Ngāpuhi chief Hone Heke was outspoken in his support of the Treaty of Waitangi, and believed to be the first Maori to sign it. It is doubtful whether, without such open support from a well-respected Maori chief, the Treaty would have been accepted by Maori.
Hone Heke was a Māori chief who played a significant role in the Northern War in New Zealand in 1845-1846. He protested the Treaty of Waitangi by repeatedly cutting down the British flagpole in Russell, which was seen as a symbol of British authority over Māori land. His actions highlighted the ongoing tensions between Māori tribes and the British Crown regarding the implementation and interpretation of the treaty.
The first person to sign the Treaty of Waitangi was Hone Heke.
Hone Heke cut down the British flagpole at Waitangi multiple times in the 1840s as a protest against British authority in New Zealand. Heke's actions were part of a wider conflict known as the Flagstaff War.
Hone Heke was born in 1807 in Kaikohe, New Zealand.
Hone Heke was a 19th-century MΔori chief in New Zealand who famously cut down the British flagpole in protest of British rule, sparking the Flagstaff War. The name "Hone Heke" itself does not have a specific meaning in English.
Yes, Hone Heke had several sisters. One of his sisters, Hariata Rongo, was married to the influential Ngapuhi chief, Tawai.
The first person to sign the Treaty of Waitangi was Hone Heke.
Hone heke was one of the first Maori chiefs to sign the British Government's Waitangi Treaty
with a feather pen
Hone Heke
" The treaty of Waitangi is all soap. It is very smooth and oily, but treachery is hidden under it " (Hone Heke to Henry Williams 5 Feb 1845 at Koikohe)
no because hone heke was
Hone Heke was the first maori chief to sign the treaty
Hone Heke was the first chief to sign the treaty.
Hone heke and captain william hobson
Hone Heke was the first chief to sign the treaty.
ummm honi heke
Hone Heke