Parihaka
Across
- 3. under this law of 1892 renewable leases of over 200,000 acres of Māori land became available. (5)
- 4. refusal to pay this was a way of protesting after 1884 (2)
- 6. fought between 1860 and 1863 (3)
- 8. John Bryce (2)
- 9. areas set aside for Māori to live in (2)
- 14. Passed in 1882, this law allowed Te Whiti and Tohu to be imprisoned indefinitely. (5)
- 18. law that allowed for arrested ploughmen and fencers to be held indefinitely (4)
- 21. Signed in 1840 (3)
- 23. 1863 legislation that set up land confiscations (4)
- 27. NZ Settlement Act meant that land could be taken away from Māori in …………………
- 32. issued the ultimatum to Parihaka people to leave (2)
- 33. area designated for settler development (2)
- 34. began 2 days after the invasion to evict the villagers
- 36. checkpoints these were set up around Parihaka to prevent movement in and out after the invasion
- 37. a factor that meant the crown was more likely to seize land
- 38. one of the jails in Christchurch where the leaders were held
- 39. materials from destroyed houses used to make this (2)
Down
- 1. name of one of the leaders of the settlement (4)
- 2. Established in 1879 to hear Māori grievances (3)
- 5. Māori wanted to appoint their own in 1858
- 7. sent in to arrest the ploughmen (2)
- 10. notice that gave the villagers 14 days to disperse
- 11. practiced by Tohu and Te Whiti (2)
- 12. Lieutenant colonel who led the invasion
- 13. Report published in 1996 (2)
- 15. one of the ways Tohu and Te Whiti protested after 1885
- 16. Tohu and Te Whiti put under house arrest here.
- 17. Parihaka Māorii needed these to enter and exit after 1881
- 19. In 1927 they ruled that the confiscations in Taranaki were not legal (4)
- 20. unit of land measurement
- 22. this form of protest saw Parihaka Māori build thatched houses on settler’s land (3)
- 24. this needs to be done before land can be settled.
- 25. next wave of resistors after the ploughmen
- 26. meeting day of each month
- 28. some Māori sent to prison there
- 29. name of one of the leaders of the settlement (2)
- 30. 1865 law that allowed settlers to legally take Māori land. (3)
- 31. jail
- 35. term for taking land