Hauhau

Hauhau
Member of the Pai Marire, a religious-military cult of the Maori people of New Zealand.

The cult was founded in 1864 by Te Ua Haumene, who claimed to have been visited by the angel Gabriel and to have sacrificed his child in repentance for the straying of the Maori people. A mixture of Jewish, Christian, and Maori beliefs, the movement held that the Maori were a new chosen people and charged them with driving out the Europeans and recovering the ancestral lands. The effort failed, though fighting lasted until 1872. Some cult beliefs have persisted among the Maoris.

* * *

▪ Maori cult
      any of the radical members of the Maori Pai Marire (Maori: “Good and Peaceful”) religion, founded in 1862 in Taranaki on North Island, New Zealand. The movement was founded by Te Ua Haumene, a Maori prophet who had been captured in his youth and converted to Christianity before his release. Like most other Maori, he was opposed to the sale of Maori land, and he joined the Maori King Movement. In 1862 he had a vision that revealed to him the evil of the pakeha (non-Maori, or European) culture.

      Adapting Christian religious tenets to Maori beliefs, Te Ua held that the Maori were a lost tribe of Israel. Their immediate task was to save themselves from the Europeans colonizing New Zealand, to recover their ancestral lands, and to establish the principle of pai marire. Despite this ideal of goodness and peace, some of the movement's believers turned to violent resistance. These men, calling on Te Hau, the spirit of God in the wind, shouted the words “Pai Marire, hau, hau!” in battle, believing that it would protect them from European bullets. This war cry is the origin of their popular name, Hauhau, and belief in its effectiveness accounted for their daring in battle. In 1864–65, as the Hauhau took to the battlefield, most other Maori forces were going down in defeat; immediate and large-scale European confiscation of Maori land, however, drove many Maori into the ranks of armed dissidents, and Hauhau remained a common label for all of the resisters, whether or not they were associated with Pai Marire. Fighting continued until 1872, by which time the Pai Marire itself had dwindled.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Hauhau — ist eine Bezeichnung der neuseeländischen Māori für einen Zweig der religiösen Bewegung Pai Marire, der in den 1860er Jahren durch Te Ua Haumēne vom in der Region Taranaki ansässigen Iwi Taranaki gegründet wurde. Die Bewegung verbreitete die… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Hauhau — is a Māori term that was applied to a branch of the religious movement Pai Marire, founded by Te Ua Haumēne of the Taranaki tribe in New Zealand in the 1860s. The movement inculcated that Māoris would regain land that they had lost to Europeans… …   Wikipedia

  • Hauhau — Miembro del Pai Marire, un culto religioso militar del pueblo maorí de Nueva Zelanda. El culto fue fundado en 1864 por Te Ua Haumene, quien sostenía haber sido visitado por el ángel Gabriel y haber sacrificado a su hijo en arrepentimiento por el… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • hauhau — /ˈhaʊhaʊ/ (say howhow) noun NZ a member of a 19th century Maori religious movement. {Maori} –hauhauism, noun …  

  • Second Taranaki War — Infobox Military Conflict conflict = Second Taranaki War partof = New Zealand land wars caption = date = April/May 1863 to November 1866 place = Taranaki territory = result = Indecisive status = combatant1 = New Zealand Government combatant2 =… …   Wikipedia

  • Ngāti Porou — Iwi of New Zealand Rohe (location) East Cape and Gisborne region Waka (canoe) Nukutere …   Wikipedia

  • Ropata Wahawaha — (died 1 July 1897) was a Ngāti Porou war chief who rose to prominence during New Zealand s East Cape War and to senior command during Te Kooti s War. Contents 1 Childhood and names 2 Early adulthood 3 1860s …   Wikipedia

  • Ngati Porou — Ngāti Porou ist ein Iwi der Māori in Neuseeland, dessen traditionelles Stammesgebiet im Bereich East Cape und der Region Gisborne liegt. Ngāti Porou ist mit 71.910 registrierten Angehörigen der zweitgrößte Iwi.[1] Die traditionellen Grenzen des… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Ngāti Porou — ist ein Iwi der Māori in Neuseeland, dessen traditionelles Stammesgebiet im Bereich East Cape und der Region Gisborne liegt. Ngāti Porou ist mit 71.910 registrierten Angehörigen der zweitgrößte Iwi.[1] Die traditionellen Grenzen des… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Te Kooti — While fighting alongside government forces against the Hauhau, he was accused of spying. Exiled to the Chatham Islands without trial along with captured Hauhau, he experienced visions and became a religious leader. In 1868 he led the escape of… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”