Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Nau Mai, Welcome to Te Aute College Teaching our rangatahi the way of the future, while remembering the past. Enrolments are closed for 2024 Open Day 27 June 2024 10-2PM.

    • Te Aute College, Nova Zelândia1
    • Te Aute College, Nova Zelândia2
    • Te Aute College, Nova Zelândia3
    • Te Aute College, Nova Zelândia4
    • Te Aute College, Nova Zelândia5
  2. Website. www .teaute .maori .nz. Te Aute College ( Māori: Te Kura o Te Aute) is a school in the Hawke's Bay region of New Zealand. It opened in 1854 with twelve pupils under Samuel Williams, an Anglican missionary, and nephew and son-in-law of Bishop William Williams. It has a strong Māori character.

  3. Nau mai haere mai ki Te Aute. Ko Kahurānaki, Ko Kauhehei, ko Pukenui ngā pae maunga, Ko Roto-ā-Tara te waiū. Ko Kahungunu te iwi, Ko Takitimu te waka, Ko Te Whatuiāpiti te tangata, Ko Te Aute te whare wananga, Tihei Mauri Ora! Ōtira, rātou e moe nei i te anuanu, i te mātaotao, kia rurutu a roimata, kia maringi a hūpe.

  4. In 1854 the Ahuriri Native Industrial School (later to be renamed Te Aute College) opened as a government school with 12 pupils, under the leadership of Samuel Williams. In 1857 the Te Aute Educational Trust was established with 4014 acres of Crown land and the gift of 4273 acres from Ngāi Te Whatuiāpiti.

  5. Te Aute College is a long-established, state integrated, Māori Anglican boarding school for young men in Central Hawke’s Bay. The college has 110 students from Years 9 to 13. All students identify as Māori, with most boarding in the college hostel and some attending as day students.

  6. Te Aute College. Date of birth. 1854. Place of birth. Central Hawke's Bay, Hawke's Bay, New Zealand. Biography. In 1853 Sir George Grey, Heretaunga Chief Te Hapuku and his Ngāi Te Whatuiāpiti people, met at Roto-a-Tara to discuss developing an endowment for a school to be established at Pukehou.

  7. 6 de mar. de 2022 · Download (142.61 MB) + Collect. thesis. posted on 2022-03-06, 18:29 authored by Robert Ritchie Alexander. The History of Te Aute College appears to be an unexplored, great, wide field, for developments in this, college effected the whole Maori race.