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  1. According to Te Ara: The Encyclopedia of New Zealand, at the start of the millennium, approximately 8,000 Māori resided in England alone (as opposed to the United Kingdom as a whole). Historically Māori have been known in the UK for their athletic prowess on the rugby field as well as their various artistic skills.

    • Māori People

      Māori are the second-largest ethnic group in New Zealand,...

    • Ethnic Origins
    • Race and Ethnic Relations
    • Culture
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    The table above shows the broad ethnic composition of the New Zealand population at the 1961 census compared to that from the most recent data of the 2013 census. People of European descent constituted the majority of the 4.2 million people living in New Zealand, with 2,969,391 or 74.0% of the population in the 2013 New Zealand census.Those of full...

    After 1840, many issues to do with sovereigntyand land ownership remained unresolved and, for a long time, invisible while Māori lived in rural communities. When Māori and Pākehā (Europeans) began living in closer proximity, the belief that the country had "the best race relations in the world" was tested. The first Race Relations Concilitator was ...

    New Zealand culture is essentially a Western culture influenced by the unique environment and geographic isolation of the islands, and the cultural input of the Māori and the various waves of multiethnic migration which followed the British colonisation of New Zealand. British settlers brought a legal, political, and economic system that has flouri...

    Demographics of New Zealand's Pacific Population—Statistics New Zealand
  2. The word Māori refers to the indigenous people of New Zealand and their language. Both the term and the people are a hybrid of various Polynesian cultures, and are thought to have arrived in New Zealand more than one thousand years ago. The Maori people are well known for their distinctive traditional full-body and facial tattooing.

    • New Zealanders in the United Kingdom Māori wikipedia1
    • New Zealanders in the United Kingdom Māori wikipedia2
    • New Zealanders in the United Kingdom Māori wikipedia3
    • New Zealanders in the United Kingdom Māori wikipedia4
    • New Zealanders in the United Kingdom Māori wikipedia5
  3. Māori New Zealanders. Māori people, who define themselves as iwi (tribes), by descent from the crew of voyaging canoes or other illustrious ancestors. Over the centuries the tribes have adapted to new circumstances. Some have combined, while others have divided, and they have moved from place to place in response to changing conditions.

  4. Kiwiana. New Zealanders: Māori and European. New Zealand got its name (originally Nieuw Zeeland) after the Dutch explorer Abel Tasman reached its shores in 1642. The early European explorers and others who arrived after Tasman referred to Māori, the indigenous people, as ‘New Zealanders’.

  5. As British subjects Māori, like all New Zealanders, had easy access to Australia. But few migrated until the 1960s. Around this time, many Māori made the decision to move from rural to urban areas within New Zealand, and the next step for some was Sydney or Melbourne.