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Tāwhao returned to Kāwhia with both wives pregnant. Maru-tē-hiakina gave birth first, to a boy named
Whatihua, and then Pūnui-a-te-kore gave birth to a son called Tūrongo. Because Whatihua was the first-born but Tūrongo was son of the senior wife, the relative status of the two sons was unclear and
88:), where he married Pūnui-a-te-kore, daughter of Te Aorere, another descendant of Hoturoa. After his marriage, Tāwhao fell in love with his wife's younger sister, Maru-tē-hiakina, who lived at Hōrea on the other side of Whāingaroa harbour. Tāwhao caught her attention by making a small raft out of
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waka. He was born at Kāwhia and had one older brother, Koro-te-whao, about whom nothing is recorded, and a younger half-brother, Tuhianga, who had further descendants, including
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In his old age, Tāwhao travelled to
Pukehou and invited Tūrongo to return to Kāwhia. There he divided his lands between Whatihua and Tūrongo, roughly along the
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waka through his father Kākāti. According to Jones, the line of descent is
Hoturoa, Hotuope, Hotuāwhio, Hotumatapū, Mōtai, Ue (who married
123:. The north went to Whatihua, who remained at Kāwhia, while the south went to Tūrongo, who was sent inland and settled at Rangiātea, near
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This is the version given by Rore Erueti, Te
Hurinui Te Wano, and others, but Te Nguha Huirama gives the mothers the opposite way around.
37:, New Zealand. He probably lived around 1500 CE. He was the last chief to lead the whole of Tainui, as the feud between his two sons
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100:. When Maru-tē-hiakina picked up the raft and saw the cloak-pin, she instantly fell in love with Tāwhao and went to marry him.
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Ngā iwi o Tainui : nga koorero tuku iho a nga tuupuna = The traditional history of the Tainui people
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they competed for pre-eminence. Eventually, the conflict led Tūrongo to leave Kāwhia and settle at
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led him to divide it into northern and southern sections.
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line that later formed the northern boundary of the
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84:As a young man, Tāwhao moved to Whāingaroa (
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92:rushes, fastening his ivory cloak-pin (
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53:Tāwhao was a male-line descendant of
16:New Zealand Māori chief, circa 1500
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33:confederation of tribes, based at
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326:16th-century New Zealand people
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155:Jones & Biggs 2004
143:Jones & Biggs 2004
280:Jones, Pei Te Hurinui
321:Māori tribal leaders
184:, pp. 272–273.
110:Hawke's Bay Region
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310:Categories
297:1869403312
272:References
70:Kurahaupō
27:rangatira
286:(2004).
125:Waikeria
65:Kahupeka
39:Whatihua
106:Pukehou
98:karakia
79:Kaihamu
55:Hoturoa
43:Tūrongo
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117:aukati
86:Raglan
75:Haumia
60:Tainui
35:Kāwhia
31:Tainui
22:was a
20:Tāwhao
131:Notes
94:aurei
90:raupō
24:Māori
292:ISBN
77:and
49:Life
41:and
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