Omslagafbeelding van de show The History of New Zealand: Maori Power and Colonial Change — Fexingo History

The History of New Zealand: Maori Power and Colonial Change — Fexingo History

Podcast door Fexingo

Engels

Geschiedenis & Religie

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Over The History of New Zealand: Maori Power and Colonial Change — Fexingo History

New Zealand's history is a story of Maori resilience, colonial upheaval, and the forging of a bicultural nation. This podcast, hosted by Lucas and Luna, traces the arc from the first Polynesian voyagers who settled Aotearoa around 1300 CE to the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840, the brutal Land Wars of the 1860s, and the modern Maori renaissance. We explore the intricate iwi (tribal) politics, the musket wars that reshaped power balances, the impact of European missionaries and settlers, and the rise of Kingitanga—the Maori King Movement. Key figures like Hone Heke, Te Rauparaha, and Apirana Ngata come to life, alongside pivotal events such as the Battle of Gate Pa and the Parihaka invasion. We delve into Maori culture—the koru spiral symbolizing new life, the haka as war dance and protest, and the deep connection to whenua (land). The show examines contemporary debates over the Waitangi Tribunal, customary fishing rights, and the place of te reo Maori in national identity. Why does a small Pacific nation's story resonate globally? Because it asks how two worlds can collide, coexist, and create something new—a question as urgent today as ever. #NewZealandHistory #Maori #TreatyOfWaitangi #LandWars #PolynesianSettlers #Kingitanga #HoneHeke #TeRauparaha #ApiranaNgata #Aotearoa #Parihaka #MusketWars #Bicultural #SouthPacific #FexingoHistory #ColonialHistory #IndigenousRights #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo

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156 afleveringen

aflevering The 1881 Siege of Parihaka: Passive Resistance and Massacre artwork

The 1881 Siege of Parihaka: Passive Resistance and Massacre

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the 1881 invasion of Parihaka, the peaceful Māori settlement led by prophets Te Whiti o Rongomai and Tohu Kakahi. They discuss how Parihaka became a symbol of nonviolent resistance against land confiscations, the government's decision to send 1,500 armed troops, the arrest of leaders without trial, and the scattering of its people. The conversation covers the plowmen protests, the carving of the Taranaki region as a punishment, and the long aftermath including the 1975 Māori Land March and eventual apologies. Listeners will learn about John Bryce, the Native Minister who led the attack, and how Parihaka's story remains a touchstone for Māori activism today. #Parihaka #TeWhiti #TohuKakahi #JohnBryce #Taranaki #Raupatu #PassiveResistance #1881Invasion #MāoriResistance #ManaMotuhake #Aotearoa #NewZealandHistory #Nonviolence #Colonialism #LandConfiscation #MāoriActivism #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14 jul 2026 - 6 min
aflevering The Kīngitanga: How the Maori King Movement Unified Resistance artwork

The Kīngitanga: How the Maori King Movement Unified Resistance

In this episode of The History of New Zealand, Lucas and Luna explore the origins and legacy of the Kīngitanga, the Maori King Movement. Starting with the 1850s push for a Maori sovereign to counter Pākehā land grabs, they follow the story from the first king, Pōtatau Te Wherowhero, through the flight of Tāwhiao into the King Country. They discuss the movement's role in the Waikato War, the strategic isolation of the Rohe Pōtae, and its quiet but persistent assertion of mana motuhake. Along the way, they touch on key figures like Wiremu Tamihana, the 'kingmaker,' Rewi Maniapoto's defiance, and the modern revival under Te Puea Hērangi. This episode avoids rehashing earlier battles to focus on the political and spiritual core of the Kīngitanga itself. #Kīngitanga #MaoriKingMovement #PotatauTeWherowhero #Tāwhiao #WiremuTamihana #RewiManiapoto #WaikatoWar #KingCountry #RohePōtae #ManaMotuhake #TePueaHerangi #MaoriSovereignty #NewZealandHistory #Raupatu #Waitangi #IndigenousResistance #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14 jul 2026 - 7 min
aflevering Māori Land Court: How the Native Land Court Reshaped Aotearoa artwork

