Tāwhiao
| Matutaera Tāwhiao | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Te Kīngi Māori | |||||||||
The king painted by Gottfried Lindauer in 1882 | |||||||||
| Māori King | |||||||||
| Tenure | 25 June 1860 – 26 August 1894 | ||||||||
| Coronation | 5 July 1894 | ||||||||
| Predecessor | Pōtatau Te Wherowhero | ||||||||
| Successor | Mahuta Tāwhiao | ||||||||
| Ariki of Te Rohe Pōtae | |||||||||
| Tenure | 5 April 1864 – 11 July 1881 | ||||||||
| Predecessor | Position established | ||||||||
| Successor | Position abolished | ||||||||
| Born | Tūkaroto Pōtatau Te Wherowhero c. 1822 Orongokoekoea Pā, Te Takiwā o Waikato Tainui, Aotearoa | ||||||||
| Died | 26 August 1894 (aged 71–72) Ngāruawāhia, Colony of New Zealand (former King Country) | ||||||||
| Burial | |||||||||
| Makau Ariki | Rangiaho Hera Aotea | ||||||||
| |||||||||
| House | Ngāti Mahuta | ||||||||
| Father | Pōtatau Te Wherowhero | ||||||||
| Mother | Whakaawi | ||||||||
| Religion | Pai Mārire | ||||||||
Kīngi Tāwhiao (Tūkaroto Matutaera Pōtatau Te Wherowhero Tāwhiao, Māori: [taːɸiao tʉːkaɾɔtɔ matʉtaeɾa pɔːtatau tɛ ɸɛɾɔɸɛɾɔ]; c. 1822 – 26 August 1894), known initially as Matutaera, reigned as the Māori King from 1860 until his death. After his flight to the King Country, Tāwhiao was also Paramount Chief of Te Rohe Pōtae for 17 years, until 1881. A rangatira, and a religious figure – a tohunga ariki – Tāwhiao amassed power and authority during a time of momentous change, to become de facto leader of the Waikato tribes. He was a member of the Ngati Mahuta hapū and the kāhui ariki, the Kīngitanga royal family.
The son of kīngi Pōtatau te Wherowhero, Tāwhiao was elected the second Māori King after his father's death in 1860. Unlike his unenthusiastic father, Tāwhiao embraced the kingship, and responded immediately to the challenge of ongoing Raukawa and Tainui support for Te Āti Awa during the First Taranaki War. In 1863, Tāwhiao was baptised into the Pai Mārire faith, taking his regnal name, before leading the response to the invasion of the Waikato. After the Kīngitanga suffered a heavy defeat at the Battle of Rangiriri and war crimes at the trading centre of Rangiaowhia, Tāwhiao led the exodus of Tainui to the land of Ngāti Maniapoto, establishing a secessionist state called Te Rohe Pōtae (the King Country). Warning all Europeans that they risked death if they crossed the border, he governed Te Rohe Pōtae as an independent state for almost twenty years. Tāwhiao's power began to decline significantly in the 1880s, as his relations with Raukawa ki Ngāti Maniapoto deteriorated. He formally sued for peace with George Grey at Pirongia on 11 July 1881, allowing the construction of the North Island Main Trunk railway line, which first opened the King Country up to the outside world. Attempts by Tāwhiao to regain personal sovereignty or establish co-governance in accordance with the Treaty of Waitangi failed, and the Kīngitanga began to lose its supporters. The king died suddenly in August 1894, and was succeeded by his son Mahuta Tāwhiao.
Tāwhiao's legacy includes building the kingitanga from a union of mid-Northern tribes into "one of New Zealand’s most enduring political institutions," becoming a powerful adversary of the Crown that endured even after the exodus into the King Country and the eventual loss of its sovereignty. He is credited with establishing several key Kīngitanga institutions, including Te Whakakitenga, the bicameral legislature of Waikato Tainui, and the annual Poukai conference, as well as the initial Kīngitanga Bank, which collapsed, and then the successful Bank of Aotearoa. Tāwhiao has also been the subject of controversy, in connection with the forfeiture of the Kīngitanga Bank, and his conversion to Mormonism.