Te Ara Wiremu Tamihana, Tarapipipi put into practice the Christian teachings he had embraced within a traditional Māori framework, and guided his people to do likewise. Brown in 1839. Wiremu Tāmihana Tarapīpipi Te Waharoa, born around 1805, belonged to the Ngāti Hauā iwi of the Tainui confederation. Later in life, Te Waharoa made a tribal base in Omokoroa, probably to better his trading opportunities with his Tauranga allies. He was the second son of the famous Ngāti Hauā chief, Te Waharoa. Te Ihingarangi: a history of the Karapiro & Maungatautari area by Te Kaapo Clark & Lyn Tairi. Horses graze nearby. 1805-1866), known as Wiremu Tāmihana, with links to related events, people of interest, and items in our archive collections. Te Ārahi was the eldest son of Te Waharoa, but it was Tarapīpipi who inherited his father's mana. Tarapīpipi participated in several war expeditions in the Waikato and Taranaki districts, but, when Ngāti Whakaue destroyed the mission station at On 27 December 1866, Wiremu Tāmihana Tarapīpipi Te Waharoa, known by Pākehā as the ‘kingmaker’, passed away. Te Tiriti of Waitangi / Treaty of Waitangi, was first signed in the Bay of Islands on 6 February 1840. Evelyn Stokes, 'Te Waharoa, Wiremu Tamihana Tarapipipi ? - 1866', Dictionary of New Zealand Biography, updated 22 June 2007, accessed 2 March 2010. In the 1850s he headed a model Christian community at Pēria while negotiating to set up a Māori king. EDITED BY G. A new biography of Te Waharoa, Wiremu Tamihana Tarapipipi appears in the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography on this site. Te Ahukaramū Charles Royal, 'Waikato - The King movement', Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, updated 4 March 2009, accessed 2 March 2010. After his From Manatū Taonga, the Ministry for Culture and Heritage: Wiremu Tāmihana Tarapīpipi Te Waharoa, born around 1805, belonged to the Ngāti Hauā iwi of the Tainui confederation. H. Reproduced with kind permission from Lyn Tairi. SummaryBreif biography of Ngāti Hauā leader Wiremu Tāmihana Tarapīpipi Te Waharoa (c. N. TE WAHAROA, WIREMU TAMIHANA TARAPIPIPI (?-1866) succeeded his father as head chief of the Ngati-Haua, who had their headquarters at Tamahere and Matamata and owned much land in the Thames and Waikato valleys. Over the following months a further eight Treaty sheets were signed in various locations around Aotearoa. He resisted pressure from the tribe to carry on Ngāti Hauā campaigns against Te Arawa. Kāhore ia i whakarongo ki ngā whakahau a Ngāti Hauā ki te pakanga tonu ki a Te Arawa. Watch a dramatisation of the events leading up to the Waikato War of 1863–4, featuring Don Selwyn as Wiremu Tāmihana Tarapīpipi Te Waharoa. Born around 1805, Wiremu belonged to the Ngāti Hauā iwi of the Tainui confederation. Wiremu Tāmihana Tarapīpipi was a man of peace forced into war. Also known asWiremu Tamihana Life datesc1805-1866 BiographyWiremu's father was the leader of the tribe Ngāti Hauā, which settled the area along the Waikato River near Horotiu as far east as the Kaimai Ranges. Wiremu Tamihana was still from time to time engaged in outbreaks of intertribal warfare, particularly against Te Arawa tribes; during one raid in the Rotorua region, he intervened to ensure the safety of two missionaries during the destruction of the CMS station at Ohinemutu by the Te Arawa tribe Ngati Whakaue, with whom Ngati Haua was fighting. Brown, a Church Missionary Society missionary at Matamata, he quickly learned to read and write in Māori. As a young man he took part in several war expeditions. Source: King Country region - Māori and European contact, Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand John Kinder took this photograph of Wiremu Tāmihana Tarapīpipi Te Waharoa and two young family members about 1865. One of those places was Tauranga. 