had good relations with European settlers and Christian missionaries. However, in 1865, following the murder of German missionary Carl Völkner, and with increasing demands from European settlers for more land, Crown soldiers invaded Te Whakatōhea land. Almost 600 km2 of Whakatōhea land was confiscated by the Crown under the New Zealand Settlements Act of 1863. All the hapū were crowded into one area, the Ōpape Native Reserve.[10][11]

During the twentieth century there was increasing recognition that Whakatōhea had suffered grievances at the hands of the Crown. In 1996, the New Zealand government signed a Deed of Settlement, acknowledging and apologising for the invasion and confiscation of Whakatōhea lands, and the subsequent economic, cultural and developmental devastation suffered by the iwi. A settlement between Whakatōhea and the Crown and redress was finalised on 27 May 2023.[12]

Tuiringa Manny Mokomoko, an activist for tūpuna who died in 1866, received a Royal Pardon in 1992 over wrongful confiscation of Māori land.[13]

Hapū and marae edit

Whakatōhea consists of about 17,000 whānau belonging to six hapū.[14]

The status of Te Ūpokorehe, a tribal group covering an area between Ōhope and Ōpōtiki, is in dispute. It was included as a hapū within Whakatōhea when the Whakatōhea Māori Trust Board was established in 1952. Some consider it part of Whakatōhea and want it to be part of the iwi's Treaty of Waitangi settlement, while others consider it a separate iwi and want it to have its own Waitangi Tribunal hearing and settlement.[15][16]

Hapū Mountain River Moana (harbour/lake) Marae Meeting house Dining hall
Ngāi Tamahua Tarakeha Opepe n/a Opape Marae Muriwai Tapairu
Ngāti Ira Mātiti Waioweka n/a Ōpeke Marae Irapuaia Te Kurapare
Ngāti Ngāhere Maungarangi Otara n/a Te Rere Marae Te Iringa Whiripare
Ngāti Patumoana Mākeo Waiaua n/a Waiaua Marae Ruamoko Te Puritanga
Ngāti Ruatakena Mākeo Waiaua n/a Omarumutu Marae Tūtāmure Hine-i-Kauia
Te Ūpokorehe (status disputed) Tirotirowhitu, Pukenui-o-raho, Hiwarau Kakaho, Waiotahe, Te Karaka Tairongo Various Various Various

Governance edit

The Whakatōhea Māori Trust Board was established in 1952 to administer the assets of the iwi, and provides members with education, health services and training in various commercial fields.[1] It is a charitable trust governed by two representatives from each of the six hapū, and based in Ōpōtiki. It is also accountable to the Minister of Maori Affairs and is governed by the Maori Trust Boards Act.[2] The trust represents the tribe's fisheries interest under the Māori Fisheries Act 2004, and its aquaculture interests under the Māori Commercial Aquaculture Claims Settlement Act 2004. It represents the tribe during consultation on resource consent applications under the Resource Management Act 1991.[2]

The Whakatōhea Pre-Settlement Claims Trust represents the tribe during Treaty of Waitangi settlement negotiations. The New Zealand Government recognised the trust's mandate to represent the iwi with an Agreement in Principle signed with the Crown on 18 August 2017. The trust is governed by one trustee elected from each of six hapū, one trustee appointed from each of eight marae, and an additional trustee appointed by Whakatōhea Māori Trust Board. The trust is administered by the same staff as the trust board, in the same offices in Ōpōtiki.[2]

Roimata Marae say they aren't represented on the trusts and the trusts cannot act on their behalf.[16][15]

The tribal area of Whakatōhea is located within the boundaries of Ōpōtiki District Council and Bay of Plenty Regional Council.[2]

Media edit

Pan-tribal iwi station Sea 92FM broadcasts to members of Whakatōhea, Ngāitai and Te Whānau-ā-Apanui in the Ōpōtiki area.[17] It is operated by pan-tribal service provider Whakaatu Whanaunga Trust, and is available on 92.0 FM. It operates the low-power Opotiki 88.1 FM, geared towards a young demographic.[18]

