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Te Kahui Kararehe 1893. Te Kurahoupo Canoe. Journal of the Polynesian Society 2: 189-191

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The tradition of the Kurahoupo canoe. The Kurahoupo and Aotea canoes are the canoes of the Ngāti-Ruanui and Taranaki.

Of ethnobotanical interest: The ancestor Turi, introduced the karaka and the kūmara in the Aotea canoe. "The name of the plantation in which the kumaras were set was Hekeheke-i-papa; there were eight kumara plants planted, in eight ridges, the product of these was eight hundred kumaras. The karaka trees are still growing there (at Patea)."

The author, in an extensive footnote, discusses the many meanings of the word kura. One meaning is "a special kind of kumara, its flesh was like that of a pumpkin in colour, and its blossoms red - this kumara was eaten by the Ariki and Tohunga only, and had some special connection with matitikura [an incantation]".

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Te Kurahoupo Canoe

1893
Te Kahui Kararehe
Journal of the Polynesian Society
2
189
191

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d59cac26-ff8c-4808-8578-f031d6ec86f0
reference
12 June 2007
4 April 2011
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