, leader of
Arawa (Ohinemutu,
Rotorua, ca. 1880).
Tainui was one of the last waka to leave Hawaiki for New Zealand. It departed on
Uenuku's night, the fourth night in the month of
Hakihea (roughly December). When the people warned Hoturoa that this period of the month, Tamatea (the
new moon), is characterised by wind and storms, he said, "Let me and Tamatea fight it out at sea!" The way out of the lagoon into the open sea was barred by waves and a sacred tree, but Ngātoro-i-rangi sang an incantation which calmed the sea. Several
Tuamotuan stories tell of canoes named
Tainui,
Tainuia (captained by Hoturoa) and
Tainui-atea (captained by Tahorotakarari), that left the Tuamotus and never returned. On its voyage the
Tainui stopped at many Pacific islands. On
Rarotonga, they encountered some distant relatives and invited them to accompany them to New Zealand, but they refused. The island of Tangi'ia ('farewell') is named for this encounter. Also on Rarotonga, they encountered
Tama-te-kapua, chief of the
Arawa waka, who kidnapped Ngātoro-i-rangi and his wife Kearoa. Riu-ki-uta took over as
Tainui's navigator. Riu-ki-uta summoned the sea
taniwha, Mawake-nui-o-rangi, Pane-iraira,
Ihe, and
Mangō-hikuroa, and seventy-six others, to guide the waka. An incantation by Taikehu caused the canoe to travel quickly.
Arrival trees in flower When
Tainui arrived in New Zealand, it was surrounded by birds and Rotu sang an incantation to the birds to bring them to shore. This first landfall was at
Whangaparāoa near
Cape Runaway in
Te Moana-a-Toi (the Bay of Plenty). Seeing the red flowers of the
pōhutukawa trees, two of the men, Hāpopo and Taininihi, threw away their red-feather head-dresses, thinking that they could use the flowers instead. The feathers were found on the beach by Māhina and Mā-ihīhi, who refused to return them. As they were coming in to land, they were so inexperienced with the region that
Tainui was caught in a current and smashed against a rock, but they were able to right the waka and make landfall. Then Rakatāura threw his own hair into the sea, allowing the sea taniwha that had been guiding the
Tainui on the open sea to depart. The other
waka had arrived before
Tainui, but their crews had gone out to investigate the land. Hoturoa built a
tuahu (altar) and had the anchor rope of
Tainui placed beneath that of the other
waka. When the other crews returned, Hoturoa pointed to these things as evidence that
Tainui had actually arrived first. This incident is the subject of much dispute between Tainui and Arawa, who tell a similar story, but with the roles reversed.
Whangaparāoa to Tāmaki From Whangaparoa,
Tainui sailed along the coast of the
Bay of Plenty to the west. At Taumata-o-Apanui, one of the women in the
waka, Tōrere, jumped out of the boat in the night and swam ashore, because she was angry with Rakatāura. She hid herself in a bush at
Tōrere and Rakatāura was not able to find her. She married a local man Manāki-ao and became the ancestor of
Ngāitai. At
Hāwai, one of the men, Tari-toronga, left the ship, headed inland and settled on the
Mōtū River.
Tainui was accompanied by
Arawa, as far as
Whitianga, where the crews of
Tainui and
Arawa had a meeting on
Great Mercury Island, after which
Tainui continued alone. One of sails of the
waka was left at a cliff near Whitianga, which is now known as Te Rā o Tainui ('the sail of Tainui'). At
Wharenga, they erected a stone altar at the place known as Kohatu-whakairi ('Hanging Stone'), formerly a sacred place for the Tainui people. As they rounded the
Coromandel Peninsula, the crew wept for
Arawa and the other
waka that they had left behind, and as a result they named the bay that they were sailing into
Tīkapa Moana, 'the Mournful sea' (the Hauraki Gulf). The
waka landed at
Tararu and Wai-whakapukuhanga, where they left one of their anchors, then to
Wharekawa, where people who had already settled told the crew that there was another sea to the west (
Tasman Sea). Hoturoa's wife, Marama-kiko-hura, decided to make the crossing by land, planning to meet up with the rest of the crew at
Ōtāhuhu. As she went, she sang the 'karakia urūru-whenua' ('the incantation for entering new lands') and carried the Tainui's treasures. Continuing on,
Tainui passed
Motutapu island and fetched up at
Takapuna in the
Waitematā Harbour. There, Taikehu encouraged Hoturoa to go out and look for the sea to the west. When Hoturoa returned he said he had seen
kanae (grey mullet) leaping in the waves, known thereafter as 'pōtiki a Taikehu' (Taikehu's children). At the mouth of the
Tāmaki River, several members of the crew went ashore. Tāiki settled at Ōtāiki. Horoiwi took the cape to the east of the river, naming it Te Pane o Horoiwi (
Bucklands Beach). Te Kete-ana-taua settled at
Taurere, with her son Taihaua, and they became the ancestors of
Ngāi Tai ki Tāmaki. Further to the west, at
Te Tatua-a-Riukiuta (Three Kings), Riu-ki-uta settled and became the ancestor of
Ngāti Riukiuta. Poutūkeka, Hāpopo, Te Uhenga, and Hautai also settled on the Tamaki isthmus (present-day
Auckland). Hoturoa decided that Tāmaki was overpopulated and that they could carry on in search of new lands. According to one tradition, reported by Aoterangi, they carried the
waka overland to
Manukau Harbour on the west coast at
Ōtāhuhu, after rendezvousing with Marama-kiko-hura there. As they hauled the canoe across the isthmus on rollers, however, it stuck and would not move. Riutiuka reported that this was because Marama-kiko-hura had violated
tapu with one of the crew or with a local man during her journey. Repeating the special incantation the Hoturoa had used to haul
Tainui into the sea in Hawaiki, they were able to get the canoe moving.
