How are you related to Te Ruki Kawiti?

Connect to the World Family Tree to find out

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Te Ruki Kawiti

Also Known As: "The Duke", "Kawiti", "Te Ruki"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Northland, New Zealand
Death: May 05, 1854 (75-84)
Waiomio, Far North District, Northland, New Zealand
Place of Burial: Northland, New Zealand
Immediate Family:

Son of Huna Kawiti and Te Tawai
Husband of Te Tiwha Kawiti; Kawa; Hana Tana Mangu and Rewa Toto Kawiti
Father of Tuwahinenui Waekamania Shortland; Maihi Paraone Kawiti; Taura Kawiti; Wiremu Te Poro Kawiti and Kokako
Brother of Taongahuru Tawai; Tiwaiwai Tawai; Hikuwae-kamania Tawai; Ringahau Tawai; Whata Tawai and 7 others
Half brother of Whata Tawai and Tupare

Occupation: High Chief of Ngati Hine, Tohunga and War Leader
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Te Ruki Kawiti

Tokerau is the mountain
Taumārere the river
Ngāti Hine the hapū
Hineāmaru the ancestress.

Kawiti was born, probably in the 1770s, in northern New Zealand. He was descended from Nukutawhiti, commander of the Ngāokimatawhaorua canoe, which made its landing at Hokianga. He was the 11th generation from Rāhiri, ancestor of Ngāpuhi; Huna was his father and his mother, Te Tawai. They were of Ngāti Hine, whose identity with their territory runs thus:

Tokerau is the mountain Taumārere the river Ngati Hine the hapū Hineāmaru the ancestress. When Kawiti reached maturity, he was admitted into Te Whare Wānanga mo ngā Tohunga, at Taumārere, one of the ancestral villages of Ngāti Hine. As he gained a reputation as a fighting warlord, Europeans gave him the nickname 'The Duke' (Te Ruki).

Kawiti and his first wife, Kawa, had three sons: Taura, Wiremu Te Poro, and Maihi Paraone Te Kuhanga. His second wife was Te Tīwhā, and they had a daughter, Tuahine. His villages were at Ōtuihu, Pūmanawa, Waiōmio, Taumārere, Ōrauta and Mangakāhia; his carved whare, Ahuareka, stood in Waiōmio, a short distance from where Te Rapunga meeting house now stands.

Kawiti was a notable warrior and detested being bottled up in a fort. He favoured rugged terrain as his battleground, and preferred to pursue an opponent and fight in hand-to-hand combat to the death. His fighting pā, therefore, were sited on hilly slopes at points which offered safe exit routes into thick bush. His pā were Ōtarawa, immediately below Te Pouaka-a-Hineamaru; Tikokauae at Mōtatau; Wahapū (Te Wahapū Inlet) at Ahikiwi; Ruapekapeka and Puketona.

At the battle of Moremonui, at Maunganui Bluff, in 1807 or 1808 Kawiti saw Ngāpuhi fall before the assembled might of Ngāti Whātua; Hongi Hika barely escaped with his life. In 1824 Te Whareumu of Ngāpuhi came to Kawiti, chanting his ngākau, a special request for assistance to avenge the deaths of his relatives at Moremonui. He had presented Kawiti with a pig, and when Kawiti shared the pig among his people it was a sign to Te Whareumu of Ngāti Hine support. The battle of Te Ika-a-ranga-nui, on the Kaiwaka River, followed in 1825, and on this occasion Ngāti Whātua fell before the assembled might of Ngāuhi; the deaths of Taurawhero, Koriwhai and other Ngāpuhi at Moremonui were avenged.

Kawiti also earned the reputation of a peacemaker among his people. This was evident at Te Ika-a-ranga-nui when a serious disagreement occurred between Hongi and Kawiti. Kawiti, who had kinship ties with Ngāti Whātua, realised that Hongi would annihilate that tribe, so just before the battle took place, he took a number of them as hostages to protect them. Hongi heard about Kawiti' hostages and went to Taumārere to demand their release; they were his 'possessions' by right of conquest. Hongi threatened to invade Ngāti Hine territory, but Kawiti warned him off.

Hongi did not carry out his threat. Sentries, posted by Kawiti along the route to Whangāroa as a precaution, reported that no preparations for full-scale war were being made at Hongi' camp. This allowed Kawiti and Ngāti Hine to embark at once on their mission of peace to return Ngati Whatua safely to Kaipara. Mate Kairangatira of Ngāti Hine was left with Ngāti Whātua to cement the peace pact made between the two tribes, and to warn Hongi of the consequences should he ever attack Ngāti Whātua again.

