Carving representing Tihori, ancestor of the Māori tribe Ngāti Awa of Bay of Plenty, New Zealand.
Early history
Ngāti Awa traces its origins to the arrival of Māori settlers on the Mātaatuawaka (canoe). The Mātaatua settlers established settlements in the Bay of Plenty and Northland. Initially, the tribe controlled a large area in Northland, but conflicts with other northern iwi resulted in a southward migration. One group eventually settled in the eastern Bay of Plenty, whose descendants would eventually found the iwi.
Awanuiarangi II is recognised as the eponymous ancestor of Ngāti Awa. Awanuiarangi II was a chief descended from Toroa, captain of the Mātaatua. Descendants of Awanuiarangi II eventually formed their own iwi, Ngāti Awa, named after their ancestor.[2]
Tribal and land wars
Ngāti Awa was frequently at war with neighbouring iwi, including those with similar ancestry. Ngāti Awa initially had good trading relations with European settlers. However, the New Zealand Wars of the 1860s resulted in the British Crown confiscating more than 1,000 km2 of Ngāti Awa land.
For more than a century afterwards, Ngāti Awa remained an aggrieved, struggling people. However, in 1999, the Waitangi Tribunal determined that the confiscation of Ngāti Awa land in the New Zealand Wars by the British Crown was illegal, and in 2003 a settlement was reached between Ngāti Awa and the New Zealand Government.
In the nineteenth century Ngāti Pūkeko were considered a separate iwi, but they are currently considered a hapū of Ngāti Awa.[2]
Government settlement
In 2003, following almost ten years of negotiations between the New Zealand Government and Ngāti Awa, a settlement was announced and reparations were made to the iwi. In summary:
The New Zealand Government (the Crown) acknowledged and apologised for the illegal confiscation of Ngāti Awa land during the New Zealand Wars
The Crown paid NZ$42.39 million in reparations to Ngāti Awa
The Crown agreed to return control of seven sites of historical and cultural significance to the iwi
Three locations were renamed to their original Ngāti Awa place names.[2]
On settlement the Ngāti Awa Research Centre that was established in 1989 to generate research for the Waitangi Tribunal claim became Ngāti Awa Research and Archives.[4][5]
Hapū and marae
Whakatāne hapū
The following hapū are based around Whakatāne and Coastlands:
Ngāti Hokopū, based at Te Hokowhitu a Tū ki te Rāhui marae and Te Hokowhitu a Tūmatauenga wharenui, and at Te Whare o Toroa marae
Ngāti Wharepaia, based at Te Hokowhitu a Tū ki te Rāhui marae and Te Hokowhitu a Tūmatauenga wharenui and Te Whare o Toroa marae
Te Patuwai me Ngāti Maumoana, based at Toroa marae
Warahoe, based at Tokitareke marae and Te Puna o Te Orohi wharenui
Ngāi Te Rangihouhiri II, based at Te Rangihouhiri II marae
Ngāi Taiwhakaea II, based at Taiwhakaea marae and Taiwhakaea II wharenui[3]
Poroporo hapū
The following hapū are based around Poroporo and Paroa:
Ngāti Pūkeko, based at Pūkeko marae
Ngāti Rangataua, based at Rangataua marae
Ngāti Tamapare, based at Rewatu marae and Ueimua wharenui
Te Whānau o Tariao Tapuke, based at Rangimarie marae and Rarawhati wharenui
Ngāti Awa ki Tāmaki Makaurau, based at Mātaatua marae and Awanuiarangi wharenui, at Māngere in Auckland[3]
Governance
Te Rūnanga o Ngāti Awa
Te Rūnanga o Ngāti Awa became the new governing body of the iwi in 2005.[2] Representatives from the Rūnanga were responsible for negotiating the settlement with the government on behalf of Ngāti Awa. Based in Whakatāne, the rūnanga manages the financial assets of the iwi, and promotes cultural, educational and economic development in the region.[6]
The trust manages the tribe's Treaty of Waitangi settlement under the Ngāti Awa Claims Settlement Act and is a body corporate for the tribe's land, under Te Runanga o Ngāti Awa Act. It represents the iwi in aquaculture and fisheries under the Māori Commercial Aquaculture Claims Settlement Act, and represents the iwi during resource consent consultation under the Resource Management Act. The trust is governed by one representative from each of the 22 hapū, and is based in Whakatāne.[3]
Sun FM is the radio station for Ngāti Awa. It was first known as Te Reo Irirangi o Te Manuka Tutāhi during a three-week AM trial run in 1990. It went to air as Tumeke FM on 6 April 1991, became Sun FM in 1994 to increase its advertising appeal, and between 1996 and 1999 worked to increase its Māori language content.[7] The classic hits station broadcasts on 106.5FM in Whakatāne.[8]
^ abcdeHarvey, Layne (26 September 2006). "Ngāti Awa". Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Archived from the original on 1 May 2007. Retrieved 28 March 2007.