
Tribes of Muriwhenua: Their Origins and Stories
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Tribes of the Muriwhenua is a history of the iwi of Te Hiku o te Ika, the Far North, in particular of Ngāti Kuri, Te Aupōuri, Ngāi Takoto, Te Rarawa and Ngāti Kahu. Bringing together the traditional history presented by kaumātua and kuia during the Muriwhenua claim before the Waitangi Tribunal during the 1980s and 1990s, the book is a testament to the richness of kōrero tuku iho. For each iwi, the author gives whakapapa and a variety of lively and dramatic stories.
The book has been expertly translated by Dr Merimeri Penfold, widely respected for her knowledge of and feel for te reo Māori. The bilingual text is illustrated with photographs of the Muriwhenua landscape.
About the Author
Dr Dorothy Urlich Cloher (Ngapuhi, 1930-2011) was formerly head of the James Henare Research Centre at the University of Auckland. Alongside The Tribes of Muriwhenua she wrote Hongi Hika: Warrior Chief (Penguin, 2003), published widely in specialist journals and produced a number of high profile reports into Maori issues including sustainable economic development and childhood education.
Dr Merimeri Penfold (Ngati Kuri, 1920-2014) spent 20 years teaching in schools and then in 1964 she became the first lecturer in te reo Maori at a New Zealand university, teaching at the University of Auckland for the next 30 years. She was an inaugural member and dominion vice president of the Maori Women's Welfare League and served on the Maori Education Foundation, the Broadcasting Commission, the Human Rights Commission and numerous other organisations. An acknowledged expert on Maori language and culture, she was part of the editorial team for the seventh edition of Williams' Dictionary of the Maori Language. Prior to The Tribes of Muriwhenua she co-authored Women in the Arts in New Zealand (1986), edited the Maori sections of The Book of New Zealand Women (1991), and published her translation of Shakespearean sonnets, Nga Waiata Aroha a Hekepia/Love Sonnets by Shakespeare: Nine Sonnets (2000). In 2000, Penfold was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Literature by the University of Auckland, in 2001 she was appointed a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to Maori, and in 2008 she was awarded Te Tohu Aroha mo Ngoi Kumeroa Pewhairangi for her contribution to te reo Maori in the 2008 Nga Taonga Toi a Te Waka Toi from Creative New Zealand.





