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Maketu, Bay of Plenty

April 29, 2010 by  
Filed under Featured Content

Maketu is a small town on the Bay of Plenty Coast in New Zealand. It is located on Okurei point and has an estuary from which the Kaituna River used to flow out of, it is also adjacent to Newdicks Beach located on the south eastern side of Okurei point.

“Auau-ki-te-rangi is the name of the ancestral carved house at Maketu marae, which was built and opened in 1962. It was not the first meeting house to be built at Maketu, but it is certainly considered to be the most important, because of its ancestral name.

Auau-ki-te-rangi was an ariki (high chief) and the father of Hoturoa. He remained in … See moreHawaiiki when his second-born son Hoturoa sailed off on the Tainui canoe which together with other famous vessels, comprised the well remembered voyage of discovery which resulted in Maori settlement of Aotearoa.

Although Auau-ki-te-rangi never came in person to Aotearoa, his presence at Kawhia is a commanding one. He stands as the ancestral carved house at Maketu to remind all Tainui descendants including those who left the canoe on the eastern coast and Hauraki gulf, that Maketu belongs equally to them all.

When there are issues of importance to all the Tainui tribes (or to the Tainui people as a single entity) their leaders usually demonstrate a preference for bringing those issues to Maketu, to the cradle of the tribe, to be discussed.

There are two reasons for this, one is that Maketu as the mooring place of the canoe belongs to all of Tainui decent, and they in turn belong to Maketu.

Because of this, all Tainui tribal voices can be heard as tangata whenua in Auaukiterangi. and none is disadvantaged as an outsider might be. Secondly, any course of action decided upon or agreement made at Maketu is sanctioned by the embrace of their common ancestor, Auaukiterangi.

Motiti Island, which is now farmed, is a habitat of the tuatara. The meaning of the name Motiti is obscure. As it stands, the word means “extirpated” and may commemorate the Ngaiterangi victory of 1832; it may, however, be a contraction of Motu-iti (literally ‘little island’)”.

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