Notable people edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Te Whakatōhea Māori Trust Board website". Retrieved 2 April 2007.
  2. ^ a b c d e "TKM Whakatōhea". tkm.govt.nz. Te Puni Kōkiri, New Zealand Government. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
  3. ^ Walker, Ranginui (1 March 2017). "Te Whakatōhea – Lands and resources". Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
  4. ^ . Statistics New Zealand. 4 April 2007. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 25 May 2007.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h "Ancestors". Te Ara. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  6. ^ "Tangata whenua pou – Te Whakatōhea". Te Ara. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  7. ^ "Living History of Opotiki". Opotiki.info Ltd. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h "Tipuna". Whakatōhea Māori Trust Board. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  9. ^ a b "Canoes of the Bay of Plenty". Te Ara. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  10. ^ Walker, Ranginui (1 March 2017). "Te Whakatōhea – From European contact to today". Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
  11. ^ "The Ōpape Native Reserve". Whakatōhea and Te Tāwharau o Te Whakatōhea and the Crown Deed of Settlement of Historical Claims (PDF). pp. 35–37. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
  12. ^ Rolleston, Te Aorewa (27 May 2023). "Whakatōhea signs 100-million dollar deed of settlement to recognise 'past injustices' with Crown". Stuff. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
  13. ^ Amoamo, Tairongo. "Mokomoko". Te Ara: The Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 14 October 2019.
  14. ^ "We are Whakatōhea". WPCT.
  15. ^ a b McCarthy, Diane (28 July 2022). "Schism in Bay of Plenty hapū amid move to extract it from Whakatōhea settlement". Stuff.co.nz.
  16. ^ a b "Te Ūpokorehe steamrolled by Te Whakatōhea deal". Radio Waatea. 23 December 2021.
  17. ^ Carlsson, Sven. "Contractors install the Whakaatu Whanaunga Trust's far-reaching antenna last Friday". Opotiki News. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  18. ^ "Iwi Radio Coverage" (PDF). maorimedia.co.nz. Māori Media Network. 2007. Retrieved 14 June 2015.
  19. ^ Hongi Hika: A Portrait. Journal of Museum Ethnography No. 32 2019. pp. 209-224. Hongi’s Hikoi: Tales through Tāonga. Oceanic Arts Society. https://www.oceanicartsociety.org.au/hongis-hikoi-tales-through-taonga/ Chau Chak Wing Museum. https://publish.twitter.com/?query=https%3A%2F%2Ftwitter.com%2Fccwm_sydney%2Fstatus%2F1649279402000388096&widget=Tweet

