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Pre-1840 Maori/Pakeha Relations

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Part 1 Summary of Influences Pakeha attitudes of superiority Marked difference between societies and cultures Based on economics: exchange, trade and exploitation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pre-1840 Maori/Pakeha Relations


1
Pre-1840 Maori/Pakeha Relations
  • Part 1

2
Summary of Influences
  • Pakeha attitudes of superiority
  • Marked difference between societies and cultures
  • Based on economics exchange, trade and
    exploitation
  • Maori choices about interaction and relationship
    with Pakeha were important
  • Increasing European presence after 1830s

3
Basic Race Relations
  • Two Views
  • 1. Eurocentric Europeans considered other races
    inferior,
  • 2. Balanced Modern view
  • that mutual understanding
  • may be limited, hence
  • mutual influence and
  • learning from each other.

4
First Culture Contact
  • James Cook 1769-1777 barter and exchange
  • Both tried force at times but that worked against
    trade
  • Early visits were irregular
  • Which led to competition amongst Maori for
    European goods.

5
Regular contact
  • Early Pakeha escaped convicts and runaway sailors
  • Sudney entrepreneurs and traders
  • More frequent after 1800 whalers sealers
    timber
  • Maori visited Sydney after 1805
  • Missionaries and trade after 1814

6
Intentions
  • Maori willing to adopt and adapt
  • Maori attitudes depended on intentions of vistors
  • Direct interaction on ships or going overseas
    sudden change
  • Indirect interaction by Maori or Maori-Pakeha
    which led to more controlled change and easier to
    cope with.

7
Trade
  • Maori
  • Food, women, labour, artifacts, knowledge, NZ
    travel, protection,timber, flax, land.
  • Europeans
  • Metal, muskets, boats, overseas travel, new
    crops, clothing, alcohol, tobaccao,literacy,
    religion

8
Choice and Negotiation
  • Interaction and change involved Choice and
    Negotiation
  • Maori- because of strength and
  • self-confidence in their culture
  • European- assumptions of
  • superiority and profit motive

9
Dominance 1800-1840
  • European visitors and Pakeha assumed dominance of
    their own culture
  • In practice Maori dominant up until 1840s
  • - outnumbered Pakeha until 1850s
  • Desire for dominance led to conflict
  • Desire for trade controlled
  • agression on both sides

10
Types of Conflict
  • Maori travellers often ill-treated on ships
  • - saw British culture
  • Early European travellers and sojourners
  • - Sealers
  • - whalers
  • - traders
  • - Pakeha Maori
  • - Maori women/wives

11
Mana
  • Europeans seen as good for mana
  • - derived from presence of Europeans
  • - Maori control over Europeans
  • - Access to Europeans trade goods

12
Muskets
  • 1810 Maori scrambled for muskets
  • from Europeans
  • Musket wars spread in 1820s-30s
  • Caused Maori migration to avoid attack
  • Greater destruction than traditional weapons
  • Musket did not respect rank
  • Traditional weapons still used dense bush and
    hand-to-hand fighting

13
Hongi Hika
  • Nga Puhi
  • Defeat of Nga Puhi by Ngati Whaua in 1810 gave
    Hongi Hika desire for utu
  • Sought European contact from 1814
  • First major leader to use muskets
  • Used slaves to cultivate potatos to trade for
    muskets
  • 1820 traded gifts from England for muskets in
    Sydney
  • 1821-23 led many campaigns until death in 1828

14
Te Rauparaha
  • Ngati Toa and Ngati Raukawa Decent
  • Outstanding leader of his people
  • Threatened by Waikato tribes in late 18th-early
    19th C
  • Ventured from Hauraki Gulf to Taranaki and Cook
    Strait.
  • By 1819 was using muskets
  • In 1820 under pressure from Waikato, left
    migration to Taranaki and then Kapiti.

15
Te Rauparaha contd
  • Set up base in Kapiti
  • Used slavs to build flax plantations and traded
    with Europeans for muskets
  • Abt. 1827 began series of raids on South Island
    to gain Pounamu
  • 1830s consolidated hold on central North Island,
    southern North Island and northern South Island

16
New Balance of Power
  • Eventually all tribes had muskets
  • By 1830s new balance of tribal power based on
    muskets rather than traditional weapons
  • Conflict continued through 1830s but
  • Destruction less than during 1820s

17
References
  • Based on Graham Langton, (2005) Pre-1840
    Maori/Pakeha Relations in Year 13 New Zealand
    in the 19th Century. Auckland ESA Publications.
    pp.43-54
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