IWI / HAPU AFFILIATIONS
The second Māori King, Tawhiao, of Ngati Mahuta, was the
paramount chief of the Tainui tribes of the Waikato. He was
known as a man of peace and a visionary whose goal was economic
self-sufficiency and stability for Māori.
Tawhiao was descended from the rangātira of both the Tainui and
Arawa canoes. Born at Orongokoekoe, in Northern Taranaki,
Tawhiao's mother was Whakaawi and his father, the first king,
Potatau Te Wherowhero. He had children to three of his wives as
well as other offspring. The children of his principal wife,
Hera, were Tiahuia, who was the mother of Te Puea famed for her
leadership in forming the Turangawaewae marae at Ngaruawahia;
Mahuta, whose comments appear in the Lindauer Māori Visitors Book
and who succeeded him as king; and Te Wherowhero.1
Tawhiao reigned from 1860 until his death in 1894 at
Parawera. Te Kingitangi (the Māori King movement) began in
the 1850s with the purpose of halting the sale of land and
promoting Māori sovereignty.2
The colonial government resisted it strongly and in 1863, Tawhiao
led the Waikato tribes in revolt against the military.
Conflict did not cease until 1881, and during that 20 year period
Tawhiao's people stayed in exile in the King country area near Te
Kuiti. An early newspaper article relates how in June of that
year, the King went with the military leader Major Mair to the
telegraph office in Alexandra (Pirongia) and 'had a chat over the
telephone with Rewi, at Kihikihi, and some other chiefs. Everything
was definitely settled on that occasion that there should in future
be peace between the Māori and the Pākeha in the Waikato.'3
Continuing to push for the end of land confiscation, Tawhiao
regularly corresponded with Sir George Grey on this matter and led
a deputation in an attempt to meet Queen Victoria in England in
1884 to present a petition on the obligations of the
Crown under the Treaty of Waitangi.4
In notes on how the portraits of Māori came to be painted by his
father, Victor Wilhelm Lindauer wrote that the artist photographed
Tawhiao when he visited him at Whatwhatihoe Pā,
accompanied by Walter Buller.5
Several portraits were painted from this photograph including the
one in the Partridge Collection. Partridge arranged for his
commissioned work to be shown as one of the ten paintings exhibited
at the St Louis World Fair in 1904.6
CM
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