whakatōhea, māori, eastern, plenty, region, zealand, their, traditional, territory, extends, along, coastline, eastwards, from, Ōhiwa, harbour, opape, inland, mātāwai, centred, area, around, town, Ōpōtiki, these, lands, have, long, held, abundance, food, resou. Te Whakatōhea is a Maori iwi of the eastern Bay of Plenty region of New Zealand 1 2 Their traditional territory extends along the coastline eastwards from Ōhiwa Harbour to Opape and inland to Matawai and is centred in the area around the town of Ōpōtiki These lands have long held an abundance of food resources particularly seafood All their historical pa were situated near the coast to defend the marine resources 3 Te WhakatōheaIwi tribe in MaoridomŌpōtiki townshipRohe region Bay of PlentyWaka canoe Arautauta Mataatua NukuterePopulation9 948In the 2006 Census 12 072 people claimed an affiliation with Te Whakatōhea 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre European history 1 2 Modern history 2 Hapu and marae 3 Governance 4 Media 5 Notable people 6 See also 7 ReferencesHistory editPre European history edit One of Te Whakatōhea s earliest ancestors was chief Tarawa and his brother Tuwharanui who had been left behind when the Te Tohora waka left Hawaiki and so built Te Arautauta waka to join the rest of their people in New Zealand They arrived at Paerata east of the Waiōtahe River Tarawa released two pet tanahanaha fish into a spring on the eastern bluff above Waiōtahe Beach which came to be known as Ōpōtiki mai tawhiti 5 6 7 8 Tarawa continued up the Mōtu River and married Manawa ki aitu 9 The tribe s next prominent ancestor was Tauturangi of his own Te Wakanui tribe who arrived with the Nukutere waka around 26 generations before 1900CE It made landfall on a rocky cove and was moored to a flat white rock now known as Te Rangi Tauturangi then sailed the waka around to Te Kōtukutuku and went ashore where he went up the Waiaua Valley to a high point named Kapuarangi where he installed his atua Tamaiwaho 5 8 Nine generations after the arrival of Nukutere the next waka to arrive was Mataatua which landed at Whakatane with kumara and carried the ancestress Muriwai the eldest daughter of Wekanui and Irakewa whose other two children sons were Toroa and Puhi The three siblings also had a half brother Taneatua In Te Whakatōhea s traditions Muriwai spoke the famous words kia tu whakatane au i ahau or ka whakatane au i ahau which is roughly translated to make me stand like a man as Mataatua was being swept back out to sea while Muriwai s brothers and their men were scouting the land It was these words that gave her the right to pull the waka back to safety and from these words being spoken at the landing place that Whakatane gets its name 5 8 Toroa s daughter Wairaka was an ancestress of Ngati Awa and Ngai Tuhoe 9 Muriwai s son Repanga went to Ōpōtiki and married Ngapoupereta their descendant Ruatakena became the ancestor of Ngati Ruatakena Muriwai s daughter Hine i kauia followed Repanga and married Tutamure born eight generations after Tauturangi s arrival in New Zealand He established the eastern boundary between the tribes of Te Wakanui and Ngai Tai at Tōrere and inland from Te Rangi cove to Ōroi 5 8 He led an attack against Ngati Kahungunu s pa at Maungakahia to avenge the murder of his sister Taneroa murdered by her husband Tauturangi s attacks were so vicious that he broke his weapon a mere and had to swap it for another more durable mere made of whalebone With this he smashed the heads of his enemies and buried them in the ground For this his people became known as Te Panenehu the buried heads 5 8 Tauturangi established the Poutōtara pa inland at Waiaua to defend against further attacks from Ngati Kahungunu The ancestral house at Omarumutu marae is named Tutamure and the dining room is named Hine i kauia and behind the marae Tauturangi occupied another pa on the Makeo hill Their descendants would become Te Whakatōhea 5 8 Tauturangi s western counterpart was Kahuki of the Whakatane hapu Kahuki conquered the nearby territory in revenge for the killing of his father Rongopopoia after which he returned to Waiōtahe and constructed a pa close to the river Whakatane and Ngati Raumoa including the Te upokorehe hapu were living on Waiōtahe and Ōhiwa land which were under Kahuki s control Te upokorehe were subjected to attacks from Ngati Awa on the western border and sought refuge at Ōpōtiki Ngati Awa and their ally Ngai Tuhoe would meet with Whakatōhea and their chief Te Rupe for one final battle at Ōhope Te Rupe was able to boost his peoples moral with the haka Te kōtiritiri te kōtaratara and won the battle 5 8 Before the arrival of the Europeans the final defining battle against Ngai Tai was done at Awahou under Punahamoa s leadership Ngai Tai s leader Tuterangikurei was killed and his head preserved as a trophy Ngai Tai were able to take Tuterangikurei s head back in exchange for the pounamu adze Waiwharangi which today is held in the Whakatane Museum 5 8 Modern history edit The iwi initially had good relations with European settlers and Christian missionaries However in 1865 following the murder of German missionary Carl Volkner and with increasing demands from European settlers for more land Crown soldiers invaded Te Whakatōhea land Almost 600 km2 of Whakatōhea land was confiscated by the Crown under the New Zealand Settlements Act of 1863 All the hapu were crowded into one area the Ōpape Native Reserve 10 11 During the twentieth century there was increasing recognition that Whakatōhea had suffered grievances at the hands of the Crown In 1996 the New Zealand government signed a Deed of Settlement acknowledging and apologising for the invasion and confiscation of Whakatōhea lands and the subsequent economic cultural and developmental devastation suffered by the iwi A settlement between Whakatōhea and the Crown and redress was finalised on 27 May 2023 12 Tuiringa Manny Mokomoko an activist for tupuna who died in 