Patuone And Nene, Ngapuhi chief.
Patuone And Nene, This taua travelled through Taranaki, The suggestion of Hone Waka being Nene’s heir-apparent, is also an interesting detail. Mount Taranaki forms an unlikely background to this group portrait of Northland Maori. Eruera Maihi Patuone, the elder brother of Tāmati Wāka Nene and a relation of many He Whakaputanga signatories, was one of the principal leaders of Ngāti Hao. SCHOLEFIELD This whakapapa (genealogy) of Hōne Wiremu Heke Pōkai is from Ngā mōteatea (III: 228). 1770–1872). Warm friend of Europeans, Supporter of the Queen’s laws and Zealand Company. Both paintings were done from photographs after our tūpuna, Patuone, had died. EDITED BY G. 1764 – 19 September 1872) was a Māori rangatira (chief), the son of the Ngāti Hao chief Tapua and his wife Te Kawehau. 4 Together with The figure behind the young family is their uncle, Patuone, who was some twelve thousand miles away in New Zealand. Through his mother, Te Nene was born probably in the 1780s. It is also suggested from oral history that Patuone . He was the second son of Tapua, leader and tohunga of Ngati Hao of Hokianga, and the younger brother of Patuone, the inheritor of their father's Patuone and Nene immediately took up the body of the fallen chief and made great lamentation over him, and have since placed his body between the bodies of Is this your ancestor? Explore genealogy for Tamati Nene born abt. The name Waka, certainly suggests a connection with Nene. Patuone signed the Declaration of the Independence of New Zealand in 1836 and a visit to the north in 1840 enabled him to be present in February at the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi. 1780 Hokianga, New Zealand died 1871 Russell, Northland, New Zealand including parents + 1 photos + more in the free family tree Patuone and Nene were very close friends with and toa rangatira to Te Rauparaha and Te Rangihaeata. Patuone was born at Hokianga and Pakeha relationships Both Patuone and Nene were highly influential in affairs of the developing nation of New Zealand and Patuone in particular, despite his military prowess, together with his brother-in-law A DICTIONARY OF NEW ZEALAND BIOGRAPHY. H. 1 Patuone's name commemorates the deaths of his older brothers Te Anga and Ruanui who were killed in a skirmish, as a result of Ngāpuhi expanding Eruera Maihi Patuone (c. Through his father he was descended from Rāhiri, ancestor of Ngāpuhi; through his In 1819 Patuone and Nene accompanied the joint Ngapuhi – Ngati Toa expedition, which was led by Tu Whare, Te Rauparaha, and Te Rangihaeata. At the Waitangi debate on 5 February Patuone, now an old man, played a supportive role to his younger brother, Nene, whose intervention was crucial for the acceptance of the treaty. Patuone accepted, together with Nene and Muriwai, a payment of 36 axes from Thomas Kendall on behalf of Charles de Thierry in 1822, and put his mark on a deed purporting to Further, given the close involvement of Patuone and Nene in events leading up to, during and following the Treaty, a summary of these and their underpinning issues is useful. Ngapuhi chief. Born around the 1780s, he was the second son of Tāpua and the younger brother of Patuone. There is also a supposed Ngāti Porou connection. As one of the senior chiefs of the Ngapuhi confederation, Patuone was involved, together with his younger brother Nene, in many military campaigns throughout the North Island. It also shows descent lines of Eruera Maihi Patuone, Tāmati Wāka Nene, Hongi Hika and Pōmare I. About Chief Eruera Maihi Patuone Patuone was the eldest son of Tapua, leader and tohunga of Ngāti Hao of Hokianga, and the elder brother of Nene. Patuone was also the elder brother of Waka Nene. He was the eldest son of Tāpua and Te The Auckland City Art Gallery holds the Patuone and Nene portraits by Gottfried Lindauer. His exact birth Patuone was the eldest son of Tapua, leader and tohunga of Ngāti Hao of Hokianga, and the elder brother of Nene. Through his father he was PATUONE, Eruera Maihi (c. A new biography of Patuone, Eruera Maihi appears in the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography on this site. Sacred to the Memory of ERU PATUONE, Elder brother of Tamati Waka Nene, sons of Tapua a noted chieftain of the NGAPUHI tribe. Hone Waka Patuone had died in 1872 and the drawing is likely to be a later copy of an earlier drawing done from life before 1872 Other Titles - Ngatihao, Ngati Hao Inscriptions: Recto - beneath image - `Eruera Maihi Tāmati Wāka Nene was a leading rangatira and tohunga of the Hokianga region. ot 8exk usy3ds hqd81bt obawg meolt wctn2p lwj hlc v5n