Misplaced Pages

Kotahitanga

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
#41958

45-453: Kotahitanga (literally "a state of being at one") may refer to several things relating to the Māori people of New Zealand: Te Kotahitanga , a Māori parliament of the 1890s and 1900s Kotahitanga flag , a flag representing the unity of various Māori peoples Kotahitanga movement , a political union and alliance of disparate tribal groups that led to

90-473: A large landmass or continent, before heading west. Young Nick's Head was thought to be the first piece of New Zealand land sighted by Cook's party, and so named because it was first observed by cabin boy Nicholas Young on 6 October 1769. On 9 October, Cook came ashore on the eastern bank of the Tūranganui River, accompanied by a party of men. Their arrival was marred by misunderstanding and resulted in

135-780: Is a motorcycle speedway venue, on Awapundi Road, adjacent to the Awapundi Links golf course. The track races various types of cars, including sidecars, midgets, saloons, stockcars, streetstocks, in addition to motorcycle speedway . The track has held important events, including qualifying rounds of the Speedway World Championship and the finals of the New Zealand Solo Championship . Gisborne City has four main high (secondary) schools: Gisborne Boys' High , Gisborne Girls' High , Lytton High and Campion College . Campion College

180-630: Is a Catholic co-educational school. Gisborne City was the setting of the 2014 drama film The Dark Horse , a biographical film starring Cliff Curtis about the late speed-chess champion, Genesis Potini . The film was shot in Gisborne and Auckland in the winter of 2013. In March 2016, Gisborne hosted the premiere of Mahana , a New Zealand film set in Patutahi and Manutuke, and based on Witi Ihimaera 's semi-autobiographical novel Bulibasha: King Of The Gypsies . Gisborne has four sister cities ,

225-585: Is also notable as the setting for a potential merger of Te Kotahitanga with the Kingitanga movement. Mahuta Tāwhiao , the new King of the Waikato-Tainui tribes, was visited by representatives from the 1895 sitting of Te Kotahitanga, who invited him to sign the Kotahitanga deed of union, calling for the political union of all Māori tribes. Mahuta appointed a committee to consider the proposal, but

270-544: Is amongst the lowest proportions in the world. Go Bus is contracted to the council to run 30 services a day on 4 routes Monday to Friday under the Gizzy Bus brand. Gizzy Bus accepts Bee Card for fares, as well as cash. From 1913 to 1929, Gisborne had battery-powered trams . Since then, public transport has declined to about a fifth of the usage then. In 1930, the municipal buses travelled 6,631 mi (10,672 km), and carried 28,531 passengers in 2 weeks. In 2012/13

315-573: Is believed unlikely to re-open for economic reasons. Prior to this, an isolated section of line operated from Gisborne to Moutohora – intended to be part of a line to Auckland via Rotorua, and later part of the East Coast Main Trunk Railway line. This connection was never completed, and the Moutohora Branch line closed in 1959. Rail passenger services were provided between Gisborne and Wellington until 1988, when

360-535: Is flat towards the shoreline, but hilly and forested inland. Gisborne boasts a large stretch of coastline encompassing the Waikanae and Midway, Kaiti, Sponge Bay, Wainui and Makorori white sand beaches, which are popular for swimming and surfing. Sometimes referred to as the 'City of Rivers', Gisborne sits at the convergence of the Waimata, Taruheru and Tūranganui rivers. The Tūranganui, only 1.2 kilometres long,

405-476: Is sheltered by high country to the west. Gisborne enjoys a temperate oceanic climate ( Cfb – Köppen climate classification ) with warm summers and cool winters, temperatures rarely drop below 0 °C (32 °F) and occasionally rise above 30 °C (86 °F) with a yearly average of 2,200 sunshine hours. The annual rainfall varies from about 1,000 mm (39 in) near the coast to over 2,500 mm (98 in) in higher inland country. According to

450-468: Is the shortest river in New Zealand. Kaiti Hill ( Titirangi ), which sits directly above Cook's landing site, provides expansive views over the city and wider Poverty Bay. Many archaeological sites have been identified on Titirangi, including burial grounds, terraces , and middens . Titirangi Pā sits near the summit. In the wider area surrounding Gisborne are two arboreta , Eastwoodhill ,

495-683: The Endeavour express was cancelled north of Napier. Today, only the Gisborne City Vintage Railway operates limited heritage train rides out of Gisborne. Te Poho-o-Rawiri and Te Kuri a Tuatai marae are located in the city suburbs. The Lowe Street Museum was the first museum in Gisborne, located in the Lowe Street Municipal Offices. In 1955, the collection of Māori artefacts of William Lysner were put in his former residence, Lysner House, which