1866 received a Royal Pardon in 1992 over wrongful confiscation of Maori land 13 Hapu and marae editWhakatōhea consists of about 17 000 whanau belonging to six hapu 14 The status of Te upokorehe a tribal group covering an area between Ōhope and Ōpōtiki is in dispute It was included as a hapu within Whakatōhea when the Whakatōhea Maori Trust Board was established in 1952 Some consider it part of Whakatōhea and want it to be part of the iwi s Treaty of Waitangi settlement while others consider it a separate iwi and want it to have its own Waitangi Tribunal hearing and settlement 15 16 Hapu Mountain River Moana harbour lake Marae Meeting house Dining hallNgai Tamahua Tarakeha Opepe n a Opape Marae Muriwai TapairuNgati Ira Matiti Waioweka n a Ōpeke Marae Irapuaia Te KurapareNgati Ngahere Maungarangi Otara n a Te Rere Marae Te Iringa WhiripareNgati Patumoana Makeo Waiaua n a Waiaua Marae Ruamoko Te PuritangaNgati Ruatakena Makeo Waiaua n a Omarumutu Marae Tutamure Hine i KauiaTe upokorehe status disputed Tirotirowhitu Pukenui o raho Hiwarau Kakaho Waiotahe Te Karaka Tairongo Various Various VariousGovernance editThe Whakatōhea Maori Trust Board was established in 1952 to administer the assets of the iwi and provides members with education health services and training in various commercial fields 1 It is a charitable trust governed by two representatives from each of the six hapu and based in Ōpōtiki It is also accountable to the Minister of Maori Affairs and is governed by the Maori Trust Boards Act 2 The trust represents the tribe s fisheries interest under the Maori Fisheries Act 2004 and its aquaculture interests under the Maori Commercial Aquaculture Claims Settlement Act 2004 It represents the tribe during consultation on resource consent applications under the Resource Management Act 1991 2 The Whakatōhea Pre Settlement Claims Trust represents the tribe during Treaty of Waitangi settlement negotiations The New Zealand Government recognised the trust s mandate to represent the iwi with an Agreement in Principle signed with the Crown on 18 August 2017 The trust is governed by one trustee elected from each of six hapu one trustee appointed from each of eight marae and an additional trustee appointed by Whakatōhea Maori Trust Board The trust is administered by the same staff as the trust board in the same offices in Ōpōtiki 2 Roimata Marae say they aren t represented on the trusts and the trusts cannot act on their behalf 16 15 The tribal area of Whakatōhea is located within the boundaries of Ōpōtiki District Council and Bay of Plenty Regional Council 2 Media editPan tribal iwi station Sea 92FM broadcasts to members of Whakatōhea Ngaitai and Te Whanau a Apanui in the Ōpōtiki area 17 It is operated by pan tribal service provider Whakaatu Whanaunga Trust and is available on 92 0 FM It operates the low power Opotiki 88 1 FM geared towards a young demographic 18 Notable people editMain category Whakatōhea people Tuakana Aporotanga tribal leader and Ringatu tohunga Te Raumoa Balneavis interpreter and administrator Whirimako Black singer and actress Tangimoe Clay weaver and textile artist Paora Kingi Delamere carpenter and boat builder Matiu Dickson academic and politician George Gage Ringatu minister Wira Gardiner soldier civil servant and writer Akenehi Hei nurse and midwife Kayla Imrie canoeist Brent Kerehona Pukepuke Ahitapu academic weaver and author 19 Paratene Matchitt sculpture and painter Gareeb Stephen Shalfoon musician Charles Shelford soldier Frank Shelford rugby union player Matiu Te Auripo Te Hau teacher and community leader Hira Te Popo tribal leader Michael Walker biologistSee also editList of Maori iwiReferences edit a b Te Whakatōhea Maori Trust Board website Retrieved 2 April 2007 a b c d e TKM Whakatōhea tkm govt nz Te Puni Kōkiri New Zealand Government Retrieved 21 March 2018 Walker Ranginui 1 March 2017 Te Whakatōhea Lands and resources Te Ara the Encyclopedia of New Zealand Retrieved 31 August 2023 2006 Census QuickStats About Maori revised Statistics New Zealand 4 April 2007 Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Retrieved 25 May 2007 a b c d e f g h Ancestors Te Ara Retrieved 18 May 2020 Tangata whenua pou Te Whakatōhea Te Ara Retrieved 18 May 2020 Living History of Opotiki Opotiki info Ltd Retrieved 18 May 2020 a b c d e f g h Tipuna Whakatōhea Maori Trust Board Retrieved 18 May 2020 a b Canoes of the Bay of Plenty Te Ara Retrieved 18 May 2020 Walker Ranginui 1 March 2017 Te Whakatōhea From European contact to today Te Ara the Encyclopedia of New Zealand Retrieved 31 August 2023 The Ōpape Native Reserve Whakatōhea and Te Tawharau o Te Whakatōhea and the Crown Deed of Settlement of Historical Claims PDF pp 35 37 Retrieved 31 August 2023 Rolleston Te Aorewa 27 May 2023 Whakatōhea signs 100 million dollar deed of settlement to recognise past injustices with Crown Stuff Retrieved 31 August 2023 Amoamo Tairongo Mokomoko Te Ara The Encyclopedia of New Zealand Retrieved 14 October 2019 We are Whakatōhea WPCT a b McCarthy Diane 28 July 2022 Schism in Bay of Plenty hapu amid move to extract it from Whakatōhea settlement Stuff co nz a b Te upokorehe steamrolled by Te Whakatōhea deal Radio Waatea 23 December 2021 Carlsson Sven Contractors install the Whakaatu Whanaunga Trust s far reaching antenna last Friday Opotiki News Retrieved 26 April 2015 Iwi Radio Coverage PDF maorimedia co nz Maori Media Network 2007 Retrieved 14 June 2015 Hongi Hika A Portrait Journal of Museum Ethnography No 32 2019 pp 209 224 Hongi s Hikoi Tales through Taonga Oceanic Arts Society https www oceanicartsociety org au hongis hikoi tales through taonga Chau Chak Wing Museum https publish twitter com query https 3A 2F 2Ftwitter com 2Fccwm sydney 2Fstatus 2F1649279402000388096 amp widget Tweet Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Whakatōhea amp oldid 1189636323, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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