Rākei-hikuroa

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Places in the life of Rākei-hikuroa
1
Pukepoto
2
Whiorau Pa on Maungapuremu
3
Māhia Peninsula
4
Tarawera

Rākei-hikuroa was a rangatira (chieftain) of Ngāti Kahungunu, who may have lived in the fifteenth century. His efforts to establish his son Tūpurupuru as upoko ariki (paramount chief) of Ngāti Kahungunu led to a conflict with his brother-in-law, Kahutapere, who expelled him from the Gisborne region, which was the start of a long-lasting conflict within Ngāti Kahungunu. After his expulsion, Rākei-hikuroa led his people south, beginning the Ngāti Kahungunu expansion into the Hawke’s Bay and Wairarapa regions.

Life

Rākei-hikuroa was the son of Kahukura-nui, through whom he was a descendant of Tamatea, the captain of the Tākitimu canoe and of the early explorer Toi,[1] and of Ruatapuwahine, the biological daughter of Tuhoropunga, and adoptive daughter of Ruapani.[2] He had one full-sister, Rongomai-tara, as well as a half-brother, Rakai-pāka, and a half-sister, Hinemanuwhiri.[3][2] As an adult, Rākei-hikuroa was based at Pukepoto in Nihotētē, the area between Lake Repongaere and Waipaoa River, not far from.[3] This site consisted of three hills, Kakarikitaurewa, Paekakariki and Te Upoko-o-Taraia, each with their own fortified village. An outpost village was based at modern Patutahi.[2]

Murder of Tarakiuta and Tarakitai

kurī (Māori dog), Otago Museum

Rākei-hikuroa had five sons, but greatly favoured his youngest, Tūpurupuru, whose excellence and physical prowess led him to say “Let Tūpurupuru be the star in the heavens” and he sought to make Tūpurupuru the upoko ariki (paramount chief) of Ngāti Kuhungunu. However, Kahutapere, who was Rākei-hikuroa’s cousin and the husband of Rākei-hikuroa's sister, Rongomai-tara, who was based at Whiorau Pā on Maungapuremu hill (near modern Ormond), wanted a share of the power for his twin sons, Tarakiuta and Tarakitai. Rākei-hikuroa saw this as a threat.[3][4][2]

When a gift of huahua (preserved birds) was made to the twins and no similar gift was made to Tūpurupuru, Rākei-hikuroa considered it an insult. According to John Te Herekiekie Grace, he sent his agent, a man named Tangihahi to Whiorau to kill the twins. The twins were experts at ta-potaka (spinning tops), so Tangihahi persuaded them to demonstrate their skills on the clifftop at Whiorau and then pushed them over the edge. The bodies were taken back to Rākei-hikuroa’s village, cooked, and served up to Tūpurupuru, who was told that it was the meat from a kurī (Māori dog).[5]

According to Wirihana Te Waitohioterangi, it was Tūpurupuru himself who killed the twins, by challenging them to a contest with his own spinning top, Whero-rua, sending their tops into a kumara pit and then killing them from behind with his taiaha spear. In another version, he killed them by collapsing a roof on the twins.[2]

The twins’ mother, Rongomai-tara, went to Rākei-hikuroa and asked what had happened to her children. At first he disavowed any knowledge, but later a tohunga divined their location by making two kites, representing the twins, which flew up and hovered over Rākei-hikuroa’s village at Pukepoto. He sent his own kite up to bring them down, revealing his responsibility for the murder.[6][2] In commemoration of this event, the two twins, Tarakiuta and Tarakitai, are depicted on a kite in Te Mana o Turanga wharenui of Whakato Marae at Manutuke.[2]

Battle of Te Paepae o Rarotonga

Matai tree

According to Grace, Rongomai-tara confronted her brother again and he cryptically admitted to the murder.[6] According to Te Waitohioterangi, Kahutapere confronted Rākei-hikuroa and was nearly killed. As he fled back to his village, his brother Rākei-hakeke was captured, along with his own twin sons, Matangiora and Kokakore. Although Kahutapere begged for them to be saved, they were executed.[2]

