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Aotearoa. In the beginning  The Beginning – There was nothingness and after nine nothingnesses became the dawn. From the womb of the darkness came the.

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Presentation on theme: "Aotearoa. In the beginning  The Beginning – There was nothingness and after nine nothingnesses became the dawn. From the womb of the darkness came the."— Presentation transcript:

1 Aotearoa

2 In the beginning  The Beginning – There was nothingness and after nine nothingnesses became the dawn. From the womb of the darkness came the Sky father and the Earth mother. They had 6 children: god of the winds, god of the forest, god of the lakes, god of the volcanoes, god of the rain, god of the plants. They separated their parents and there became light. All the children were male so the sky father created a woman out of soil and so became the world.

3 WORLD MAP

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5 MAORI INDIGENOUS PEOPLE  The Maori are the native inhabitants of New Zealand and are of Polynesian origin numbering over 500,000 today.  This is about 15% of New Zealand's population.  Over 95 percent of Maori live on New Zealand's North Island.

6  The Maori originally immigrated to New Zealand around 1200 AD from the Cook Islands, Society Islands, and Marquesas Islands in the Pacific Ocean.  According to Maori legend, their ancestors set out together from a place in Polynesia in a fleet of large canoes  WAKA

7 EARTH CULTURE Maori means “ordinary or usual”. Most Maori people belong to a tribe, or iwi, descended from people from one of ten canoes that landed there. The iwi are divided into sub-tribes, or hapu, in which everyone is related. Each sub-tribe has sacred ground, known as a marae, in front of the village's meeting house.

8  The iwi determined marriage, settlement patterns, and who fought whom.  The society is headed by chiefs, followed by priests, then by commoners, and then slaves.  Intertribal warfare are essential parts of their culture.  It was their way of gaining control of their land.  After defeating a tribe, they either eat the defeated (ultimate insult) or they take the women and children to be their slaves.

9  Delineation of responsibility was ruled by the complex laws of tapu (taboo)  Boy children are taught to be warriors, girl children help their mothers with household chores.

10 KEY VALUES TO THEIR CULTURE  Spirituality – everyone has an active life force, soul and spirit, and personal spiritual prestige and power.  Land – Mountains and rivers delineated tribal boundaries. Mountains were personified and became part of their social identity.  Hospitality – People are the most important things in the world.  Ancestors – Proper reverence to ancestors is important. Genealogy has to be committed to memory

11 Marae –Ancestral house Where Ancestral spirits live – Meeting house that is the link between sky father and earth mother. All visitors are challenged by the male Maori making fierce faces and noises showing that they are ready for war. Visitors then show that they come in peace. Shoes have to be taken off and they give a gift.

12 Bongi – traditional pressing of noses (mingles breath showing unity)

13 Food  Cook food in earth ovens – dig a pit with wood and stones on top – heat stones  Maori delicacies – freshwater eels, mutton, birds, and seafood

14 Clothes  Paper Mulberry plant is used for making tapacloth. This is what they make clothing with.  Tattooing – Used for decoration – long painful process with a bone chisel and pigment rubbed on incision. Men are heavily tattooed – face, body, bottom, and thighs. Women’s are confined to chin and lips and sometimes ankles and wrists.

15 TATOO PICTURES

16 Music  Musical Instruments – many forms of flute (some you play with your mouth and some with your nose) and also instruments made from shells.  Also mouth bows  Used no drums just rhythmic stomping

17 THE HAKA  Song and Dance – Their dances are associated with war chants that preceded battle. Includes fierce shouting, flexing arm movements, thunderous stomping, big eyes, and sticking out of the tongue.  Most famous association?  RUGBY!!!

18 Art and storytelling  Carving and stories were the only way of recording history,  The Maori have no written language and so all their ancestry is remembered through art and the living word

19  In 1841 New Zealand officially became a colony of Britain. Over 500 Maori Chiefs signed a treaty to agree to this.  Many European settlements were established and between 1843 and 1872 violent conflicts between the Maori and European colonizers, known as the New Zealand Wars took place.

20 NOW?  New Zealand is a predominantly English society and the Maori population dwindled to less than 40 000 people.  Now there are over 350 000 Maoris and the culture is carefully looked after.

21 The Landscape

22 THIS TERM  TATOO PROJECT  HAKA PROJECT  EXAM REVIEW

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