TY - BOOK AU - Mataga,P.D. AU - Mataga,Scott Alexander TI - Kent and Dillon: seamen, traders, history changers SN - 0473668335 U1 - 993.01 23 PY - 2023/// CY - Glendowie, Auckland, New Zealand PB - Opuzen Press KW - Muzzle-loading firearms KW - New Zealand KW - Kawhia KW - Firearms industry and trade KW - Ngati Paoa (New Zealand people) KW - History KW - Ngati Maru (New Zealand people) KW - Ngā Puhi (New Zealand people) KW - Māori (New Zealand people) KW - Waikato KW - Kawhia (N.Z.) KW - North Island (N.Z.) N1 - "The story of how Ngati Paoa and Waikato iwi succeeded in acquiring muskets for survival and of those who made it possible."--Title page; Includes bibliographical references and index; Introduction -- 1820: Ngapuhi as traders and warriors -- 1821: Ngati Paoa, Ngati Maru and Waikato -- 1821-1822: Hongi's raids on Ngati Paoa, Ngati Maru and Waikato -- 1823-1825: Respite from Ngapuhi for Waikato, Ngati Paoa and Ngati Maru -- 1823-1827: Peter Dillon's critical role in the Tamaki Strait trade -- 1824-1827: Hongi's peace; Pomare's defeat; Ngati Paoa's return to Tamaki Strait; Repulse of the Ngapuhi Utu raid for Pomare -- Captain Kent, NSW Government explorer and Hokianga trader -- 1826-1828: The Wherowhero rebuilds Waikato; Ngapuhi disarray -- 1828: Kent makes dramatic changes to his trading arrangement -- 1828: Kent sets up trading arrangements at Kawhia in conjunction with Te Wherowhero -- 1829-1833: Ngati Mahuta's success in the trading of flax for muskets -- 1835: Onwards: Te Wherowhero's influence on New Zealand's history -- Appendices: Ship visits to the Bay of Islands and Hokianga 1804-1830 ; Short biographies of Kent's first traders ; Flax ; The mysterious 'Brian Boru' ; The influence of Hongi's visit to England on his future strategies N2 - "The story of New Zealands musket wars is one of killing, cannibalism and enslavement on a horrific scale. These activities did not originate with the arrival of European weapons but were endemic as hapu strove to expand or to defend their homelands. Nor was the arrival of these weapons in itself the cause of the scale of the horror, but it was the imbalance of one hapu or iwi acquiring large numbers of weapons which they used against those that had none. Muskets, powder and shot were acquired by Maori in different ways and different circumstances throughout New Zealand, but this story is confined to the trade in the northern half of the North Island. The written history of New Zealand pre-1840 tends to compress time but in the musket trade Ngapuhi started serious trading for muskets in 1814, the Marutuahu iwi, Ngati Paoa and Ngati Maru over 10 years later and Waikato some 15 years after Ngapuhi. Even then the trading avenues to Marutuahu and Waikato had to be opened up by seamen/traders to bring to an end this unequal conflict. Two men led this opening up and they are the subjects of this book. Captain (later Chevalier) Peter Dillon who initiated arms trade with Marutuahu and Captain John Rodolphus Kent who brought large scale arms trading to the Waikato. This is their story, and with it a somewhat different perspective of events in pre-1840 New Zealand."--Back cover ER -