Kahutapere raised a war party and attacked Pukepoto, in the Battle of Te Paepae o Rarotonga.[7] According to Te Waitohioterangi, Kahutapere was aided by his cousin Te Mahaki-a-tauhei, Kahutapere’s brother Taururangi, Te Rangi-nui-a-Ihu, and Kahu-tauranga. They attacked Tūpurupuru's advance party, killing its commander Pouarau and eating his heart, as normal for the mātāika (first casualty of a battle). When Tūpurupuru received the news he was tying up his hair in preparation for the attack and the cord kept snapping, leading him to prophesy his own demise, “Pouarau in the morning and me in the afternoon.”[2] Another member of Te Mahaki-a-tauhei’s people, Whakarau-potiki, had been away hunting when the call to arms came and had therefore been left behind, but he found the stake that had been used for cooking Pouarau’s heart (the kōhiku-manawa) and tracked the war party to Pukepoto, made his way to the front line and killed Tūpurupuru with a spear strike to the throat. In recognition of this deed, Kahutapere allowed Whakarau to marry his daughters, Pare and Kura.[2]

According to Grace, Tūpurupuru was cooked in an oven with matai wood. It is said that the sap which comes out of this wood when it is burnt is Tūpurupuru's blood.[7] According to Te Waitohioterangi, his body was hung from a tree and the war party took turns throwing spears at it. Eventually, Mahaki and Rangi-nui-a-ihu stopped this desecration. Rākei-hikuroa gave Rangi-nui-a-ihu his pounamu patu (greenstone club), Ngawhakatangiura, and four cooking boulders in thanks for this.[2]

Conflict with Kahuparoro

After the battle, Rākei-hikuroa led his people south to Okurarenga on the Māhia Peninsula, where they stayed with a local chieftain, Kahuparoro. When he heard about the Battle of Te Paepae o Rarotonga, Kahuparoro said that he wished to see the site of the conflict. Rākei-hikuroa gave him directions, asking only that he leave Tūpurupuru’s remains in peace. Instead, Kauparoro exhumed the remains and took them to Nukutaurua (also on the Māhia Peninsula), where he made fish hooks out of the shoulder bones.[7]

When Kahuparoro was fishing at Matakana Rock with Rākei-hikuroa’s son Tamanuhiri, he got a hāpuku on his line and as it fought against him, he joked that it had no chance of getting away and let slip that his hook had been made from Tūpurupuru’s bones. Tamanuhiri overheard and faked an injury, by punching himself in the nose and pretending to pass out, so that they would take him quickly back to shore. There he told Rākei-hikuroa what he had heard. Rākei-hikuroa ambushed Kahuparoro and his men the next morning as they were dragging their canoe into the water for more fishing and killed nearly all of them. This was known as the Battle of Nukutaurua.[8] The survivors fled to Ngāti Kurapoto kin at Tarawera in the Ahimanawa Range, with Tūpurupuru’s bones, some of which they made into spears for hunting birds and burying the rest in their new village, which they therefore named Tūpurupuru.[9]

Later life and legacy

After the Battle of Nukutaurua, Rākei-hikuroa, his son Taraia, and Te Aomatarahi led his people onward to Hawke’s Bay, where they took control of the region and launched raids into the Wairarapa.[9]

Several generations after Rākei-hikuroa’s death, another chieftain, Kahutapere II, along with his sons Te Rangiapungangana, Te Anau, and Wharekotore, led a force to Tarawera to get revenge for the treatment of Tūpurupuru’s bones. He conquered the villages of Toropapa, Te Kupenga, Tahau, Urutomo, Matairangi, and Tūpurupuru and made the descendants of Kahuparoro flee towards Taupō. To commemorate the success, he named the captured region Ngapua a Rākei-hikuroa (the bloom of Rākei-hikuroa).[10] Eventually he was succeeded as paramount chief by Te Hikawera, great-grandson of Rākei-hikuroa.[11]

Family and descendants

Rākei-hikuroa married Turoimata, Pāpāuma, Ruarauhanga, and Mahumokai,[12] as well as Hine-te-raraku and Te Orāpa, daughters of his cousin Kahunoke,[2] with whom he had at least nineteen children.[13][12] After Rākei-hikuroa's death, an enduring feud developed between the descendants of Pāpāuma (Te Hika a Pāpāuma) and the descendants of Ruarauhanga (Te Hika a Ruarauhanga).[12]

The children of Turoimata were:[14]

The children of Pāpāuma were:[14]

  • Hineraumoa
  • Takapau
  • Parea
  • Wairakai
  • Tahito
  • Rurea
  • Taiwha
  • Takaha, who married Rakaipa and Kurapare and had two sons
  • Hikawera
  • Tauapare, who married Te Whatuiāpiti's son Hikawera.[16]
  • Tamanuhiri, who had two daughters:[2]
  • Hinepare, who married her uncle Taraia.[18]
  • Hine-te-kapua, who married Tahutoria and had a son:[2]
  • Tamakanohi, who married Hinepua, daughter of his cousin Tawhiwhi.[2]
  • Ruatapu