Kawiti also intervened at the battle known as the Girls' War, at Kororāreka (Russell) in 1830, and helped to speed up peace negotiations between Ngāpuhi and the Kororāreka people. Ngāpuhi were seeking to avenge the loss of their chief Hengi. To avoid full-scale war between Ngāpuhi and the people of Kororāreka, Kawiti induced Kiwikiwi to surrender the lands of Kororāreka, which were Kawiti' by right of conquest, to Ngāpuhi as atonement for the loss of Hengi.

In 1840, when William Hobson arrived in New Zealand having been commissioned as lieutenant governor, Kawiti vigorously resisted the introduction of British rule. He aimed to ensure that the lands of his people would be left intact so that Ngāti Hine would never become landless or homeless, or slaves to the Pākehā. Before 1840 he had already lost Ōpua lands; it is said that a Paihia missionary had waited until Kawiti was absent at Kaipara, before negotiating a purchase with a local chief of lesser rank. Kawiti was not in a trusting mood when confronted by Hobson and other British officials at the Waitangi meeting on 5 and 6 February 1840. He refused to sign the treaty for fear that his sacred moko would provide the means by which the government would commence taking the lands. He said to Hobson, 'Who said we want you to stay here? We don't want to be restricted, or to be trampled on by you. The missionaries may stay, but you must return to your own country. There is no place here for the governor!'

Kawiti did not give his agreement to the treaty on 6 February when others signed at Waitangi, but his people still pressed him to sign. At a special meeting with Hobson, in May 1840, Kawiti reluctantly agreed to sign the treaty. (His name appears above the signatures of 6 February.) He expressed his reservations in the strongest terms, saying the Maori population was declining so fast that the Europeans were likely to get the land anyway. He did not want to 'sign away his land'.

Possibly Kawiti regretted giving his agreement. Early in 1845 he joined forces with Hōne Heke in challenging British sovereignty. At Kororāreka, on 11 March, his forces created a diversion while the flagstaff on Maiki Hill was cut down for the fourth and last time. Kawiti saw the flagstaff as a symbol of the assertion of British sovereignty over Maori land, and was determined that it should not be re-erected (which it was not, until 1858).

The northern war of 1845–46 involved the forces of Kawiti and Heke against British troops and Māori allies. The British launched three major expeditions into the hinterland of the Bay of Islands. In the first, at Puketutu, Kawiti and his warriors remained outside the pa. When the British attacked the pa, Kawiti' forces staged well co-ordinated strikes at the British rear. They sustained quite heavy casualties but it was a Maori victory, despite British claims to the contrary. Skilled in military tactics, Kawiti never risked his men in open combat again.

At Ōhaeawai he saw to the construction of a carefully designed pa that withstood a British attack on 1 July. Outnumbered six to one, the Māori forces inflicted a serious defeat on the British. Kawiti' military tactics were crucial to this Māori victory. For five months fighting ceased while Governor Robert FitzRoy tried to arrange a peace which would salvage British pride. Kawiti rejected the peace terms, which included a cession of land.

It is said that he censured Heke, who was tempted to make peace, with these words: 'You and your territory have done enough. This time let me have them [the British]. I warned you that the water was too deep for you alone to net the big fish, but you would not listen. Now the water just barely reaches your knees and you cry, enough!'

Governor Robert FitzRoy was replaced by George Grey, who arrived in November 1845. Grey gave Kawiti and Heke only five days to respond to the peace offer, and meanwhile organised an expedition against Kawiti' new pā of Ruapekapeka. Kawiti' aim was to draw British troops into battle on a fairly inaccessible site. He succeeded: 1,100 men took nearly a month to cover the 15 miles from the Bay of Islands to the inland pa. Kawiti, knowing that the pa had to be stronger than Ōhaeawai, selected puriri trunks 20 feet long and 3 feet thick, and embedded them 8 feet into the soil for the main palisades. No major building was erected within the pa; underground rooms were built instead. These pits could hold up to 20 men each; they were designed to withstand the heavy bombardment which the British launched in late December 1845 and which lasted two weeks. Kawiti and his men sheltered together in the dark bunkers like a colony of bats, an arrangement which gave the pa its name, Ruapekapeka, the Bats' Nest. Heke and his men were camped outside.

