The Maori are indigenous inhabitants of New Zealand, and trace their origin to three waves of settlers from Polynesian islands in 950, 1150, and 1350 (Latham, 2009). The first recorded European contact with the Maori occurred with Captain James Cook’s arrival in 1769, and in the centuries that followed came whalers, traders, missionaries, and the British government (Hawthorn, 1944:7-11). This entry focuses around the time of 1820, before intense European influence. At this time, contact included that with whalers, explorers, and traders. The first missionaries arrived in New Zealand in 1814, but a change in indigenous religious beliefs was gradual and not salient until several decades later. The Maori did not have a distinct religious spher...
As the Maori population continued to decline, the aged rangatira admired by Pakeha (even including t...
This thesis examines the extent to which the New Zealand Assemblies of God, one of the largest and o...
The Cook Group consists of fifteen small and scattered islands lying between Samoa to the west and ...
From the early days of the colony, Maori visitors and immigrants were part of Sydney's cultural and ...
This book takes you on a journey exploring the histories of the country's first Polynesian discovere...
This thesis attempts to understand the intellectual milieu of Maori society in the early colonial p...
This thesis presents, in a newly edited and annotated form, a collection of Maori language texts re...
This paper explores how the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints attracted a large Maori foll...
from that of its giant Australian neighbour. But difference are there, and reflect the different his...
The main goal of this work is to understand the role that tapu (the sacred) had in ordering Maori ge...
Indigenous tribal groups can operate as complex adaptive systems. Tribal members are then autonomous...
Eldon Best (1923, p.27) describes Maori: "Their love of travel is innate; they are born sailors, an...
This thesis explores the impact of infectious introduced diseases on pre-Treaty Maori society. It ad...
The food resources available to the pre-European Maori were both scanty and scattered, and each hapu...
Ngāpuhi, a confederation of Māori iwi (tribes) from Te Tai Tokerau, the northern region of Aotearoa,...
As the Maori population continued to decline, the aged rangatira admired by Pakeha (even including t...
This thesis examines the extent to which the New Zealand Assemblies of God, one of the largest and o...
The Cook Group consists of fifteen small and scattered islands lying between Samoa to the west and ...
From the early days of the colony, Maori visitors and immigrants were part of Sydney's cultural and ...
This book takes you on a journey exploring the histories of the country's first Polynesian discovere...
This thesis attempts to understand the intellectual milieu of Maori society in the early colonial p...
This thesis presents, in a newly edited and annotated form, a collection of Maori language texts re...
This paper explores how the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints attracted a large Maori foll...
from that of its giant Australian neighbour. But difference are there, and reflect the different his...
The main goal of this work is to understand the role that tapu (the sacred) had in ordering Maori ge...
Indigenous tribal groups can operate as complex adaptive systems. Tribal members are then autonomous...
Eldon Best (1923, p.27) describes Maori: "Their love of travel is innate; they are born sailors, an...
This thesis explores the impact of infectious introduced diseases on pre-Treaty Maori society. It ad...
The food resources available to the pre-European Maori were both scanty and scattered, and each hapu...
Ngāpuhi, a confederation of Māori iwi (tribes) from Te Tai Tokerau, the northern region of Aotearoa,...
As the Maori population continued to decline, the aged rangatira admired by Pakeha (even including t...
This thesis examines the extent to which the New Zealand Assemblies of God, one of the largest and o...
The Cook Group consists of fifteen small and scattered islands lying between Samoa to the west and ...