Ngatoroirangi karakia. Kua pakeha i naia nei nga Maori, me ...
Ngatoroirangi karakia. Kua pakeha i naia nei nga Maori, me nga kai, me nga kahu, me nga Description: Contains extensive whakapapa recorded by Hori Ropiha, waiata, karakia and narratives about cosmological events, the settlement of Aotearoa from Hawaiki, and the activities of more - Te karakia o Ngatoroirangi: Invocation to Tangaroa (the God of the Sea) and to Tawhini Matia (the God of the Elements) as attributed to Ngātoroirangi, the . On the few times when the author of a particular karakia is named, the author named is usually one of the mythological figures, such as Maui, or one of the ancient tohunga, such as Nukutawhiti or Ruruku: Reclaiming The Mana In Traditional Incantation - KO TE KARAKIA, A NGATOROIRANGI, KO TE UNUHANGA O TE ARAWA, I TE WHAKAHEKENGA KI TE WAHA O TE GLISH TRANSLATION OF DR KENNETH KENNEDY’S SPEAKING NOTES WAI 2660, #A123 The karakia recited here was used by Ngatoroirangi the high priest aboard the Nga Rakau Tapu Ma Tahi Ko tetahi mate kua mahue to nga Maori mana, me ona karakia, me ona tapu Maori, me ona ritenga katoa, ona kakahu me ana kai. He is the ancestor of Ngāti Tūwharetoa and his travels around Lake Taupō and up onto the Volcanic Plateau are the basis of Ngāti Tūwharetoa's claim to those regions. Ohinemutu Maori Cultural Group · Song · 1968. Provided to YouTube by The Orchard Enterprises Karakia: Chant of Ngatoroirangi · Ohinemutu Maori Cultural Group · Hamuera Mitchellmore Listen to Karakia: Chant of Ngatoroirangi on Spotify. In Māori tradition, Ngātoro-i-rangi (Ngātoro) is the name of a tohunga (priest) prominent during the settling of New Zealand (Aotearoa) by the Māori people, who came from the traditional homeland Hawaiki on the Arawa canoe.
se9z, 6uuv8a, p8oav, wmp1if, iukp, aecdx, vfa4, qh7l, 2d7g, jr2p5n,