Rārangi wā ki te Tohutoa a Te PahiTimeline of The Te Pahi Medal
He taonga nui te tohutoa a Te Pahi ki te motu whānui: ko te koha tapu tuatahi nā te kāwanatanga ki tētahi rangatira Māori.
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The Te Pahi medal is a taonga of national importance: the first official state gift given to a Māori chief.
Explore the history of the Te Pahi Medal (in English and te reo Māori) in this timeline.
January 1806: The medal is gifted
The Governor of New South Wales, Philip Gidley King, had the medal made to mark Te Pahi’s three-month visit to Sydney. John Austin, a convict silversmith, probably crafted it from two watch cases.
King hoped to secure resources for his colony from Te Pahi, and protection of whalers and traders in the Bay of Islands. Te Pahi aimed to establish trade ties and acquire new technology.
I te wā ka manaakitia a Te Pahi, māuiui kē a King, kua wherū i te noho ture kore o te koroni o Niu Haute Wēra. Ka rua ngā tau ka mate i te tau 1808.
Philip Gidley King, Governor of New South Wales, had the medal made for Te Pahi ‘to give him some proof of the estimation he was held in’.
Philip Gidley King, about 1800. State Library of New South Wales (IE204307)
About 1810: The medal disappears
In 1810, tragedy struck in Northland. A local chief’s son had been flogged on the Boyd, a cargo ship. In retaliation, his tribe massacred all on board. Te Pahi was wrongly blamed.
Revenge was swift – British whalers sacked Te Pahi’s island pā, killing up to 60 Māori. Te Pahi was fatally wounded. During the turmoil, the medal vanished.
I ponitaka te whenua o Te Pahi i te rohe o Rangihoua i Pēwhairangi.
Te Pahi’s rohe surrounded Rangihoua Bay in the Bay of Islands. It included Rangihoua Pā, shown in this landscape 11 years after his death.
Augustus Earle, Ranghe Hue, [i.e. Rangihoua] a New Zealand fortified village, the residence of Warri-Pork [i.e. Wharepoaka], 1827. National Library of Australia (Solander Box C18 #T178 NK12/141)
1810–2014: Where was the medal?
Te Pahi’s medal all but disappeared between 1810 and 2014. It was only mentioned once, in an Australian will dated 1899. How it got to Australia from the Bay of Islands is a mystery.
April 2014: The medal reappears
In 2014, the medal resurfaced at Sotheby’s Sydney auction house. Te Pahi’s iwi, Ngāpuhi, explored a legal challenge to its sale, fearing the taonga could be lost to a private collector.
On auction day, Ngāpuhi performed a haka outside the sale venue. Meanwhile, Te Papa and Auckland Museum, with Ngāpuhi’s endorsement, put in a joint bid – and won.
November 2014: The medal returns
Te Pahi’s descendants welcomed his medal back to the Bay of Islands in November 2014. Afterwards, it was handed into the care of Te Papa and Auckland Museum, its new co-owners.
Currently, Te Papa is custodian of the Te Pahi medal – a tribute to a leader of great mana, and a symbol of friendship between two peoples.