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  2. Māori history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Māori_history

    The Māori settlement of New Zealand represents an end-point of a long chain of island-hopping voyages in the South Pacific.. Evidence from genetics, archaeology, linguistics, and physical anthropology indicates that the ancestry of Polynesian people stretches all the way back to indigenous peoples of Taiwan.

  3. Austronesian peoples - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austronesian_peoples

    The Austronesian peoples refer to people sometimes referred to as Austronesian-speaking peoples, [44] and are meant to refer to a large group of peoples from places such as Taiwan, Maritime Southeast Asia, parts of Mainland Southeast Asia, Micronesia, coastal New Guinea, Island Melanesia, Polynesia, and Madagascar that speak languages that have been categorized by some as Austronesian languages.

  4. Māori people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Māori_people

    Following their defeat at Ōrākau in 1864, Kīngitanga forces withdrew into the Ngāti Maniapoto tribal region of the North Island that became known as the King Country. [ 106 ] [ 107 ] [ page needed ] The Māori monarch's influence has not been as strong as it could be, partially due to the lack of affiliation to the Kīngitanga of key iwi ...

  5. Polynesians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polynesians

    Polynesians are an ethnolinguistic group comprising closely related ethnic groups native to Polynesia, which encompasses the islands within the Polynesian Triangle in the Pacific Ocean. They trace their early prehistoric origins to Island Southeast Asia and are part of the larger Austronesian ethnolinguistic group, with an Urheimat in Taiwan.

  6. What is 'Taiwan independence' and is Taiwan already ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/explainer-taiwan-independence...

    Taiwan, whose people elect their own leaders and whose government controls a defined area of territory with its own military and passport, enjoys de facto independence even if that is not formally ...

  7. Taiwanese indigenous peoples - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taiwanese_indigenous_peoples

    Some of them traded with the Taiwanese aborigines. During this period, Taiwan was referred to as Xiaodong dao ("little eastern island") and Dahui guo ("the country of Dahui"), a corruption of Tayouan, a tribe that lived on an islet near modern Tainan from which the name "Taiwan" is derived. By the late 16th century, Chinese from Fujian were ...

  8. Polynesian culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polynesian_culture

    Tonga is the only island group in the South Pacific that was never colonised by a European power. [citation needed] The remaining islands are a part of, or under the sovereignty of other countries: Hawaii became a U.S. state in 1959; American Samoa has been a territory of the United States since 1899

  9. Pre-Māori settlement of New Zealand theories - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pre-Māori_settlement_of...

    Edward Tregear's The Aryan Maori (1885) suggested that Aryans from India migrated to southeast Asia and thence to the islands of the Pacific, including New Zealand. [ 32 ] Two works published in 1915, Percy Smith 's book The Lore of the Whare-wānanga: Part II and Elsdon Best 's journal article "Maori and Maruiwi" in the Transactions of the New ...