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Te Tiriti o Waitangi - The Treaty of Waitangi - Coggle Diagram
Te Tiriti o Waitangi - The Treaty of Waitangi
Has been a public holiday since 1974
440/500 chiefs signed the Te Tiriti o Waitangi
The original copies are kept in Wellington
New Zealand has a bi-cultural agreement
After the treaty was signed the British said they had control over New Zealand
The Treaty of Waitangi was signed on the 6th February 1840
The Treaty caused lots of wars over the years and there is still problems today
Waitangi has celebrations
Māori and British have different ideas of what the treaty means
The treaty is written in English and Māori
There are special groups trying to make things better
Māori and Pākehā signed the treaty
Captain William Hobson signed it for the Queen
In 1830 lots of British came to New Zealand
The original copy of treaty is kept in Wellington
The treaty was signed at Waitangi
After the treaty was signed the British said that they had control over New Zealand
The settles are the people who stayed, and the traders, sailors and whalers came back and forth
The Māori didn't know that they were signing over all their land to the British
They tried to make things better by listening to the stories of the Māori giving back things that were taken.
Some chiefs did not some the treaty
On Waitangi Day each year there are many celebrations around New Zealand
Pākehā came to New Zealand and some people stay
Some people don't celebration Waitangi Day
Te treaty of Waitangi is a special piece of history in New Zealand
There are some people whose land was taken off them, and then they become slaves for the British
Māori were in New Zealand before Pākehā
In the North Island some chiefs decided to make their own flag
There are 3 different articles in the treaty. They are Protection, Participation and Partnership
Some people signed the treaty more than once