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rangatira and is
Renowned for its vibrant colour and its ability to survive even perched on rocky, precarious cliffs, it has found an important place in New Zealand culture for its strength and beauty and is regarded as a chiefly tree ( rākau rangatira ) by Māori.

rangatira and chief
In the winter months of 1845 Lieutenant Colonel Despard led a combined force of troops from the 58th and 99th Regiments, naval marines and Māori allies in an attack on Pene Taui's Pā ( stockade ) at Ohaeawai, which had been fortified by Te Ruki Kawiti, a prominent rangatira ( chief ) and military leader.
Tāmati Wāka Nene ( c. 1785-4 August 1871 ) was a Māori rangatira ( chief ) who fought as an ally of the British in the Flagstaff War.
Te Ruki Kawiti far right, with his nephew Hone Heke and Heke's wife HariataTe Ruki Kawiti ( 1770s – 1854 ) was a prominent Māori rangatira ( chief ).
Hone Wiremu Heke Pokai ( c. 1807 – 7 August 1850 ) was a Māori rangatira ( chief ) and war leader in Northern New Zealand and a nephew of Hongi Hika, an earlier war leader of the Ngāpuhi iwi.
Te Rauparaha ( 1760s-27 November 1849 ) was a Māori rangatira ( chief ) and war leader of the Ngāti Toa tribe who took a leading part in the Musket Wars.
The land involved in goldmining in Thames was Māori owned ; important parts of the goldfield were owned by the Ngāti Maru rangatira ( chief ) Rapana Maunganoa and the Taipari family.
Pounamu was highly prized by Maori and the mere pounamu as the weapon of a chief or rangatira, was the most revered of all Maori weapons.
The word " rangatira ' means " chief ( male or female ), wellborn, noble " and derives from Proto-Central Eastern Polynesian * langatila (" chief of secondary status ").
The people, as they came to the temple in a body, were called tira, or company ; and as the leader had to assign, or ranga, a place to each of his tira, he was called the rangatira, from which we derive our word in Maori for chief, rangatira.

rangatira and tino
The Māori text of the Declaration was made by the tino rangatira ( hereditary chiefs ) of the northern part of New Zealand and uses the term Rangatiratanga to mean independence, declaring the country a " whenua Rangatira " ( independent state ) to be known as The United Tribes of New Zealand ( Te Wakaminenga o nga Hapu o Nu Tireni ).

rangatira and translated
Māori chiefs ( rangatira ) then debated the treaty for five hours, much of which was recorded and translated by the Paihia missionary station printer, William Colenso.

rangatira and p
Many positions overlap with Ariki holding multiple roles, including " head of an iwi, the rangatira of a hapu and the kaumatua of a whanau " ( p. 197 ).

rangatira and .
In 1831, thirteen chiefly rangatira from the far north of the country met at Kerikeri to compose a letter to King William IV asking for help to guard their lands.
It notably appears in the Māori version of the Treaty of Waitangi, signed by the British Crown and Māori chiefs ( rangatira ) in 1840.
After receiving a series of 18 threatening letters from Wiremu Tamihana, the Waikato leader who was until then was considered one of the more peaceful rangatira and who had negotiated the truce at the end of the First Taranki War, on 9 July 1863 Governor Grey expelled virtually all the Māori living in the territory controlled by the British south of Auckland after Kingitanga Maori refused to swear an oath of allegiance to the Queen.
After receiving a series of 18 threatening letters from Tamihana, the Waikato leader who was until then was considered one of the more peaceful rangatira and who had negotiated the truce at the end of the First Taranki War, on 9 July 1863 Governor Grey expelled virtually all the Māori living in the territory controlled by the British south of Auckland after Kingitanga Maori refused to swear an oath of allegiance to the Queen.
The first Māori king was the great Waikato warrior Te Wherowhero who came from a great line of rangatira.
However Kawiti was the senior rangatira and appears to have had a key role in the strategic decisions as to the design of the strengthened defences of Pene Taui's pā at Ohaeawai and the design and construction of the new pā that was build at Ruapekapeka to engage the British forces.
The Māori owned land was gifted by the Ngāti Maru rangatira Rapana Maunganoa.
The position of Māori monarch was constituted in 1858 by chiefs ( rangatira ) from many tribes, predominantly in the central North Island.
Women also hold the titles of ariki, mataiapo and rangatira.
Ideally, rangatira were people of great practical wisdom who held authority on behalf of the tribe and maintained boundaries between a tribe's land and that of other tribes.
Changes to land ownership laws in the 19th century, particularly the individualisation of land title, undermined the position of rangatira, as did the widespread loss of land under the colonial government.

