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Living Among the Northland Māori

Diary of Father Antoine Garin, 1844–1846

Peter Tremewan editor Giselle Larcombe editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Canterbury University Press

Published:29th Mar '19

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Living Among the Northland Māori cover

`I love this sort of life: visiting the Maori, sleeping at their places, organising my house, etc.’ A French Marist priest, Father Antoine Garin was sent to run the remote Mangakāhia mission station on the banks of the Wairoa River. 'Living Among the Northland Māori' is Garin’s diary recording his experiences from 1844 to 1846 as he gets to know the Māori in the region. The diary provides vivid accounts of contemporary events, as Garin came dangerously close to the action of the Northern War, and wrote of such prominent figures as Hōne Heke and Kawiti as they opposed the new colonial authorities. Above all, the diary is an intimate record of life in a Māori community in which Garin describes the close relationships he formed with his new neighbours – from his young followers and local families to the chiefs who offered him protection while he lived among them. This is the first full English translation of Garin’s surviving Mangakāhia journals and letters. Frank, open-minded and often humorous, Garin’s diary is a major contribution to the early history of European settlement in Aotearoa and a compelling insight into Māori customs, values and beliefs of the time.

ISBN: 9781988503028

Dimensions: 258mm x 190mm x 58mm

Weight: unknown

620 pages