When gold was first discovered, the Crown accepted that it needed Maori consent to open their land for mining and had to assuage fears of losing their land. Accordingly, officials devised agreements to protect Maori interests and to provide a financial return. Because of what had occurred in other countries after goldfields opened, both Maori and the government agreed that these must be well controlled. Over time, the regulations increasingly favoured the mining industry rather than the original landowners, who were not informed about the true value of their land, auriferous or otherwise. Maori were confused about their financial entitlement because of changes made by the government to the fees payable to them. Some rangatira, most notabl...
The consequence of the murder of a Maori miner was the immediate abandonment of the Tui mines, but a...
William Robert Wilson, one of the founders of B.H.P., visited New Zealand on several occasions both ...
The food resources available to the pre-European Maori were both scanty and scattered, and each hapu...
When gold was first discovered, the Crown accepted that it needed Maori consent to open their land f...
Before the existence of gold was confirmed at Te Aroha, the Ngati Rahiri reserves were finally delin...
Before the arrival of Europeans, Maori had known of the existence of gold but did not mine it and ha...
With the discovery of gold in 1880 and the pressure to open the land for mining, there was a need to...
Imagining the Hauraki Peninsula to contain payable goldfields and knowing that land to the south of ...
Economic growth in nineteenth century New Zealand involved the exploitation of the natural resources...
This thesis is a study of the interaction between Māori and Pākehā in the Hauraki region during the ...
To explore the new field, men were attracted by the excitement and the great hopes expressed, althou...
As the Maori population continued to decline, the aged rangatira admired by Pakeha (even including t...
By mid-1880, when there were expectations that gold would be found at Te Aroha, at last Ngati Rahiri...
Because optimists believed there was payable gold still to be discovered in New Zealand, prospecting...
The Paris and London Rothschilds became involved in mining investments in the late nineteenth centur...
The consequence of the murder of a Maori miner was the immediate abandonment of the Tui mines, but a...
William Robert Wilson, one of the founders of B.H.P., visited New Zealand on several occasions both ...
The food resources available to the pre-European Maori were both scanty and scattered, and each hapu...
When gold was first discovered, the Crown accepted that it needed Maori consent to open their land f...
Before the existence of gold was confirmed at Te Aroha, the Ngati Rahiri reserves were finally delin...
Before the arrival of Europeans, Maori had known of the existence of gold but did not mine it and ha...
With the discovery of gold in 1880 and the pressure to open the land for mining, there was a need to...
Imagining the Hauraki Peninsula to contain payable goldfields and knowing that land to the south of ...
Economic growth in nineteenth century New Zealand involved the exploitation of the natural resources...
This thesis is a study of the interaction between Māori and Pākehā in the Hauraki region during the ...
To explore the new field, men were attracted by the excitement and the great hopes expressed, althou...
As the Maori population continued to decline, the aged rangatira admired by Pakeha (even including t...
By mid-1880, when there were expectations that gold would be found at Te Aroha, at last Ngati Rahiri...
Because optimists believed there was payable gold still to be discovered in New Zealand, prospecting...
The Paris and London Rothschilds became involved in mining investments in the late nineteenth centur...
The consequence of the murder of a Maori miner was the immediate abandonment of the Tui mines, but a...
William Robert Wilson, one of the founders of B.H.P., visited New Zealand on several occasions both ...
The food resources available to the pre-European Maori were both scanty and scattered, and each hapu...