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The Whare Tapa Wha model represents aspects of Hauora as the four walls of a whare, each wall representing a different dimension. All four dimensions are necessary for strength and stability. [3] Other models of hauora have been designed.
A strong house (Whare Tapa Wha) The octopus (Te Wheke) Supporting structures (Nga Pou Mana) Spirituality (Wairua) Spirituality (Wairuatanga) Family (Whānaunga-tanga) Mental health (Hinengaro) Mental health (Hinengaro) Cultural heritage (Taonga tuku iho) Physical (Tinana) Physical (Tinana) Environment (Te Ao tūroa) Family
Te Ākau: Te Ākau: Waikato Tainui (Ngāti Tāhinga, Tainui Hapū) Te Ākau: Te Awamārahi: Te Ōhākī a Te Puea: Waikato Tainui (Ngāti Āmaru, Ngāti Pou, Ngāti Tiipa) Onewhero: Horahora Marae: Te Whare i Whakaarohia: Waikato Tainui (Ngāti Hine, Ngāti Naho, Ngāti Pou, Ngāti Taratikitiki) Rangiriri: Hukanui Marae: Te Tuturu-a-Papa Kamutu
Te Wainui: Te Whare o Hera: Te Aitanga-a-Māhaki : Whatatutu: Waiari Marae: Waiari: Ngāi Tāmanuhiri (Ngāi Tawehi, Ngāti Kahutia, Ngāti Rangitauwhiwhia, Ngāti Rangiwaho, Ngāti Rangiwahomatua) Muriwai: Whakato: Te Mana o Turanga: Rongowhakaata (Ngāti Maru) Manutuke: Whāngārā Marae: Whitirēia / Waho Te Rangi: Ngāti Porou (Ngāti ...
Plaque in Auckland. Ngāti Whātua is a Māori iwi (tribe) of the lower Northland Peninsula of New Zealand's North Island. [1] It comprises a confederation of four hapū (subtribes) interconnected both by ancestry and by association over time: Te Uri-o-Hau, Te Roroa, Te Taoū, Ngāti Whātua o Kaipara and Ngāti Whātua-o-Ōrākei.
Subtribes of Tūhoe include Ngāti Koura, Ngāti Rongo, Ngāti Tāwhaki, Tamakaimoana, Ngāti Whare, Te Whānau Pani, Ngāti Hinekura and Patuheuheu. The Tūhoe continue to maintain camps in Te Urewera and help run conservation programmes for endangered birds, such as the North Island brown kiwi and the North Island kōkako .
During development for the residency, the four artists decided to make a single work together, naming themselves Mataaho Collective. Their first work, Te Whare Pora, was inspired by customary weaving spaces as sites of wānanga for sharing and learning reigned over by the atua wahine Hineteiwaiwa. They treated the residency like a contemporary ...
Ngā Toki in its whare waka at Waitangi Ngā Toki Matawhaorua of Pewhairangi , often simply known as Ngā Toki , is the name of a New Zealand waka taua (large, ornately carved Māori war canoe). It is named after Matawhaorua , the canoe of Kupe , the Polynesian discoverer of the islands now known as New Zealand; Kupe's canoe was later re-adzed ...