On Sunday, 11 January, the British troops entered the pa. It appeared deserted, although Kawiti and a small group remained. (There are confusing accounts that either they, or the rest of the force, were at prayer.) Detachments of Kawiti' men had slipped away previously, in a tactical move, aimed at enticing the troops to follow into the bush, where they could easily be picked off. A strong defensive position had been prepared at the rear of the pa.

The feigned retreat was partly successful. The British suffered a total of 45 casualties, while Māori killed and wounded numbered about 30. The pā, like Ōhaeawai, was abandoned. It had served its purpose: blood had been spilled and therefore it would never be used again. The battle was not an outright victory for the British. Nevertheless, at the end of January Kawiti and Heke negotiated a peace. Kawiti is said to have pressed a kōtuku feather into the hat of the senior British officer, as a gesture of accord. An important part of the peacemaking was Kawiti' reconciliation with Tāmati Wāka Nene.

The divisions in Ngāpuhi and Ngāpuhi' failure to support him in the war, were the subject of a now famous takuate (lament) which Kawiti sang, it is said, at Ruapekapeka. The lament acknowledged that the ancestors of Ngāpuhi had arrived in many different canoes. Each ancestor had formed his own tribe, who selected their chief, who in turn was the guardian of his own territory. A chief had the right to refuse to support another.

After the peacemaking Kawiti moved to Waionui and later to Pākaraka. Some sources say that he was baptised, by Henry Williams, on 20 February 1853. He was thought to be about 80 years of age when he died at Waiōmio on 5 May 1854; his tangi continued for a year. Afterwards his remains were placed with those of his ancestors in Te Pouaka-a-Hineāmaru. His son, Maihi, succeeded him as leader of Ngāti Hine.

Before his death Kawiti warned his people to hold fast to the treasures of their ancestors, and to wait 'until the sandfly nips the pages of the book [the treaty]; then you will rise and oppose'. Descendants have taken this as a special injunction to act, when treaty promises are not upheld.

A marae complex, a loving memorial to Kawiti, was erected at Waiōmio Caves by Kawiti' great-grandson, Tawai, who did not live to see its completion; his whānau added his name to the meeting house along with that of his father, his grandfather, and Kawiti. The meeting house name now reads: Tawai, Te Riri, Maihi, Kawiti.

Te Ruki Kawiti (1770s–1854) was a prominent Māori rangatira (chief). He and Hōne Heke successfully fought the British in the Flagstaff War in 1845–46.

Descended from Nukutawhiti and Rāhiri, he was born in the north of New Zealand into the Ngāti Hine hapū, one of the subtribes of Ngāpuhi.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Te_Ruki_Kawiti



Te Ruki Kawiti was a prominent Maori chieftain (c1770 -1854), with Hone Heke he successfully fought the British in the First Maori War.

Descended from Nukutawhiti and Rahiri he was born in the north of New Zealand to the Ngati Hine hapu, one of the subtribes of the Ngapuhi. From his youth he was trained in leadership and warfare. He was present at the Battle of Moremonui when many of the Ngapuhi were slughtered by the Ngati Whatua, then almost twenty years later, in 1825, he was at the Battle of Te Ika a Ranganui when it was the Ngapuhi's turn to slaughter the Ngati Whatua. However he took captive a number of Ngati Whatua and refused to hand them over to Hongi Hika prefering instead to return them to their own people.

Kawiti refused to sign the Treaty of Waitangi on 6 February, 1840 seeing that it would, inevitably lead to further European encroachment and the loss of Maori land. However he eventually yielded to pressure from his own people and signed the Treaty in May 1840, right at the top, above those chiefs who had signed earlier.

However he soon grew disenchanted with the course of events and supported Hone Heke in his protests against British rule. When in March 1845 Heke cut down the flag pole at Kororareka for the fourth time thereby initiating the First Maori War Kawiti created a diversion by attacking the town.

By now well into his seventies Kawiti was a very experienced warrior, between them he and Heke fought and probably defeated the British.

The first serious engagement of the war was the Battle of Puketutu Pa. While Heke occupied the Pa itself, Kawiti and his men were skirmishing in the scrub and gullies around the Pa. They successfully prevented the British from launching a coordinated attack on the Pa but at quite a heavy cost in casualties.

