Difference between revisions of "Archaeology of the Hohi Mission Station"

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== Archaeology of the Hohi Mission Station Volume 1: The 2012 Excavations ==
 
  
[[File:Smith et al.jpg|right]]Ian Smith, Angela Middleton, Jessie Garland, Naomi Woods 2012  University of Otago Studies in Archaeology No. 24. ISSN 0110-3709
 
 
   
 
   
 
Te Hohi (Oihi) Mission Station was the first permanent European settlement in New Zealand, giving it a significant place in the settlement history of New Zealand. Established by Samuel Marsden in December 1814 under the protection of local chiefs who occupied the adjacent Rangihoua pa, Hohi was home to a community of ca. 25-30 Europeans and a place of work and schooling for numerous Maori. It was also the focal point of Maori-European interactions in the Bay until other localities with better anchorages became more popular with visiting ships in the early 1820s and other European settlements were established in Kerikeri, Paihia and Kororareka. Hohi was abandoned in 1832, with the last of its missionaries relocating to Te Puna, about 1km to the west. Te site was never reoccupied, giving it outstanding archaeological potential as an undisturbed record of the first 18 years of European settlement. This period is as yet poorly known through the archaeological record. Hohi was also one of the earliest mission station founded in the South Pacific.
 
Te Hohi (Oihi) Mission Station was the first permanent European settlement in New Zealand, giving it a significant place in the settlement history of New Zealand. Established by Samuel Marsden in December 1814 under the protection of local chiefs who occupied the adjacent Rangihoua pa, Hohi was home to a community of ca. 25-30 Europeans and a place of work and schooling for numerous Maori. It was also the focal point of Maori-European interactions in the Bay until other localities with better anchorages became more popular with visiting ships in the early 1820s and other European settlements were established in Kerikeri, Paihia and Kororareka. Hohi was abandoned in 1832, with the last of its missionaries relocating to Te Puna, about 1km to the west. Te site was never reoccupied, giving it outstanding archaeological potential as an undisturbed record of the first 18 years of European settlement. This period is as yet poorly known through the archaeological record. Hohi was also one of the earliest mission station founded in the South Pacific.
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== Archaeology of the Hohi Mission Station Volume 1: The 2012 Excavations ==
  
 +
[[File:Smith et al.jpg|right]]Ian Smith, Angela Middleton, Jessie Garland, Naomi Woods 2012  University of Otago Studies in Archaeology No. 24. ISSN 0110-3709
 
Available from the department http://www.otago.ac.nz/anthropology/arch/publications/UOSPA/UOSPA.html.
 
Available from the department http://www.otago.ac.nz/anthropology/arch/publications/UOSPA/UOSPA.html.
 
See also [[Marsden Cross]].
 
See also [[Marsden Cross]].
  
 
[[Category:2012_Books]][[Category:Books]] [[Category:Northland]]
 
[[Category:2012_Books]][[Category:Books]] [[Category:Northland]]

Revision as of 00:44, 26 May 2018


Te Hohi (Oihi) Mission Station was the first permanent European settlement in New Zealand, giving it a significant place in the settlement history of New Zealand. Established by Samuel Marsden in December 1814 under the protection of local chiefs who occupied the adjacent Rangihoua pa, Hohi was home to a community of ca. 25-30 Europeans and a place of work and schooling for numerous Maori. It was also the focal point of Maori-European interactions in the Bay until other localities with better anchorages became more popular with visiting ships in the early 1820s and other European settlements were established in Kerikeri, Paihia and Kororareka. Hohi was abandoned in 1832, with the last of its missionaries relocating to Te Puna, about 1km to the west. Te site was never reoccupied, giving it outstanding archaeological potential as an undisturbed record of the first 18 years of European settlement. This period is as yet poorly known through the archaeological record. Hohi was also one of the earliest mission station founded in the South Pacific.

Archaeology of the Hohi Mission Station Volume 1: The 2012 Excavations

Smith et al.jpg
Ian Smith, Angela Middleton, Jessie Garland, Naomi Woods 2012 University of Otago Studies in Archaeology No. 24. ISSN 0110-3709

Available from the department http://www.otago.ac.nz/anthropology/arch/publications/UOSPA/UOSPA.html. See also Marsden Cross.