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Tamāio pursued Ngāti Hā to Te Tīroa, which was also too well-defended to besiege. Tamāio therefore pretended to encamp on one side of the village and then sent a group of his troops around to the woods on the other side of the village, with their weapons tied to the side of their bodies that was not
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Therefore, Tamāio raised a war party and advanced on the Ngāti Hā village. Since the village was too well-defended to take by force, Tamāio devised a stratagem. He had his party march up onto a hill that was visible from the Ngāti Hā village, then down into a valley that was out of sight, before
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returning to the hill with their cloaks turned inside out. This was repeated three times and led the Ngāti Hā to believe that Tamāio's war party was much larger than it actually was, so they abandoned the location without a fight, fleeing back to Te Tīroa.
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visible from the village. Believing them to be unarmed men collecting firewood, the three chiefs of Ngāti Hā sallied forth from the village with their warriors and were killed.
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There was a tribe called Ngāti Hā, led by three chiefs, Hā-nui ('Big Hā'), Hā-roa ('Long Hā'), and Hā-kūhā-nui ('Big-thigh Hā'), who was the great-grandson of
314:). Tamāio pursued the latter group, but their chief Te Hoata came to meet him and negotiated a peace by marrying his daughter Hinemata to Tamāio.
338:, based on a version told to him by his uncle Te Hurinui Te Wano before 1911. The raid is also referred to in evidence presented to the
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279:, one of the chieftains of Tainui in southern Waikato noticed the Ngāti Hā at Te Tīroa while he was foraging for
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canoe). Tamāio's mother was Te Kete-kura, who was also descended from
Hoturoa on her father's side and from the
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The remaining Ngāti Hā fled, splitting into two groups, one of which went to Taupō, while the other went to
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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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Tamāio and
Hinemata had a daughter, Rangi-ānewa, who married her cousin Rereahu. They had one child,
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Nga tohu a Tainui
Landmarks of Tainui: a geographical record of Tainui traditional history
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44:. He was the first chieftain to lead a war-party inland from Kāwhia, in a war against
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413:, p. 118 gives the line of descent as Tia - Pawheorangi - Hatea - Hā-kūhā-nui.
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shoots and reported to Tamāio that they were coming to seize the land.
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Tuwharetoa: The history of the Maori people of the Taupo
District
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239:, who was born after Uenuku-te-rangi-hōkā had moved to south
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48:, sometime around the middle of the sixteenth century.
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Land Court by Te Naunau Hīkaka on 15 December 1892.
197:Tamāio's father was Uenuku-te-rangi-hōkā, son of
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235:on her mother's side. He had two half-brothers,
267:and headed west, establishing a village on the
201:(through whom he was a male-line descendant of
529:Jones, Pei Te Hurinui; Biggs, Bruce (2004).
259:canoe. Ngāti Hā had been driven out of the
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533:. Auckland : Auckland University Press.
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219:(through whom he was a descendant of
302:, establishing a fortress where the
255:, who arrived in New Zealand on the
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495:. Auckland : A.H. & A.W. Reed.
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491:Grace, John Te Herekiekie (1959).
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326:, who was Rereahu's eldest son.
157:Places in the war with Ngāti Hā.
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568:16th-century New Zealand people
514:. Otorohanga: Tohu Publishers.
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32:tribal confederation, based at
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1:
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334:The story is reported by
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510:Phillips, F. L. (1989).
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476:Jones & Biggs 2004
464:Jones & Biggs 2004
452:Jones & Biggs 2004
440:Jones & Biggs 2004
399:Jones & Biggs 2004
387:Jones & Biggs 2004
375:Jones & Biggs 2004
363:Jones & Biggs 2004
478:, pp. 98-99 n.2.
223:, the captain of the
205:, the captain of the
563:Māori tribal leaders
336:Pei Te Hurinui Jones
454:, pp. 170–171.
442:, pp. 100–101.
401:, pp. 108–109.
389:, pp. 102–103.
377:, pp. 272–273.
28:(chieftain) of the
275:. Tamāio's cousin
466:, p. 98 n.1.
365:, pp. 98–99.
324:Te Ihinga-a-rangi
247:War with Ngāti Hā
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265:Ngāti Tūwharetoa
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308:Whanganui River
298:and then on to
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213:Rua-pū-tahanga
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558:Tainui people
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521:9780908596263
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304:Ōngārue River
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217:Ngāti Ruanui
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281:black ponga
269:Mōkau River
42:New Zealand
552:Categories
540:1869403312
411:Grace 1959
346:References
340:Ōtorohanga
312:Taumarunui
306:meets the
263:region by
190:Taumarunui
25:rangatira
310:(modern
273:Puketutu
241:Taranaki
232:Tokomaru
199:Whatihua
182:Te Tīroa
174:Puketutu
46:Ngāti Hā
330:Sources
300:Ōngarue
296:Waimiha
277:Rereahu
237:Hotunui
203:Hoturoa
83:30miles
38:Waikato
537:
518:
499:
318:Family
211:) and
208:Tainui
165:Kāwhia
34:Kāwhia
30:Tainui
19:was a
17:Tamāio
261:Taupō
257:Arawa
226:Aotea
21:Māori
535:ISBN
516:ISBN
497:ISBN
221:Turi
81:45km
52:Life
253:Tia
215:of
36:in
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