At the next engagement, the Battle of Ohaeawai Pa Kawiti provoked the British into a disastrous frontal attack that cost them very heavy casualties. Having achieved his purpose he then evacuated the Pa. Following this there was a lull of several months for peace negotiations that went nowhere. Then towards the end of 1845 the British launched a major expedition against Kawiti's new Pa at Ruapekapeka. The Pa successfully withstood the siege and bombardment for several weeks before Kawiti made a tactical withdrawal; luring some of the British troops into a complex ambush behind the Pa.

The British had not fought alone in this war. They had been allied with the important chief, Tamati Waka Nene. After Ruapekapeka Kawiti and a reluctant Heke made their peace with Waka Nene who in turn insisted that the British accepted it.

This was Kawiti's last war. He died at Waiomio 5 May 1854 lamenting the disunity of the Ngapuhi people. The meeting house, marae complex at Waiomio Caves is his memorial.

Why was Kawiti later called ?Te Ruki? or ?The Duke??

It is not known when precisely Kawiti took up the name Te Ruki but we do know that he took up the name from the Duke of Wellington (born 1769 ? died 1852) who was the most famous of Britain?s Military leaders in the early 1800?s and probably the most famous of all time, which is no mean feat given Britain?s history of warfare - "Te Ruki" being a transliteration of "the Duke" Neither is it known as to whether he took the name himself or whether others called took the liberty of naming him which Kawiti then accepted later?

But what is known was that Rangatira Maori of that period were taking on the names of others. Examples such as Nene taking on ?Tamati Waka? or Thomas Walker. Patuone took on the name ?Eruera Maihi? after Te Tiriti o Waitangi to honour Henry Williams son, ?Edward Marsh?. And then there was Whiria of Ngati Manu taking on the name of Pomare 1 who was then the king in Tahiti. Field Marshal Arthur Wellesley, the Duke of Wellington was a native of Ireland and was one of the leading military and political figures of the early 1800?s in Britain. His defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo in 1815 put him in the top rank of Britain's military heroes as his battle record is exemplary having participated in some 60 battles during the course of his military career. Above all things, the Duke of Wellington is famous for his adaptive defensive style of warfare, resulting in several victories against a numerically superior force while minimising his own losses. He is regarded as one of the greatest defensive commanders of all time, and many of his tactics and battle plans are still studied in military academies around the world as have Kawiti's strategies. Given that Kawiti died in 1854 and that Wellington died in 1852, it would be probable that Kawiti only took on the name of Te Ruki after the Northern Wars of 1845/46 given that he was known for his defensive style of warfare against the British and their Maori allies - ko wai ka mohio? There are many Te Ruki?s or Ruki in Ngati Hine whakapapa right to this day. There are also derivatives of Duke as it appears as ?Tiuka? as well.

From a Facebook entry in the group 'Ngati Hine a Hineamaru'



Kawiti was born, probably in the 1770s, in northern New Zealand. He was descended from Nukutawhiti, commander of the Ngā-toki-mata-whao-rua canoe, which made its landing at Hokianga. He was the 11th generation from Rāhiri, ancestor of Ngāpuhi; Hunā was his father and his mother, Te Tāwai. They were of Ngāti Hine, whose identity with their territory runs thus:

Tokerau is the mountain Taumārere the river Ngāti Hine the hapū Hineāmaru the ancestress. When Kawiti reached maturity, he was admitted into Te Whare Wānanga mō nga Tohunga, at Taumārere, one of the ancestral villages of Ngāti Hine. As he gained a reputation as a fighting warlord, Europeans gave him the nickname 'The Duke' (Te Ruki).

Kawiti and his first wife, Kawa, had three sons: Taura, Wiremu Te Poro, and Maihi Parāone Te Kuhanga. His second wife was Te Tiwha, and they had a daughter, Tuahine. His villages were at Ōtūihu, Pūmanawa, Waiōmio, Taumārere, Ōrauta and Mangakāhia; his carved whare, Āhuareka, stood in Waiōmio, a short distance from where Te Rapunga meeting house now stands.

Kawiti was a notable warrior and detested being bottled up in a fort. He favoured rugged terrain as his battleground, and preferred to pursue an opponent and fight in hand-to-hand combat to the death. His fighting pā, therefore, were sited on hilly slopes at points which offered safe exit routes into thick bush. His pā were Ōtārawa, immediately below Te Pouaka-a-Hineāmaru; Tikokauae at Mōtatau; Wahapū (Te Wahapū Inlet) at Ahikiwi; Ruapekapeka and Puketona.

