The land issue- The Maori King Movement

A line in the sand

The pressure to sell land was a key factor in the creation of the Kingitanga. Consider the following:

  • in 1840 there were approximately 2000 permanent European residents in New Zealand, compared with 70,000 Maori;
  • by 1858 Pakeha outnumbered Maori for the first time.

Before European settlement Maori could not alienate land by sale and few chiefs had the mana or authority to ‘tuku’ or gift land. The Treaty of Waitangi gave the Crown pre-emptive or sole right of purchase of Maori lands. This might have protected Maori custom and interests but the Crown used this monopoly to aggressively purchase Maori land.

Initially land purchases were discussed in open meetings, but by the late 1840s secret deals with government officials were occurring. Deals with individual Maori or groups who did not represent all the owners dragged Maori into disputes with each other. In 1854 hui held in Taranaki and Waikato resolved to retain intact all the land within certain boundaries. Those who joined swore to maintain a tapu on the land on pain of death.

When Maori living at Manukau attempted to sell their claims on the lower Waikato riverbanks they were confronted by a large armed party that had travelled down the river to set up boundary marks beyond which no sales were permitted. In August 1854 Rawiri Waiaua and four others were killed near New Plymouth for attempting to sell land. In response to what was labelled the Puketapu feud, British troops were stationed in New Plymouth to protect European settlers.

1854 was a significant year in many respects. Many settlers now had direct political representation under a constitution that created an elected House of Representatives. In the minds of proponents of the Kingitanga this heightened the need to find a suitable candidate to be king, and quickly.

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