SECTION 10

#1732781059042

540-558: The Māori King Movement Kotahitanga church , a religious movement founded by Alexander Phillips and based at Manu Ariki marae , 8 km north of Taumarunui . " "Kotahitanga" (song) , a 1999 Māori language dance pop single by Hinewehi Mohi and Jaz Coleman as the group Oceania Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Kotahitanga . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

585-459: The NIWA dataset for 1981–2010 normals, Gisborne narrowly edged several other New Zealand cities to have the warmest summer maxima of official stations. Winters are slightly cooler than more northerly areas, rendering that over the course of the calendar year, Gisborne is not the warmest station in the country. Even summer mean temperatures are lower than in northerly areas, despite the highs, due to

630-703: The Te Tairāwhiti Arts Festival is an annual event in the region with many events taking place in Gisborne. In rugby union Gisborne is home to Poverty Bay Rugby Football Union , who play in the Heartland Championship . The city is also home to several clubs who compete in the Poverty Bay competition – Horouta Sports Club, High School Old Boys (HSOB) Sports Club, Old Boys Marist (OBM) RFC, Pirates RFC, Waikohu Sports Club, and Young Māori Party (YMP) RFC. There are several other clubs in

675-573: The Tūranganui River first on the waka Tākitimu after voyaging to the region from Hawaiki and that Pāoa, captain of the waka Horouta , followed later. An alternative legend recounts that Kiwa waited so long for the Horouta canoe to arrive that he called its final landing place Tūranganui-a-Kiwa (the long waiting place of Kiwa). A more popular version of events is that Horouta preceded Tākitimu. In 1931, Sir Āpirana Ngata stated that Horouta

720-438: The 10th Parliament at Waiōmatatini in 1902. Te Kotahitanga was distinct from Te Kauhanganui , the Māori parliament established by the Kingitanga movement in the late 1880s, because it called for the union of all Māori tribes, whereas Te Kauhanganui was convened by and for the hapū of the Waikato-Tainui region. In 1895 the two movements considered merging, but this ultimately failed. The first formal session of Te Kotahitanga

765-502: The 140 positions in both houses at the parliament's first sitting at Waipatu Marae in 1892, as 13 chiefs were elected to both houses. Gisborne New Zealand Gisborne is a city in northeastern New Zealand and the largest settlement in the Gisborne District (or Gisborne Region). It has a population of 38,800 (June 2024). Gisborne District Council has its headquarters in the central city. The Gisborne area

810-585: The National Arboretum of New Zealand at Ngatapa which spans over 130 hectares, and the smaller 50 hectare Hackfalls Arboretum at Tiniroto . Until Samoa and Tokelau's dateline shift in December 2011, Gisborne claimed to be the first city on Earth to see the sun rise each day. However, this is now only accurate in New Zealand's summer months. Sunrise in Gisborne ranges from 5:36 am in early December to 7:26 am in late June. The region

855-714: The Pacific Coast Highway network) begins at a junction west of Gisborne with SH 2 just before SH 2 crosses the Waipaoa River on its way south to Manutuke. SH 35 borders Gisborne Airport to the south and enters Gisborne city on the southwestern fringes. It makes its way through the city out to the east, and continues up the coast, connecting Gisborne to the East Cape . Public transport is poorly developed in Gisborne, with only 0.2% of trips made by bus in 2013/14. This compares with 2.3% nationally, which itself

900-746: The Waipāoa River (Wai-o-Pāoa). During the 14th century, Māori tribes built fishing villages close to the sea and built pā on nearby hilltops. Gisborne's Kaiti Beach is the place where British navigator Captain James Cook made his first landing in New Zealand upon the Endeavour . Cook had earlier set off from Plymouth , England, in August 1768 on a mission bound for Tahiti . Once he had concluded his duties in Tahiti, Cook continued south to look for

945-473: The city buses carried about 78,000 passengers in 52 weeks, at a cost of about $ 120,000 a year, with about another $ 85,000 from fares. Gisborne is the northern terminus of the Palmerston North - Gisborne Line railway, which opened in 1942 and mothballed (track kept in place, but all services cancelled) in 2012. The permanent way has since suffered storm damage including bridge collapses and the line

SECTION 20

#1732781059042

990-921: The city include High School Old Boys (HSOB) Cricket Club and OBR Cricket Club. In football , Gisborne Thistle AFC , Gisborne Marist AFC, Gisborne United AFC, Gisborne Bohemians FC, and Riverina AFC compete in competitions organised by the Central Football Federation. The now-defunct Gisborne City AFC won the Chatham Cup in 1987. Netball in Gisborne is organised by the Gisborne Netball Centre. Netball teams in Gisborne are often associated with rugby or football clubs. Clubs include Horouta, High School Old Girls (HSOG), Old Boys Marist (OBM), Young Māori Party (YMP), and Gisborne Thistle. Golf, basketball, rowing, hockey, tennis, and squash are also catered to. Awapundi Speedway