At the battle of Moremonui, at Maunganui Bluff, in 1807 or 1808 Kawiti saw Ngāpuhi fall before the assembled might of Ngāti Whātua; Hongi Hika barely escaped with his life. In 1824 Te Whareumu of Ngāpuhi came to Kawiti, chanting his ngākau, a special request for assistance to avenge the deaths of his relatives at Moremonui. He had presented Kawiti with a pig, and when Kawiti shared the pig among his people it was a sign to Te Whareumu of Ngāti Hine support. The battle of Te Ika-ā-ranganui, on the Kaiwaka River, followed in 1825, and on this occasion Ngāti Whātua fell before the assembled might of Ngāpuhi; the deaths of Taurawhero, Koriwhai and other Ngāpuhi at Moremonui were avenged.

Kawiti also earned the reputation of a peacemaker among his people. This was evident at Te Ika-ā-ranganui when a serious disagreement occurred between Hongi and Kawiti. Kawiti, who had kinship ties with Ngāti Whātua, realised that Hongi would annihilate that tribe, so just before the battle took place, he took a number of them as hostages to protect them. Hongi heard about Kawiti's hostages and went to Taumārere to demand their release; they were his 'possessions' by right of conquest. Hongi threatened to invade Ngāti Hine territory, but Kawiti warned him off.

Hongi did not carry out his threat. Sentries, posted by Kawiti along the route to Whangaroa as a precaution, reported that no preparations for full-scale war were being made at Hongi's camp. This allowed Kawiti and Ngāti Hine to embark at once on their mission of peace to return Ngāti Whātua safely to Kaipara. Mate Kairangatira of Ngāti Hine was left with Ngāti Whātua to cement the peace pact made between the two tribes, and to warn Hongi of the consequences should he ever attack Ngāti Whātua again.

Kawiti also intervened at the battle known as the Girls' War, at Kororāreka (Russell) in 1830, and helped to speed up peace negotiations between Ngāpuhi and the Kororāreka people. Ngāpuhi were seeking to avenge the loss of their chief Hengi. To avoid full-scale war between Ngāpuhi and the people of Kororāreka, Kawiti induced Kiwikiwi to surrender the lands of Kororāreka, which were Kawiti's by right of conquest, to Ngāpuhi as atonement for the loss of Hengi.

In 1840, when William Hobson arrived in New Zealand having been commissioned as lieutenant governor, Kawiti vigorously resisted the introduction of British rule. He aimed to ensure that the lands of his people would be left intact so that Ngāti Hine would never become landless or homeless, or slaves to the Pākehā. Before 1840 he had already lost Ōpua lands; it is said that a Paihia missionary had waited until Kawiti was absent at Kaipara, before negotiating a purchase with a local chief of lesser rank. Kawiti was not in a trusting mood when confronted by Hobson and other British officials at the Waitangi meeting on 5 and 6 February 1840. He refused to sign the treaty for fear that his sacred moko would provide the means by which the government would commence taking the lands. He said to Hobson, 'Who said we want you to stay here? We don't want to be restricted, or to be trampled on by you. The missionaries may stay, but you must return to your own country. There is no place here for the governor!'

Kawiti did not give his agreement to the treaty on 6 February when others signed at Waitangi, but his people still pressed him to sign. At a special meeting with Hobson, in May 1840, Kawiti reluctantly agreed to sign the treaty. (His name appears above the signatures of 6 February.) He expressed his reservations in the strongest terms, saying the Māori population was declining so fast that the Europeans were likely to get the land anyway. He did not want to 'sign away his land'.

Possibly Kawiti regretted giving his agreement. Early in 1845 he joined forces with Hōne Heke in challenging British sovereignty. At Kororāreka, on 11 March, his forces created a diversion while the flagstaff on Maiki Hill was cut down for the fourth and last time. Kawiti saw the flagstaff as a symbol of the assertion of British sovereignty over Māori land, and was determined that it should not be re-erected (which it was not, until 1858).

The northern war of 1845–46 involved the forces of Kawiti and Heke against British troops and Māori allies. The British launched three major expeditions into the hinterland of the Bay of Islands. In the first, at Puketutu, Kawiti and his warriors remained outside the pā. When the British attacked the pā, Kawiti's forces staged well co-ordinated strikes at the British rear. They sustained quite heavy casualties but it was a Māori victory, despite British claims to the contrary. Skilled in military tactics, Kawiti never risked his men in open combat again.

