Wiremu Kingi Moki Te Matakatea

Wiremu Kingi Moki Te Matakatea (died 14 February 1893) was a notable New Zealand tribal warrior and leader. Of Māori descent, he identified with the Taranaki iwi.[2]

Wiremu Kingi Moki Te Matakatea
Born
Wiremu Kingi Moki

Died(1893-02-14)14 February 1893
Other namesWilliam King[1]
OccupationTribal warrior

Te Matakatea was a principal chief of Ngati Haumiti hapu of the Taranaki tribe. Born probably in Taranaki in the early years of the nineteenth century, he was first known as Moki. In the 1820s and 1830s he was caught up in his tribe's resistance to a series of Waikato raids. After a Waikato victory at Maru, at the base of Mt Taranaki, in 1826, he became the leader of some 120 men and their families who stayed within the protection of Te Namu pa, near Opunake, when the remainder of the Taranaki tribe migrated to the Kapiti coast about 1827. Moki and his people were able to obtain muskets from European flax traders who had settled at Ngamotu, near present-day New Plymouth, in 1828. When in 1833 Waikato laid siege to Te Namu, Moki distinguished himself by his marksmanship and received the name Te Matakatea, the clear-eyed. Waikato retreated but, sensing that this was only a temporary reprieve, Te Matakatea led his people a few miles south to a complex of three pa at the mouth of the Kapuni Stream, in the territory of his Ngati Ruanui relatives.

References

  1. "Wiremu Kingi Moki Te Matakatea". New Zealand Electronic Text Centre. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  2. Church, Ian. "Wiremu Kingi Moki Te Matakatea". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 23 April 2017.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.