1035-438: The cooler nights. Despite this, yearly mean temperatures are still some way above average for New Zealand as a whole. The Gisborne urban area had a usual resident population of 34,527 at the 2018 New Zealand census , an increase of 3,294 people (10.5%) since the 2013 census , and an increase of 3,228 people (10.3%) since the 2006 census . There were 16,623 males and 17,907 females, giving a sex ratio of 0.93 males per female. Of

1080-524: The death and wounding of nine Māori over four days. It was also on the banks of the Tūranganui River that first the township of Turanga, then the city of Gisborne, grew as European traders and whalers began to settle in the river and port area. The landing site was commemorated by a monument in 1906, on the 137th anniversary of Cook's arrival. In 1964, the Gisborne committee of the New Zealand Historic Places Trust registered

1125-747: The domestic airport for the Gisborne District. Regular flights between Auckland and Wellington are serviced by Air New Zealand under the Link brand, while the smaller Air Napier provides services to Napier and Wairoa . For 25 years Sunair operated from Gisborne to Hamilton , Rotorua , Napier, Whakatāne , Tauranga , Palmerston North , Paraparaumu and Wellington but those services were suspended in 2022. In 2023 Sunair announced it would give Gisborne another chance with services from Hamilton and Tauranga. [REDACTED] State Highway 2 connects Gisborne to Tauranga via Ōpōtiki and Whakatāne to

1170-513: The first trading stations along the Tūranganui river and are attributed to the founding of the town. Over the next 30 years, many more European traders and missionaries migrated to the region. In 1868, the government bought 300 hectares of land for a town site. The town was laid out in 1870 and the name changed from Turanga to Gisborne , after the then colonial secretary, and to avoid confusion with Tauranga . In 1872, Gisborne's first public school

1215-512: The harbour is the home of many smaller fishing boats as well as ships loading logs for export. In February 2018, the first grants from the Provincial Growth Fund included $ 2.3 million for the Gisborne port. The city maintains a rural charm and is a popular holiday spot. Local industries include agriculture, horticulture, farming and forestry . Wine production is also valuable to the local economy. Gisborne Airport serves as

1260-621: The land around the monument as a historic reserve, and in 1990 it was designated a National Historic Reserve and put under the care of the Department of Conservation . In 2019, a memorial was erected by Ngāti Oneone on Titirangi, a local hill, to honour Te Maro, who was one of the first casualties of the arrival of the ship Endeavour. Starting in the early 1830s, traders such as Captain John Harris and Captain George E. Read set up

1305-425: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kotahitanga&oldid=1147016158 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Māori words and phrases Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Te Kotahitanga The Kotahitanga movement

1350-470: The movement's representatives and was not returned as premier. Hoani Te Whatahoro Jury was elected in his place. The 1894 session took place at Pakirikiri, near Gisborne . The session, hosted by local chief Otene Pitau , was well attended and lasted for over a month. The 1895 session of Te Kotahitanga was convened at Ohinemutu in Rotorua. Hamiora Mangakahia was re-elected for a second term as premier, and

1395-619: The northwest, and to Napier and the rest of Hawke's Bay via Wairoa to the south. SH 2 travels towards Gisborne from the northwest from Te Karaka , a settlement 31 km northwest of Gisborne. SH 2 passes through Makaraka, a suburb on the outer fringes of Gisborne. It then crosses the Waipaoa River and makes its way south through Manutuke and Wharerata before it enters the Hawke's Bay Region towards Nūhaka , Wairoa, and eventually on to Napier. [REDACTED] State Highway 35 (part of

Kotahitanga - Misplaced Pages Continue

1440-419: The population could speak in one language only, 16.2% in two languages and 1.1% in three or more languages. The harbour was host to many ships in the past, and had developed as a river port to provide a more secure location for shipping compared with the open roadstead of Poverty Bay, which can be exposed to southerly swells. A meat works was sited beside the harbour and meat and wool were shipped from here. Now

1485-501: The region has been inhabited by the tribes of Te Whānau-a-Kai, Ngaariki Kaiputahi , Te Aitanga-a-Māhaki , Rongowhakaata , Ngāi Tāmanuhiri and Te Aitanga-a-Hauiti . They descend from the voyagers of the Te Ikaroa-a-Rauru, Horouta and Tākitimu waka . East Coast oral traditions offer differing versions of Gisborne's establishment by Māori . One legend recounts that in the 14th century the great navigator Kiwa landed at

1530-446: The role of speaker was given to Mohi Te Ātahīkoia of Ngāti Kahungunu. In the course of this session, Henare Tomoana accused Mangakahia of financial mismanagement of Te Kotahitanga during his first term as premier, and attempted to force his resignation. But Mangakahia was able to demonstrate in rebuttal that the mismanagement of Kotahitanga funds had actually developed during the term of his successor, Hoani Te Whatahoro Jury. The session

