Te Puea Kirihaehae Katipa nee Tāwhiao is from the Waikato iwi of Tainui.
Herangi (Searancke).
Te Puea Kirihaehae Katipa nee Tāwhiao is from the Waikato iwi of Tainui.
Ko te kai a te Rangatira, he korero - The food of a Rangatira is talk Mahi a te Rangatira, he whakatira i te iwi - The work of a Rangatira is to unite people. Rangatira - chief
Her mother was Ngati Mahuta and her father was Ngati Apakura, both Iwi of Waikato, Tainui.
Te Puea Herangis was a woman who helped re-establish the Kingitanga or King's Movement in Tainui lands. This occurred during the First World War.
About 540
Heres the basic of how to write a mihi ko______ this is where you write what iwi you are EG.. ko nga te rangi te iwi ko ______ this is where you write your sub tribe EG... ko ngati he te hapu ko ______ this is where you write the name of your wharenui and ect....
Te Puea Herangi (Te Kirihaehae) was Ngati Mahuta (from her mother's side) and Ngati Apakura (from her father's side) of Tainui Iwi.
Ngati Mahuta an Iwi of Waikato Tainui.
Cilla Henry, late member of the Raukura Manaaki Trust, used the term ' mehemea karekau ana he whakakitenga ka mate te iwi' in the first chapter of his book, 'History of New Zealand.' The phrase means, 'Where there is no vision the people perish.'
Tribe iwi is maori for tribe. E -we
The main social units in Maori culture are Waka (canoe), Iwi (tribe), Hapu (sub-tribe) and Whanau (extended family). Iwi is an extended kinship group usually connected by a common ancestor and/or a migratory Waka or canoe. Iwi, though commomnly translated as 'tribe' can mean people, nation, or race. Iwi literally means 'bone' so a common Maori expression "I'm am going back to my bones" refers to a return to their Iwi.