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Go through and complete these activities to check your understanding of te Tiriti o Waitangi and te ao Māori, then discuss what you’ve learnt!

The waiata “Purea nei” is said to be about the story of Ueoneone and Reitū and carries the traditions of the Te Rarawa Iwi, although the waiata is modern.

Reitū and Reipae

The sisters Reitū and Reipae are renowned in Māori tradition. Ueoneone, a chief from Whāngāpē, travelled to the Waikato, where he fell in love with the sisters. He proposed marriage and they accepted.

Ueoneone sent a bird to the Waikato to carry the sisters northward. However, when the bird landed near present-day Whangārei, Reipae fell in love with a chief named Ōtāhuhupōtiki, and married him. Te Whanga-a-Reipae (the harbour of Reipae) is one meaning of the name Whāngārei.

Reitū carried on alone and married Ueoneone at Whāngāpē. Kauae and Tawakeiti, their twin daughters, married Tūpoto, from whom every tribe north of Auckland can trace descent.

https://teara.govt.nz/en/muriwhenua-tribes/page-1

https://www.folksong.org.nz/purea_nei/index.html


Ōriwa Tahupōtiki Haddon was a public figure known for his orator abilities as a broadcaster, Methodist minister and Māori advocate. A pharmacist by trade Haddon was also an accomplished artist. This image is of a painting titled “The Signing of the Treaty of Waitangi” by Haddon. The photograph comes from a copyright application held at Archives New Zealand and submitted by Haddon on 19th January 1934. Archives reference: AEGA 18982 PC4 1934/3067 www.archway.archives.govt.nz/ViewFullItem.do?code=18288277 Caption information from Te Ara: teara.govt.nz/en/biographies/4h2/haddon-oriwa-tahupotiki For more information use our “ask an archivist” link on our website: www.archives.govt.nz Material from Archives New Zealand Te Rua Mahara o te Kāwanatanga Date Taken on 15 June 2018, 11:40 Source “The Signing of the Treaty of Waitangi”, Ōriwa Haddon Author Archives New Zealand from New Zealand