Maori Wars of the Nineteenth Century
The Struggle of the Northern against the Southern Maori Tribes Prior to the Colonisation of New Zealand in 1840
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:15th Dec '11
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This 1899–1901 publication (revised 1910) about the New Zealand 'Musket Wars' reveals how Europeans interpreted Maori oral traditions.
This pioneering study, originally published 1899–1901 and reissued here in the enlarged edition of 1910, was written by a retired New Zealand government surveyor turned ethnologist. It covers the inter-tribal 'Musket Wars' of the early nineteenth century, and provides fascinating insights into the European reception of Maori oral traditions.Stephenson Percy Smith (1840–1922) arrived in New Zealand as a boy, and in early 1858 travelled six hundred miles exploring the volcanic interior of North Island, including Taupo, Lake Tarawera and the Tongariro-Ruapehu area, returning via Rangitikei and Wanganui. He also witnessed the unrest caused by the rapid European encroachment on Maori lands. After retiring in 1900 from his career as a government surveyor, Smith devoted himself to the study of the Maori and co-founded the Polynesian Society, in whose journal this study originally appeared between 1899 and 1901. Reissued here in its enlarged second edition of 1910, it deals with the inter-tribal 'Musket Wars' of the early nineteenth century, when different Maori communities competed for territory shortly before European settlement began in earnest. Although Smith's interpretations do not meet modern scholarly standards, his pioneering work still provides fascinating insights into nineteenth-century Maori traditions and their colonial reception.
ISBN: 9781108039901
Dimensions: 216mm x 140mm x 28mm
Weight: 630g
498 pages