The British and the maoris
Jack Andrew William RobertsonThe Treaty of Waitangi is a treaty first signed on 6 February 1840 by representatives of the British Crown and various Māori chiefs from the North Island of New Zealand.
If it's for New Zealand's Treaty of Waitangi it was between the Maori Chiefs and the English.
the Treaty of Greenville
Tribes that did not sign the treaty of Waitangi include: Tuhoe, Waikato, Te Arawa, Ngati Paoa and Tuwharetoa.
Biculturalism. Two separate peoples (Maori and Pakeha) forming one nation.
The Treaty of Waitangi enabled British settlement on a bigger scale. For Maori it intially offered security as they had concerns over the colonisation of NZ by the French & the behaviour of some early British settlers. Maori operated under the assumption that they would retain control of their lands and receive protection from the British. The British and subsequent settlers took the Treaty (which had two ambiguous versions) to mean that they were now in control of NZ.
there are two different versions of the treaty- maori and english, but there are differences between the versions, which has caused lots of problems between the maori people and the nz government.
russia and Germany signed ( it was a peace treaty between the two countries ) taking russia out of the war
Russia and Germany signed ( it was a peace treaty between the two countries ) taking russia out of the war
im board and i don't the the answer
The relationship between the British and the Maori remained tense after the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840. There were ongoing conflicts and disagreements over land ownership, cultural differences, and breaches of the treaty terms by the British. The New Zealand Wars of the mid-19th century further strained relations between the two groups.
The Treaty of Paris formally ended the American War for independence. The two countries that signed the Treaty of Paris were the United States and Great Britain.