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  2. First peoples in Māori tradition. Story: First peoples in Māori tradition. Among Māori tribes there are many oral traditions about ancient peoples and gods who inhabited New Zealand from the beginning of time.

  3. First peoples in Māori tradition. ›. Page 1. Story: First peoples in Māori tradition. Contents. Story summary. Framework of the traditions. Tāne, Hineahuone and Hine. Māui. Ancestors from the natural world. Patupaiarehe, tūrehu and other inhabitants. Kupe. Toitehuatahi. External links and sources. Page 1. Framework of the traditions.

  4. The following story was written by Hoani Nahe, a Ngāti Maru (Hauraki) elder of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He writes graphically of a people called the patupaiarehe and the tūrehu, who inhabited the land prior to the arrival of the Polynesian peoples. <...

  5. James Cook. For almost 130 years, Europeans and Māori had no further contact with each other. Then on 8 October 1769, James Cook and others landed on the east side of the Tūranganui River, near present-day Gisborne. It appears from later accounts that the local Māori at first took the ship to be a floating island or giant bird.

  6. Jan 23, 2021 · The Great Fires of Tamātea, as Maori lore records them, resulted in the permanent deforestation of many of the drier parts of the South Island. (Later British colonists would perpetrate the same mistake in both main islands of New Zealand. Striving to clear small areas of ‘bush’ they would inadvertently set fire to large, valuable forests.)

  7. e. The history of the Māori began with the arrival of Polynesian settlers in New Zealand ( Aotearoa in Māori ), in a series of ocean migrations in canoes starting from the late 13th or early 14th centuries. Over time, in isolation the Polynesian settlers developed a distinct Māori culture . Early Māori history is often divided into two ...

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