The children of Ruarauhanga were:[14]

  • Hine-te-raraku
  • Rangitawhiao, who built the chief fortress of Te Hika a Ruarauhanga, Tahunamoa, at Waiohiki.[14][19]
  • Uewhereua
  • Kahuwairua
  • Taraia, ancestor of Ngāi Te Ūpokoiri, who married his nieces Hinepare, Hinemoa, and Hinekura, and had four sons and a daughter:[20][21]
  • Te Huhuti, who married Te Whatuiāpiti.[11]
  • Ruatiti
  • Manuitiatoi
  • Parengenge
  • Taraia
  • Hinehore
  • Hikateko
  • Kaiaotea
  • Karaka
  • Te Rangikohea
  • Te Ao, ancestor of Ngai Te Ao
  • Te Huikai
  • Te Raupare, who was the cause of a war between Te Ariari, Taraia, and Tuwhakawhiurangi.[15]
  • Tūpurupuru,[22] who married Hinemoa and had one son:
  • Rangi-tūehu, who married Rakai-te-kura and had two daughters:[20]
  • Hineiao, ancestor of Ngāti Hineiao, who married her cousin Rangitaumaha.[20]
  • Tuaka, who married Te Angiangi and had:
  • Kehu, who went to Taupo and never returned.[24]
  • Taraiwhenuakura, who died while hunting birds for Hineiao.[24]

The children of Mahumokai were:[14]

  • Mahutapapa
  • Tutehue

Children whose maternity is not specified:[14]

  • Tuhenga
  • Tawhao

References

  1. ^ .Grace 1959, p. 195 and Jones & Biggs 2004 give the line of descent as: Toi – Rongoueroa – Awanui a rangi – Hinenui a rangi – Rautu – Miru – Rere – Tata – Tato – Rongokako – Tamatea – Kahungunu – Kahukura-nui – Rākei-hikuroa.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Te Waitohioterangi 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d Grace 1959, pp. 190–191.
  4. ^ Jones & Biggs 2004, pp. 70–71.
  5. ^ Grace 1959, pp. 191–192.
  6. ^ a b Grace 1959, p. 192.
  7. ^ a b c Grace 1959, pp. 192–193.
  8. ^ Grace 1959, pp. 193–194.
  9. ^ a b Grace 1959, p. 194.
  10. ^ Grace 1959, pp. 194–195.
  11. ^ a b Grace 1959, pp. 195–196.
  12. ^ a b c Parsons 1997, p. 28.
  13. ^ Grace 1959, p. 190.
  14. ^ a b c d e f Parsons 1997, p. 29.
  15. ^ a b Parsons 1997, p. 30.
  16. ^ a b Parsons 1997, p. 38.
  17. ^ Parsons 1997, p. 59.
  18. ^ Parsons 1997, p. 33.
  19. ^ Te Waitohioterangi 2020 makes him a son of Hine-te-raraku
  20. ^ a b c d Grace 1959, p. 195.
  21. ^ Parsons 1997, pp. 29–30, 38.
  22. ^ Te Waitohioterangi 2020 makes him a son of Te Orāpa
  23. ^ Jones & Biggs 2004, pp. 62, 66, 70–71, 143.
  24. ^ a b Parsons 1997, p. 26.

Bibliography

  • Grace, John Te Herekiekie (1959). Tuwharetoa: The history of the Maori people of the Taupo District. Auckland [N.Z.]: A.H. & A.W. Reed. ASIN B0007JE64K. ISBN 9780589003739.
  • Jones, Pei Te Hurinui; Biggs, Bruce (2004). Ngā iwi o Tainui : nga koorero tuku iho a nga tuupuna = The traditional history of the Tainui people. Auckland [N.Z.]: Auckland University Press. ISBN 1869403312.
  • Parsons, Patrick (1997). WAI 400: The Ahuriri Block: Maori Cusomary Interests (PDF). Retrieved 10 July 2022.
  • Te Waitohioterangi, Tanith Wirihana (2020). "Tupurupuru and the Murder of the top [spinning] twins". Nga Korero. Retrieved 30 June 2022. (an account of the conflict between Rākei-hikuroa and Kahutapere transmitted from Hiraina Riria Pere, Hetekia Te Kani Pere II, and Hiraina Hinetoko).