Tāmihana Te Rauparaha

Ngati Toa leader, evangelist, writer, sheepfarmer, assessor
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroNgati Toa leader, evangelist, writer, sheepfarmer, assessor
wasWriter Assessor Evangelist
Work fieldLiterature Religion
Gender
Male
Birth1 January 1820
Death1 January 1876 (aged 56 years)
The details

Biography

Tāmihana (born Katu) Te Rauparaha (1820s – October 1876) was a notable New Zealand Māori leader, Christian evangelist, assessor, writer and farmer. He was born in Pukearuhe, Taranaki, New Zealand, the son of the great Ngati Toa leader Te Rauparaha and his fifth and senior wife, Te Akau of Tuhourangi.
Tāmihana was strongly influenced by Church Missionary Society teaching. In 1842 Tāmihana worked as a missionary in the South Island, easing fears of renewed conflict from his father's old enemies. The following year he married Ruta Te Kapu in Otaki. In October 1850 he sailed for England, where he was presented to the Queen Victoria. On his return Tāmihana became supportive of the idea of a Māori King to unify tribes. Initially he joined the King movement in opposing the selling of Maori land to the government, but when a chief of Te Āti Awa, Wiremu Kīngi got into conflict with the government over the sale of land at Waitara, he broke with the movement and sided with the government over issues of land and sovereignty.

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