Ngati Hei
Encyclopedia
Ngāti Hei is a Māori iwi
Iwi
In New Zealand society, iwi form the largest everyday social units in Māori culture. The word iwi means "'peoples' or 'nations'. In "the work of European writers which treat iwi and hapū as parts of a hierarchical structure", it has been used to mean "tribe" , or confederation of tribes,...

 of New Zealand
New Zealand
New Zealand is an island country in the south-western Pacific Ocean comprising two main landmasses and numerous smaller islands. The country is situated some east of Australia across the Tasman Sea, and roughly south of the Pacific island nations of New Caledonia, Fiji, and Tonga...

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Ngati Hei is generally recognised as the dominant tribe of the Mercury Bay area. Iwi spokes person Joe Davis is a well known local identity and Rangitira of Ngati Hei. He and his family reside Wharekaho on iwi ancestral land on the shores of Mercury Bay
There has always been much speculation as to the origins of Maori people. Historians agree that Maori arrived in Aotearoa from place in the South Pacific Ocean called Hawaiiki, but its exact location has been the subject of much debate and speculation.

By contrast Ngati Hei has much more definite ideas from whence they came. Joe told us that Ngati Hei can trace its roots to the arrival of Kupe, the great navigator, who sailed from Tahiti to Aotearoa in 950AD and whose presence is commemorated in place names around the district. Ngati Hei is named for the esteemed spiritual tauira (authority) Hei, who sailed with Kupe to Aotearoa on the waka, Te Arawa.

Ngati Hei were reputed to be peaceable seafaring people. Unfortunately throughout history they endured much suffering at the hands of raiding parties who repeatedly stripped Ngati Hei of their assets and slaughtered them with muskets.

Today Ngati Hei numbers just 300. Their legends speak of Kupe coming to these shores from Ra 'iatea (Tahiti) aboard the waka Matahourua in the tenth century.

A lesser known place name is Koko-ia-Kupe - a snug little bay on Whakau (Red Mercury Island). The Maori name was later displaced by Von Luckners Cove, after an incident during the World War I.

These two place names are the only enduring reminders of the Tahitian Polynesian on the Hauraki Peninsula. Interestingly, there is a place on Ra 'iatea, in the leeward Tahitian group, named Hitia' a - the same word as the Maori Whitianga.

Another significant historical marker showing the migration of the Tahitians is the name of a headland pa and small stream near Whitianga. The name is Tapu Tapu Atea - which was also the name of Kupe's great international temple at Opoa on the island of Raiiatea . In the mid 19th century, this temple - famous for its ceremonial feasts - was the home of Polynesian knowledge and instruction.

It was Kupe who named this place at Whitianga, where the stream used to flow out onto Buffalo Beach, immediately below the ancient pa. The old temple at Opoa on Ra'iatea is said to be the marae matua, which still stands today on the low, wide cape overlooking Akaroa Bay.

After Kupe returned to Tahiti, there were other voyages to Aotearoa, including one led by Toi. The entire Coromandel Peninsula is known as Te Paeroa-o-Toi (the long mountain ridge of Toi) and was well-populated after Kupe's time by the so-called Maoriori, or Mauriuri - a people descendant of Maui or Te-Tini-o-Maui.

They intermingled with some of Kupe's people, and became known as Maruiwi, having descended from an ancestor of that name. Nga Maruiwi clashed with Toi's people when they arrived about 1150 AD.

The tribe's strategic location made it a target for raiding parties paddling up and down the east coast. In the 17th century, land was lost through assimilation, escalating to more hostile raids in the 18th and 19th centuries. Hostilities continued unabated from 1769 to 1838 when peace was finally made with the Ngapuhi.

Later came European colonists with their timber trade, the gold rush, gum digging, and a hunger for land.

Successive settler governments and their legislation finally wrested from Ngati Hei the lands to which they had so tenaciously clung. Apart from our turangawaewae land at Wharekaho, the only other land retained until relatively recent times (1930) was parts of Kauanga-Whenuakite.

Ohinau Island - taken by the Crown in 1923 without investigation of title in the Maori Land Court - was finally returned to Ngati Hei in February 1995.

External links

  • http://www.hoppers.co.nz/lifeandstyle/speced/pre_european_history.htm
  • www.ngatihei.iwi.nz
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