is and chief
A chief characteristic of experience in the mode of causal efficacy is one of derivation from the past.
Finally, in The Maltese Falcon among others, the clash between detective and police is carried to its logical conclusion: Sam Spade becomes the chief murder suspect.
His denials of extensive reading notwithstanding, it is no doubt safe to assume that he has spent time schooling himself in Southern history and that he has gained some acquaintance with the chief literary authors who have lived in the South or have written about the South.
Without saying or seeming to say that in portraying the Sartoris and the Compson families Faulkner's chief concern is social criticism, we can say nevertheless that through those families he dramatizes his comment on the planter dynasties as they have existed since the decades before the Civil War.
It is the chief merit in Copernicus' work that all his planetary calculations are interdependent.
Mr. Stavropoulos is the U.N. legal chief and a very good man, but he is not fully versed on some technical points of American law ''.
Since the great flood of these dystopias has appeared only in the last twelve years, it seems fairly reasonable to assume that the chief impetus was the 1949 publication of Nineteen Eighty-Four, an assumption which is supported by the frequent echoes of such details as Room 101, along with education by conditioning from Brave New World, a book to which science-fiction writers may well have returned with new interest after reading the more powerful Orwell dystopia.
Next to it is a copper section, with cooking utensils and a figure of the chief cook in an elaborate, floor-length robe.
The chief experience is the sensing of communion, and in the higher religions, of a harmonious relationship with the supernatural power.
As Loomis remarks, `` In the internal pattern the chief reason for interacting is to communicate liking, friendship, and love among those who stand in supporting relations to one another and corresponding negative sentiments to those who stand in antagonistic relations ''.
`` Unfortunately '', says Chief Postal Inspector David H. Stephens, who has prosecuted many device quacks, `` the ghouls who trade on the hopes of the desperately ill often cannot be successfully prosecuted because the patients who are the chief witnesses die before the case is called up in court ''.
This serious condition, popularly known as pyorrhea, is one of the chief causes of tooth loss in adults.
One of the chief features of this community of interest is the automotive patents cross-licensing agreement, a milestone in the development of American industrial cooperation.
Jerome Leavitt, a partner in the Union Liquor company, 3247 S. Kedzie Av., Dominic Senese, a teamster union slugger who is a buddy of Stein and a cousin of Tony Accardo, onetime gang chief ; ;
They know it is the chief ingredient in gallstones.
Doc Doolittle's scheduled appearance at captain's mast was a very unusual thing, because the discipline dispensed there is ordinarily for the young and immature, and a chief is naturally expected to stay off the report.
His chief motivation for enrolling at Hanford is the desire to '' --
The word archipelago is derived from the Greek ἄρχι-– arkhi-(" chief ") and πέλαγος – pélagos (" sea ") through the Italian arcipelago.
An abbot ( from Old English abbod, abbad, from Latin abbas (“ father ”), from Ancient Greek ἀββᾶς ( abbas ), from Aramaic ܐܒܐ / אבא (’ abbā, “ father ”); confer German Abt ; French abbé ) is the head and chief governor of a community of monks, called also in the East hegumen or archimandrite.
Odin is the chief of Asagarth.
In 1541, he received Bayreuth as his share of the family lands, but, as the chief town of his principality was Kulmbach, he is sometimes referred to as the Margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach.
His chief work is a Historia Francorum, or Libri v de Gestis Francorum, which deals with the history of the Franks from the earliest times to 653, and was continued by other writers until the middle of the twelfth century.
) where each of them is declared to be the chief in some quality, Ānanda is mentioned five times ( more often than any other ).

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