One law or two monarchs? : Maori and colonisation in the 19th century

Robinson, John

Childs, Roger

Notes
People on the move -- How the Maori lived before 1840 -- A treaty sets up a national government -- Setting out to govern fairly -- Land disputes in Taranaki -- The Maori king movement -- War in Taranaki -- Rebellion: the Waikato War -- Confiscations and Grey's offer to return land -- Ngata looks back from the 20th century -- The benefits of colonisation -- Becoming New Zealanders.
Summary: For over 500 years, Polynesians had New Zealand to themselves. However, towards the end of the 1700s, Europeans started arriving to exploit the resources of the country. A technologically advanced culture began interacting with a Stone Age society, and those connections increased as more and more settlers, mainly British, arrived. This book is about those interactions in the 19th century and the impact of colonisation on Maori. The book examines the early history of Polynesian settlement together with the subsequent European interest, and the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi following the reluctant British decision to take on New Zealand as a country. Throughout, the book relies heavily on accounts of the people who were living through the events of the time. (Back cover)
Librarian's Miscellania
John Robinson and Roger Childs
Location edition Bar Code due date
Library R32727