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Rangi stole Tenewhitua's fish head.
John Featon has written: 'The Waikato war, together with some account of Te Kooti Rikirangi' -- subject(s): History, Waikato War, New Zealand, 1863-1865
Harold Miller has written: 'Grandpa' -- subject(s): Biography 'The invasion of Waikato; a public lecture delivered at Hamilton to celebrate the centenary of the Waikato War, by Harold Miller'
The great calamity that befell the Waikato people in the 19th century was the confiscation of millions of acres of tribal territory after the Waikato war of the 1860s. The government wanted to obtain the fertile Waikato lands for Pākehā settlement, but the King movement, which was centred in Waikato, resisted the loss of land and control. British and colonial forces crossed the Mangatāwhiri Stream on 12 July 1863. The stream, just north of Meremere, was established by King Tāwhiao as a boundary line (aukati) between land to the south controlled by the king, and land to north under government control. Tāwhiao had warned that should the British forces cross that boundary, war would ensue. Troops pushed south into the Waikato region, engaging King movement forces in a series of battles at Koheroa, Rangiriri, Rangiaowhia and finally at Ōrākau, a pā just outside Kihikihi. Following that battle, the Waikato people were forced into exile in what became known as the King Country, and the Waikato lands were confiscated by the government.
Food like hard tack(dry biscuits) and bully beef (corned beef) were eaten.
Uniforms, equipment, weapons, food, water, personal items.
war planes
carrots, gum, fruits and vegetables, sugar, tea and salt was being rationed
A Lesser Sort of War - 2007 is rated/received certificates of: Canada:G
Civil War
sort of
No but sort of. How and who is very complicated. Just wiki "Korean War" to get an understanding.