Pakeha Maori

Pākehā Māori is a term used to describe some early European settlers in New Zealand (known as Pākehā in the Māori Language) who lived among the Māori. Some, the Māori kept as slaves, but others settled in Māori communities by choice. Among these, many were runaway seamen and escaped convicts. They were often welcomed by the Māori and took wives and were treated as Māori. Some even received the moko or facial tattoo. Some even achieved a degree of prestige among the Māori and fought in battle with their adopted tribe in the Māori Wars, sometimes even against European soldiers. The early settler Frederick Edward Maning published two books under the pseudonym Pakeha Māori.

References

  • Pakeha Maori: The extraordinary story of the Europeans who lived as Maori in early New Zealand by Trevor Bentley; published 1999 ISBN 0-14-028540-7

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
hms glory (r62)
hms vengeance (r71)
hms pioneer (r76)
hms venerable (r63)
hms perseus (r51)
prairie island indian reservation
madawaska river
glorious class aircraft carrier
hms courageous (50)
molossus (biology)
grey tuesday
jim bacon
list of sudbury schools
obsolete scientific theory
ethics and evolutionary psychology
etisalat
rosh hanikra
householder transformation
abel programming language
chinese martial arts
suicide by cop
michael holroyd
vijay anand
non partisan association
hindbrain
periodogram
cranbrook, british columbia
regional district of kootenay boundary, british columbia
leslie frost
mail call
war of the three henrys
hnon map
earnshaw's theorem
list of australian divisions in world war i
gordon daniel conant
tigermilk
peter macnicol
valour class patrol corvettes
m&m's
b 52 (hairstyle)
maria schell
robert james manion
baron hemphill
british 15th (scottish) division