Quarrel between Hoturoa and Rakatāura . . According to another tradition, however, it was
Rakatāura who was to sing the special incantation, but when he was about to do so, his sister Hiaroa abused him for helping Hoturoa when the latter had refused to allow him to marry Hoturoa's daughter Kahukeke. As a result, Rakatāura left the crew and
Tainui had to sail all the way around
Northland. Meanwhile, Rakatāura went inland with ten of his relatives along the
Hakarimata Range. One of his relatives, Rotu, stopped here and established an altar at a place called Tanekaitu. Hiaroa went on to Pu-karamea-nui and established an altar at a place called Moekakara. At
Mount Roskill or
Puketutu Island, Rakatāura and Hiaroa lit a fire and sung incantations to prevent
Tainui from entering the
Manukau Harbour. Then Rakatāura and Hiaroa went south, meeting the
Waikato River at Ruakokopu and crossing it at Te Piko o Hiaroa ('Hiaroa's Bend'). They climbed up
Karioi Mountain, built an altar called Tuāhu-papa, and sung incantations to prevent
Tainui from entering
Raglan harbour. Again, they sang incantations at Ngairo to prevent
Tainui from entering
Aotea Harbour or
Kawhia Harbour. As the
Tainui travelled south, its
bailer was swept overboard at
Te Karaka (near
Waikaretu), where it is said to have been transformed into a rock that can be seen today. At the mouth of the
Mimi river,
Tainui came ashore and Hoturoa planted a pohutukawa tree, which was still living as of 1912. The area had already been settled by one of Hoturoa's relatives, Awangaiariki from the
Tokomaru waka, so they turned around and began to head north once more. At the mouth of the
Mōkau River, three rocks are said to be mooring stakes used by the canoe and another anchor was left behind. Hoturoa disembarked and travelled north by land. At Whareorino he encountered Rakatāura and they reconciled. Together, they brought
Tainui in to Kāwhia harbour and hauled it ashore. Hoturoa set up an altar on the site, called Puna-whakatupu-tangata ('The Source of Mankind') and Rakatāura set up one called Hani. The
waka was buried at Maketu
marae, where it remains to this day.
Whakaotirangi, Hoturoa's wife, settled at Pakarikari near
Kāwhia Harbour and established a
kūmara garden. The people of the
Tainui waka settled at Kāwhia Harbour, and expanded their territory inland in the
Waikato region over the following generations, under the leadership of
Tūrongo,
Rereahu, and
Whāita.
Subsequent journeys According to
Percy Smith, after landing at Kāwhia,
Tainui was taken south to
Taranaki, where Hine-moana-te-waiwai of Ngāti Hikawai married the
Tainui crewman Kopuwai, who was renamed Tarapounamu, after a large
pounamu spearhead that had formed Hine-moana-te-waiwai's
dowry. Later, Tarapounamu wanted to see the
South Island, so he took
Tainui and headed south. At
Mōkau River he left an anchor and a stand of
Pomaderris apetala trees (called
tainui in
Māori). Then he landed at
Te Waiiti (near
New Plymouth) and allowed
Tainui to become full of excrement. As a result, Hoturoa had
Tainui seized and brought back to Kawhia. Tarapounamu had descendants on
D'Urville Island. ==See also==