Turikatuku

public profile

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Turikatuku

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Northland, New Zealand
Death: January 1827 (54-55)
Whangaroa, Northland, North Island, New Zealand
Place of Burial: Northland, New Zealand
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Te Koke and Mutunga, II
Wife of Hongi Hika
Mother of Hare 'Charley' Hongi; Hare Hongi II; Hariata Rongomai; Rewharewha Hongi; Korokoro Hika and 3 others
Sister of Tangiwhare Te Toki; Rangatira (chief) Te Ururoa Rewharewha Te Koki and Hau
Half sister of Manawapa

Managed by: Jason Scott Wills
Last Updated:

About Turikatuku

Turikatuku was the daughter of Mutunga II, and belonged to Te Hikutu and Ngati Rehia, who were related to Nga Puhi; their territories stretched north from Te Puna and Rangihoua in the Bay of Islands towards Whangaroa. She was related to Te Pahi, a major leader of Nga Puhi. She was born probably in the late eighteenth century, and may have been in her late teens when she and her younger sister, Tangiwhare, became the wives of Hongi Hika. Turikatuku was Hongi's senior wife, and the mother of at least two of his children, a son named Hare Hongi, and Rongo, later given the Christian name of Hariata, who was to become the wife first of Hone Heke and then of Arama Karaka Pi. Turikatuku may also have been the mother of another daughter of Hongi, Matenga, if that were not an earlier name for Rongo.

Hongi Hika had other wives, but Turikatuku was probably his closest friend and confidante as well as his senior and favourite wife. Those who met her regarded her as 'extraordinary', and it is recorded that Hongi never travelled or fought without taking her as his chief adviser. The devotion of Turikatuku to Hongi was witnessed by the earliest missionary visitors in 1814.

About 1816 Turikatuku suffered an inflammation of the eyes which made her completely blind, but she did not allow the handicap to prevent her from carrying out her usual tasks. Although she was the wife of the most powerful leader in the Bay of Islands she took a full part in the physical labour of cultivating food. Samuel Marsden, the chaplain of New South Wales, observed her in 1819 digging and weeding in Hongi's kumara gardens at Te Puna, with as much, or more, efficiency as those who were sighted. Marsden and Turikatuku made an exchange: Turikatuku received an iron hoe; Marsden was presented with Turikatuku's weeding tool which was sent to the Church Missionary Society in London.

In 1819 Hongi and Turikatuku received word that the people of Whangaroa had interfered with the bones of Turikatuku's father, Mutunga. An expedition proceeded against the guilty party. Hongi did not take their pa but fired on them, killing five or six persons; peace was then made. Turikatuku accompanied Hongi on his three great expeditions against tribes in the Coromandel and Hauraki Gulf, Waikato and Bay of Plenty, between 1821 and 1823. The scheme to deceive Ngati Maru into a sense of false security by a feigned withdrawal is said to have originated with Turikatuku; Nga Puhi returned and surprised Te Totara pa three days later. According to Wiremu Te Wheoro, it was Turikatuku who escorted Toha, also known as Matire Toha, daughter of Rewa of Nga Puhi, to Waikato as a wife for Kati, a kinsman of Te Wherowhero. The marriage, which took place in 1823, was a peacemaking alliance after the defeat of Waikato at Matakitaki in May 1822.

Turikatuku's role in the 1825 campaign against Ngati Whatua was recounted to the missionary George Clarke by one of the participants, Pakira of Ngati Rehia. The expedition set out from Kerikeri on the morning of 20 February 1825, taking a month or more to work its way down the east coast to Mangawhai, south of Bream Bay. From here the war party worked its way inland to a place called Te Ika-a-ranga-nui, at the junction of the Kaiwaka River and the Waimako Stream, where contact was made with the enemy. When battle seemed imminent Hongi made a speech pointing out the way Turikatuku and the other women and children were to escape if by chance he was killed and Nga Puhi conquered. After three days the Nga Puhi camp was moved to a nearby hill where rites were performed, the tohunga sprinkling each warrior with water. While this ceremony was taking place Ngati Whatua approached to within 300 yards. Turikatuku now addressed the assembled Nga Puhi; she urged them to be courageous, and to remember that their peaceful return to their wives and children depended entirely on their valour through the day. She reminded them that if they were defeated they would, if not killed and eaten, be wretched slaves for life.

After this speech, firing commenced; Wharepoaka of Rangihoua was wounded, which caused a temporary retreat by Nga Puhi; for three days they worked at repairing canoes burned and broken by the enemy, and then fighting began in earnest. Te Whareumu of Kororareka (Russell), leading the largest portion of the war party, was either driven back or made a planned withdrawal; the section led by Hongi charged, and met the full attack of Ngati Whatua. In the ensuing fighting Hare Hongi, the son of Hongi and Turikatuku, was shot and killed. Nga Puhi won a complete victory; in anger at the loss of his son, Hongi ordered all the prisoners to be killed.

During 1826 a series of domestic troubles and political reverses led to Hongi's decision to attack Ngati Uru and Ngati Pou of Whangaroa, not only to punish them for their ill treatment of Europeans but also to establish a new home for himself and his people. Although Turikatuku was very ill, Hongi Hika insisted on taking her with him when the war party set out in December 1826. They arrived in January 1827 to find that several Ngati Uru leaders had fled. With the remaining Ngati Uru, Hongi set out to drive out the other hapu, Ngati Pou; during the pursuit he himself received a ball through his chest. On his return to Whangaroa a few days later he found that Turikatuku had died. She was buried at Whangaroa, and a number of Hongi's people were left to guard her grave; it was Hongi's intention to take back her bones to bury at Waimate North. He himself died in March 1828; it is not known whether his wishes were carried out.

More suggestions and sources Elder, J. R., ed. Marsden's lieutenants. Dunedin, 1934

Marsden, S. Letters and journals. Ed. J. R. Elder. Dunedin, 1932

Sissons, J. et al. The puriri trees are laughing. Auckland, 1987

view all 12

Turikatuku's Timeline

1772
1772
Northland, New Zealand
1803
1803
New Zealand
1813
1813
1815
January 9, 1815
Pukepoto, Northland, North Island, New Zealand
1827
January 1827
Age 55
Whangaroa, Northland, North Island, New Zealand
January 1827
Age 55
Northland, New Zealand
????
????
????