At Ōhaeawai he saw to the construction of a carefully designed pā that withstood a British attack on 1 July. Outnumbered six to one, the Māori forces inflicted a serious defeat on the British. Kawiti's military tactics were crucial to this Māori victory. For five months fighting ceased while Governor Robert FitzRoy tried to arrange a peace which would salvage British pride. Kawiti rejected the peace terms, which included a cession of land.

It is said that he censured Heke, who was tempted to make peace, with these words: 'You and your territory have done enough. This time let me have them [the British]. I warned you that the water was too deep for you alone to net the big fish, but you would not listen. Now the water just barely reaches your knees and you cry, enough!'

Governor Robert FitzRoy was replaced by George Grey, who arrived in November 1845. Grey gave Kawiti and Heke only five days to respond to the peace offer, and meanwhile organised an expedition against Kawiti's new pā of Ruapekapeka. Kawiti's aim was to draw British troops into battle on a fairly inaccessible site. He succeeded: 1,100 men took nearly a month to cover the 15 miles from the Bay of Islands to the inland pā. Kawiti, knowing that the pā had to be stronger than Ōhaeawai, selected pūriri trunks 20 feet long and 3 feet thick, and embedded them 8 feet into the soil for the main palisades. No major building was erected within the pa; underground rooms were built instead. These pits could hold up to 20 men each; they were designed to withstand the heavy bombardment which the British launched in late December 1845 and which lasted two weeks. Kawiti and his men sheltered together in the dark bunkers like a colony of bats, an arrangement which gave the pā its name, Ruapekapeka, the Bats' Nest. Heke and his men were camped outside.

On Sunday, 11 January, the British troops entered the pā. It appeared deserted, although Kawiti and a small group remained. (There are confusing accounts that either they, or the rest of the force, were at prayer.) Detachments of Kawiti's men had slipped away previously, in a tactical move, aimed at enticing the troops to follow into the bush, where they could easily be picked off. A strong defensive position had been prepared at the rear of the pā.

The feigned retreat was partly successful. The British suffered a total of 45 casualties, while Māori killed and wounded numbered about 30. The pā, like Ōhaeawai, was abandoned. It had served its purpose: blood had been spilled and therefore it would never be used again. The battle was not an outright victory for the British. Nevertheless, at the end of January Kawiti and Heke negotiated a peace. Kawiti is said to have pressed a kōtuku feather into the hat of the senior British officer, as a gesture of accord. An important part of the peacemaking was Kawiti's reconciliation with Tāmati Wāka Nene.

The divisions in Ngāpuhi, and Ngāpuhi's failure to support him in the war, were the subject of a now famous takuate (lament) which Kawiti sang, it is said, at Ruapekapeka. The lament acknowledged that the ancestors of Ngāpuhi had arrived in many different canoes. Each ancestor had formed his own tribe, who selected their chief, who in turn was the guardian of his own territory. A chief had the right to refuse to support another.

After the peacemaking Kawiti moved to Waiōnui and later to Pākaraka Some sources say that he was baptised, by Henry Williams, on 20 February 1853. He was thought to be about 80 years of age when he died at Waiōmio on 5 May 1854; his tangi continued for a year. Afterwards his remains were placed with those of his ancestors in Te Pouaka-a-Hineāmaru. His son, Maihi, succeeded him as leader of Ngāti Hine.

Before his death Kawiti warned his people to hold fast to the treasures of their ancestors, and to wait 'until the sandfly nips the pages of the book [the treaty]; then you will rise and oppose'. Descendants have taken this as a special injunction to act, when treaty promises are not upheld.

A marae complex, a loving memorial to Kawiti, was erected at Waiōmio Caves by Kawiti's great-grandson, Tāwai, who did not live to see its completion; his whānau added his name to the meeting house along with that of his father, his grandfather, and Kawiti. The meeting house name now reads: Tāwai, Te Riri, Maihi, Kawiti.

Taken from: https://teara.govt.nz/en/biographies/1k4/kawiti-te-ruki

view all 13

Te Ruki Kawiti's Timeline

1774
1774
Northland, New Zealand
1807
1807
Kawakawa, Northland, New Zealand
1809
1809
Waiomio, Far North District, Northland, New Zealand
1811
1811
Waiomio, Far North District, Northland, New Zealand
1853
February 20, 1853
Age 79
1854
May 5, 1854
Age 80
Waiomio, Far North District, Northland, New Zealand
1854
Age 80
Northland, New Zealand
????
????
Porowini Avenue, Whangarei, Northland, 0110, New Zealand