Māori Land Court: How the Native Land Court Reshaped Aotearoa

In this episode of The History of New Zealand, Lucas and Luna explore the Native Land Court, a pivotal institution established in 1865 that transformed Māori land tenure and accelerated colonization. They trace its origins in the New Zealand Settlements Act 1863 and the Native Land Act 1865, designed to individualize communal Māori land and make it easier for settlers to purchase. Lucas explains how the court process—requiring Māori to prove ownership in a foreign legal system—led to fragmentation, debt, and widespread land loss. The episode highlights key figures like Chief Judge Francis Fenton, Māori litigants such as Paora Tuhaere, and the impact on iwi including Ngāti Whātua and Waikato Tainui. They discuss the court's role in the raupatu (confiscations) and its long-term effects, including the rise of the Kotahitanga movement and the later Waitangi Tribunal. Lucas draws on historian Richard Boast's work to illustrate how the court became a tool of assimilation, while also noting Māori adaptation and resistance. The episode closes with a reflection on the ongoing struggle for mana whenua and the legacy of the court in modern Aotearoa. #NativeLandCourt #MāoriHistory #NewZealandHistory #Raupatu #LandConfiscation #Colonialism #FrancisFenton #PaoraTuhaere #NgātiWhātua #WaikatoTainui #Kotahitanga #WaitangiTribunal #RichardBoast #ManaWhenua #Assimilation #History #FexingoHistory #Oceania Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gisteren - 5 min
aflevering Ngata's Whakairo Revival and the 1929 Waitangi Riot artwork

Ngata's Whakairo Revival and the 1929 Waitangi Riot

In 1929, the small town of Waitangi in the Chatham Islands erupted in violence when police attempted to arrest a Māori man for home-brewing. The riot that followed exposed deep tensions over land confiscation, cultural suppression, and the legacy of Te Kooti's Ringatū faith in the islands. But this episode is not just about the riot — it's about the wider context of Māori cultural revival in the 1920s and 30s, led by Sir Apirana Ngata. We explore Ngata's ambitious program to revive whakairo (carving) and kapa haka (performing arts) as acts of mana motuhake, and how Māori communities balanced assimilation with resistance. We also look at the 1929 Waitangi Riot as a flashpoint of Māori anger over the Tohunga Suppression Act and ongoing raupatu. Through first-hand accounts and official records, we piece together a moment when two visions of Aotearoa clashed — and how Ngata's cultural renaissance offered a third way. #ApiranaNgata #Whakairo #WaitangiRiot1929 #ChathamIslands #Ringatū #MāoriCulturalRevival #TohungaSuppressionAct #Raupatu #ManaMotuhake #1920sNewZealand #KapaHaka #MāoriLand #TeKooti #MāoriProtest #NewZealandHistory #Oceania #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gisteren - 6 min
aflevering Māori in World War One: The 28th Māori Battalion at Gallipoli and Beyond artwork

Māori in World War One: The 28th Māori Battalion at Gallipoli and Beyond

In 1914, Māori were not legally required to serve in the New Zealand Expeditionary Force, yet over 2,200 volunteered for the Māori Contingent. This episode follows the men of the 28th Māori Battalion from training at Avondale to the beaches of Gallipoli, where they landed at Anzac Cove in July 1915. Lucas and Luna explore the complex motivations behind Māori enlistment—loyalty to Empire, the hope of gaining equal citizenship rights, and the desire to uphold mana on a world stage. They discuss key figures like Sir Māui Pōmare, who advocated for Māori participation, and the impact of the Pioneer Battalion on the Western Front. The episode also examines the government's shifting policy, the racial segregation within the NZEF, and the long-term consequences: the deaths of many young leaders, the erosion of Māori communities, and the postwar fight for recognition. With firsthand accounts from diaries and letters, this episode brings a little-known chapter of Aotearoa's Great War story into sharp focus. #MāoriBattalion #Gallipoli #WorldWarOne #ANZAC #MāuiPōmare #MāoriContingent #PioneerBattalion #NZEF #AvondaleCamp #ChunukBair #Aotearoa #Māori #NewZealandHistory #MilitaryHistory #WWI #FexingoHistory #History #Oceania Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

12 jul 2026 - 5 min
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