Musket Wars
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The Musket Wars were a series of battles fought between various tribal groups of Māori in the early 1800s, primarily on the North Island in New Zealand. The conflicts were directly influenced by the acquisition of muskets by Māori. Northern tribes, such as the rival Ngapuhi and Ngāti Whātua, were the first to obtain firearms and inflicted heavy casualties upon each other and on neighbouring tribes, some of whom had never seen muskets.
"The first occasion appears to have been the defeat of a Ngapuhi war party by Ngāti Whātua at Moremonui near Maunganui, between Hokianga and Kaipara harbours in 1807. In this instance, it was the Ngapuhi who were equipped with muskets. But the Ngāti Whātua ambushed them with traditional weapons before Ngapuhi had sufficient opportunity to load or reload." (Michael King). Hongi Hika, who was later to lead Ngapuhi raids across most of the northern North Island, saw two of his brothers killed in this debacle.
In time, all the tribes traded to obtain muskets and the conflict ultimately reached an uneasy stalemate after decimating the population of some tribes and drastically shifting the boundaries between areas controlled by various tribes. The new boundaries would largely become fixed after the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi.
[edit] References
"The first single volume recounting this period of New Zealand history": "The Musket Wars"
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