1844/1845? – 24 June 1929) was a New Zealand Māori leader of Ngāti Hauā, renowned as a kingmaker and key architect of the Kīngitanga (Māori King Movement)'s governance structures. The governor was a landmark television series about the life of Sir George Grey, and was both ambitious and highly controversial at the time of its release. He accompanied his father on several campaigns against the Rotorua and Bay of Plenty tribes, and was present at the battle of Motunui (1822). A DICTIONARY OF NEW ZEALAND BIOGRAPHY. Nō te marama o Oketopa 1838, ka mate a Te Waharoa, ka tū a Tarapīpipi hei kaiārahi i roto i a Ngāti Hauā. 5. This 1865 wood engraving shows Wiremu Tāmihana Tarapīpipi Te Waharoa negotiating with Brigadier George Jackson Carey during the New Zealand wars. Mentored by A. Main Body Wiremu Tāmihana Tarapīpipi Te Waharoa, born around 1805, belonged to the Ngāti Hauā iwi of the Tainui confederation. Ko Te Ārahi te mātāmua a Te Waharoa, ēngari ko te mana i riro kē i a Tarapīpipi. 1805 – 27 December 1866), generally known as Wiremu Tamihana, was a leader of the Ngāti Hauā Māori iwi in nineteenth century New Zealand, and is sometimes known as the kingmaker for his role in the Māori King Movement. SCHOLEFIELD This meeting was later called Te Puna o te Roimata – the wellspring of tears – referring to the troubled times that followed. The Ngāti Hauā chief Tarapipipi Te Waharoa, or Wiremu Tamihana, was also named The Kingmaker for his role in promoting the idea of a Māori king and advocating at several hui during the 1850s for Pōtatau Te Wherowhero to take up the role of king. Korero about Wiremu Tarapīpipi Tarapīpipi Te Waharoa, or Wiremu Tamihana as he was later known, was born at Tamahere near Cambridge in the early years of the nineteenth century. This Wiremu Tamihana is different to Wiremu Tarapīpipi Tamihana of Ngāti Haua and Wiremu Tamihana Te Neke of Te Ātiawa. E ai ki a Parāone, he tangata ngākau tōkete, nō te mea, ahakoa te puta o te riri o tana iwi ki a ia, ka Evelyn Stokes, 'Te Waharoa, Wiremu Tamihana Tarapipipi ? - 1866', Dictionary of New Zealand Biography, updated 22 June 2007, accessed 2 March 2010. . N. Wiremu Tamihana Tarapipipi Te Waharoa (c. In 1835, Wiremu met Reverend A. He was given the name Wiremu Tamihana (William Thompson), and embarked on a life of teaching and preaching in the Tauranga and Matamata districts. Wiremu Tāmihana Tarapīpipi was a man of peace forced into war. Tupu Atanatiu Taingākawa Te Waharoa (c. The second son of the influential chief Wiremu Tāmihana Tarapīpipi Te Waharoa, he assumed leadership roles within Ngāti Hauā from 1867 and became a staunch Wiremu Tamihana Tarapipipi Te Waharoa (c. He lived by the principles of Te Whakapono, Te Ture, Te Aroha: be steadfast in faith in God, uphold the rule of law, show love and compassion to all. He was baptised by the CMS missionary A. Although seen here in a warlike pose, the Ngāti Hauā leader Wiremu Tāmihana Tarapīpipi Te Waharoa was committed to peace and Christian principles for nearly all his adult life. Through the custom of takahī (tramping the land) Ngāti Mutunga claimed large areas of land through conquest on Wharekauri. Brown, who had set up Watch a dramatisation of the events leading up to the Waikato War of 1863–4, featuring Don Selwyn as Wiremu Tāmihana Tarapīpipi Te Waharoa. During the wars of the 1860s, all parties used horses, and their theft from adversaries was common. Ngāti Hauā chief who took a leading role in forming the King Movement (Kīngitanga) and the election of Pōtatau Te Wherowhero as the first Māori King. ruzwf, k6cry, vvykhb, l5yv, bwvd4, kzoer, 5xgln, w9ui9, shaa, iezdgf,