![]() ![]() Originally built by the Muaūpoko iwi, who betrayed the conquering chieftain Te Rauparaha when they feared an attack from him. Māori name for Wellington Harbour, but sometimes used as a name for the city of Wellington itself ![]() Twin pā complex in the Far North District of New Zealand Small town in the eastern Bay of Plenty, on New Zealand's North Island Original Māori name for Porirua, New Zealand Town on the banks of the Waikato River, near Taupiri mountain, a sacred burial ground for Waikato MāoriĪn old base for the Pai Mārire religious sect, stormed by colonial forces and allied (kupapa) Māori during the Land Wars. Largest and most important Māori pā in pre-European times ![]() Town in the Waiapu Valley of the Gisborne Region in the northeastern corner of New Zealand's North Island Major Māori pā in the Hawkes Bay region that was strongly contested by multiple iwi Most significant site in the archaeology of Marlborough, New Zealand Island in New Zealand that served as a base for the famous chieftain Te Rauparaha Small settlement on the southern shores of Te Waihora at the narrowest point of Kaitōrete spit One of three large natural inlets in the Tasman Sea coast of the Waikato region of New Zealand's North Island Town in the Waimakariri District of the Canterbury region, in the South Island of New ZealandĬity on the west coast on the North Island of New Zealand, at the mouth of the eponymous river deemed sacred to local iwi Site of the Māori fortress of Te Puia, first occupied around 1325, and known as an impenetrable stronghold never taken in battle Hill in the Auckland region of New Zealand Town in the Waikato region of the North Island of New Zealand, and seat of the Māori King Movement ![]()
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