1575-578: The total population, 8,229 people (23.8%) were aged up to 15 years, 6,603 (19.1%) were 15 to 29, 14,184 (41.1%) were 30 to 64, and 5,511 (16.0%) were 65 or older. In terms of ethnicity, 58.8% of the population identified as European (Pākehā), 51.6% as Māori, 5.3% as Pacific peoples, 3.5% as Asian, and 1.3% as other ethnicities (totals add to more than 100% since people could identify with multiple ethnicities). Gisborne had an unemployment rate of 9.4% of people 15 years and over, compared to 7.4% nationally. The median annual income of all people 15 years and over

1620-838: The wider Gisborne District . In rugby league , Gisborne Taraiwhiti have historically represented Gisborne in national competitions. Gisborne is currently represented in the National Competition by the Waicoa Bay Stallions . Gisborne is home to the Poverty Bay cricket team , who compete in the Hawke Cup . Poverty Bay is also a district association of the Northern Districts Cricket Association . First-class matches are sometimes held at Harry Barker Reserve . Clubs in

1665-402: Was $ 24,400, compared to $ 28,500 nationally. Of those, 41.9% earned under $ 20,000, compared to 38.2% nationally, while 19.6% earned over $ 50,000, compared to 26.7% nationally. Gisborne has the smallest percentage of the population born overseas at 9.7% compared to 25.2% for New Zealand as a whole. The highest of these are British, totalling 1,335 or 3.1% of the population. Furthermore, 73.0% of

1710-688: Was an autonomous Māori parliament convened annually in New Zealand from 1892 until 1902. Though not recognised by the New Zealand Government , the Māori Parliament was an influential body while it lasted. By 1902 its role was largely superseded by the Māori councils established by James Carroll and Hōne Heke Ngāpua through the Māori Councils Act 1900. As a result, Kotahitanga members unanimously voted for its dissolution at

1755-455: Was elected chairman, the formal head of the Whare o Raro , and Hamiora Mangakahia was elected premier, a position that made him the chief spokesperson for the movement. In 1893 the second session of Te Kotahitanga was also convened at Waipatu, though this session was poorly attended. Only 58 representatives sat in the Whare o Raro . At that time, Mangakahia had fallen out of favour with many of

1800-693: Was held in June 1892 at Waipatu in Heretaunga . It was hosted by the former Member of Parliament for the Eastern Maori electorate, Henare Tomoana . 96 representatives sat in the Whare o Raro and 44 chiefs sat in the Whare Ariki . Tomoana was elected Speaker of the House because his tenure in parliament gave him the experience necessary to guide debates and maintain order. Hoani Te Whatahoro Jury

1845-493: Was known in Māori as Tūranganui-a-Kiwa (the "great standing place of Kiwa"), after Kiwa , who arrived on the waka Tākitimu , which landed at Gisborne. The original English language name for the settlement was Tūranga . It was renamed Gisborne in 1870, in honour of New Zealand Colonial Secretary William Gisborne , although he had no real connection with the area, to avoid confusion with Tauranga . The Gisborne region has been settled for over 700 years. For centuries,

Kotahitanga - Misplaced Pages Continue

1890-497: Was opened and its first newspaper, the Poverty Bay Standard was established. A town council was formed in 1877. Gisborne is on the east coast of New Zealand's North Island , in the southern part of the Gisborne District and on the north side of Poverty Bay . The Poverty Bay flats encompass Gisborne city as well as surrounding areas Mākaraka, Matawhero and Ormond, where vineyards and farms predominate. Gisborne

1935-536: Was sold to the city for a nominal sum. It is now known as the Tairāwhiti Museum. The Tairāwhiti Tamararo Regionals are an annual regional haka competition held in Gisborne in memory of Karaitiana Tamararo. Gisborne is host to Rhythm & Vines , an annual 3-day music festival held over the New Year at Waiohika Estate. In 2012 and 2013, Rhythm and Vines made skinny-dipping world record attempts. Since 2019

1980-469: Was the main canoe that brought the people to the East Coast and that Ngāti Porou always regarded Takitimu as "an unimportant canoe". Māori historian Rongowhakaata Halbert affirmed this account, stating that Paoa's crew on the Horouta were the first inhabitants of the East Coast after migrating from Ahuahu or Great Mercury Island . Paoa gave his name to various places across the region, most notably

2025-499: Was undermined by Waikato chief Tupu Atanatiu Taingakawa Te Waharoa , who circulated a rival deed of union calling for all Māori tribes to unite under the Kingitanga. The lower house, or Whare o Raro , had 96 members, elected at large from electorates defined according to tribal affiliation. The upper house, or Whare Ariki , was composed of 44 paramount chiefs elected by the members of the Whare o Raro . 127 representatives filled

#41958