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Tene Waitere

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Name
  
Tene Waitere


Tene Waitere Tene Waitere 1905 Whakairo Mori carving Te Ara Encyclopedia

Died
  
1931, Whakarewarewa, Rotorua, New Zealand

Toi Art stories in New Zealand Sign Language: Tene Waitere, Carved mirror frame


Tene Waitere (1853–1931) was a notable New Zealand Māori carver. He identified with the Ngāti Tarāwhai and Te Arawa iwi. His mother was Ani Pape, the daughter of Te Rahui, a Ngāti Tarāwhai leader. As a young girl, she was captured by Ngāpuhi during an attack on Rotorua in 1823 and taken as a slave to Northland, where she was forced to marry a Waitere. Tene Waitere was born probably in 1853 or 1854 at Mangamuka. When Tene was a few years old an uncle brought him, his elder sister Mereana Waitere and their mother to Ruato, on Lake Rotoiti. He married Ruihi Te Ngahue of Tuhourangi and they had one child, a daughter Tuhipo. One of Tuhipo's children was Rangitiaria Dennan, better known as Guide Rangi. Eramiha Neke Kapua, another carver, was Waitere's nephew, son of his sister Mereana.

Tene Waitere Tene Waitere Works on Sale at Auction Biography

Tene Waitere httpssmediacacheak0pinimgcomoriginalsf5

References

Tene Waitere Wikipedia