Ngāti Hotu

Ngāti Hotu

Ngāti Hotu was a pre maori people that, according to tradition, lived in the central North Island of New Zealand in the area surrounding southern Lake Taupo, where the Ngāti Tūwharetoa tribe now resides.

The battle of the five forts

Ngāti Hotu were found living around the shores of lakes Taupo and Rotoaira by the Ngāti Tūwharetoa iwi (tribe) in perhaps the 15th century. Ngāti Tūwharetoa were then resident at Kawerau and associated with Te Arawa iwi which today occupies the area from the Bay of Plenty coastline to the Lake Taupo district. Ngāti Hotu suffered a major defeat at the battle of Pukekaikiore ('hill of the meal of rats') to the southwest of Lake Taupo where Ngāti Tūwharetoa devastated them, causing the few survivors to flee.

Apparently some of the survivors settled around the village of Kakahi ('freshwater mussels') which lies 30 kilometres west of Lake Taupo. They were discovered there by a party of Whanganui Māori journeying up the river of the same name, who soon called up reinforcements to attack the settlement. The Ngāti Hotu set up a ring of five forts around Kakahi which the Whanganui Māori attacked and took one by one until finally the last two, Otutaarua and Arikipakewa, fell. The final, brutal episode of the battle was played out on the flats between Kakahi and the Whanganui river when the now, effectively victorious Whanganui Māori hung the legs of fallen Ngāti Hotu warriors from poles mounted in the forks of trees - a gesture at which their remaining enemies broke and fled off into the depths of the King Country to vanish from history.

The battle is estimated to have occurred circa 1450 and its story has since been handed down through 15 generations to the Whanganui kaumatua Takiwa Tauarua, who related it to prominent New Zealand artist Peter McIntyre in the 1960s.

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • List of Māori battles — The list of Māori battles includes four types of battles: mythological from the “wars of the gods” Epos, inter tribal battles before the European contact found in Māori oral tradition, the Musket Wars battles, and those that took place between… …   Wikipedia

  • Kerry Bolton — Kerry Raymond Bolton (born 1956) is a far right activist in New Zealand. He has been involved in many organisations and has written publications focused around politics and on his interest in metaphysics, religion, and the occult. [cite book… …   Wikipedia

  • Rousseur — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Roux. Femme rousse, ses cheveux sont roux et sa peau claire. La rousseur représente approximativement 1 à 2 pour cent de la population humaine …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Taniwha — district plays on this double meaning: Waikato taniwha rau Waikato of a thousand chiefs (Mead Groves 2001:421). [A fuller version of the saying, Waikato taniwha rau, he piko he taniwha, he piko he taniwha (Waikato of a hundred taniwha, a taniwha… …   Wikipedia

  • Tiki — This article is about the large Polynesian carvings in humanoid form. For other uses, see Tiki (disambiguation). A Māori man retouches the painted tattoo on a carved wooden tiki at Whakarewarewa Model Village, New Zealand, 1905 …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”