condensed discuss document expanded export feedback print share remove reset document_white enquire_white export_white report_white

Full name unavailable

  • Service number
  • Also known as
  • Armed force / branch
  • Last rank
  • War

Identity

  • Title
  • Forenames
  • Surname
  • Ingoa
    • Mauihera
    • Manihera Mawhitiwhiti
    • Manihera
  • Also known as
  • Service number
  • Gender
    Male AWMM
  • Iwi / Hapū / Waka / Rohe
  • Religion

Civilian life

About birth

Contribute ›
  • Birth
  • Date of birth
  • Place of birth
  • Birth notes
  • Address before enlistment
  • Post war occupation
  • Next of kin on embarkation
  • Relationship status

Service

Wars and conflicts

Contribute ›
  • War
  • Campaign
    28 March 1860 Waireka (28 March 1860) AWMM
  • Armed force / branch
  • Service number
  • Military service
  • Promotions/ Postings/ Transfers

Military decorations

Contribute ›
  • Medals and Awards

Training and Enlistment

Contribute ›
  • Military training
  • Branch Trade Proficiency
  • Enlistment
  • Occupation before enlistment
  • Age on enlistment

Embarkations

Contribute ›
  • Embarkation details

Prisoner of war

Contribute ›
  • Capture details
  • Days interned
  • Liberation date
  • Liberation Repatriation
  • POW liberation details
  • POW serial number

Medical history

Contribute ›
  • Medical notes
    Killed in Action, Cause of Death AWMM

Last known rank

Contribute ›
  • Last rank

Biographical information

Biographical information

Contribute ›
  • Mauihera is listed, Ngati Ruanui tribe, killed in The Taranaki Herald 7 April 1860. The same list is given in an open letter written in Maori by Native Secretary Donald McLean, dated ‘Taranaki’, 4 April 1860 (Parkinson and Griffith 2004:519) with the name as Manihera Mawhitiwhiti. Prickett (2005) writes, of the spelling differences that McLean is likely to be correct because of his knowledge of Maori and he will also have known some of the named men.

    The Taranaki Herald of 7 April gives further information regarding Maori casualties. In the ‘Journal of Events’ dated 31 March, on Monday (1 April) it is reported that ‘Whitikamu’ and ‘Manihera’ had been found buried on the battlefield. Prickett (2005) comments that this appears to contradict the general assertion that the chiefs were taken south for burial.

    The Taranaki Herald 7 April 1860. Grayling, W.I. 1862. The war in Taranaki, during the years 1860-61. New Plymouth, G.W. Woon. Belich, J. 1986. The New Zealand Wars: and the Victorian interpretation of racial conflict. Auckland, Auckland University Press. Parkinson, P. and P. Griffith 2004. Books in Maori 1815–1900; Nga Tanga Reo Maori. Auckland, Reed. AWMM
Read more

Death

About death

Contribute ›
  • Death
    28 March 1860 Prickett, (2005).
    WairauTaranaki Prickett, (2005).
  • Date of death
  • Age at death
  • Place of death
  • Cause of death
  • Death notes
  • Cemetery
  • Cemetery name
  • Grave reference
  • Obituary
  • Memorial name
  • Memorial reference

Memorials

Memorial

Contribute ›
  • Memorial name

Roll of Honour

Remember Full name unavailable by laying a poppy.

Leave a note

Leave a tribute or memory of Full name unavailable

Leave a note

Contribute ›

Sources

Sources

Contribute ›
  • External links
  • References
    Prickett, N. (2005). Maori Casualties of the First Taranaki War, 1860-61. Records of the Auckland Museum 42: 81-124. AWMM

The development of the Online Cenotaph is an ongoing process; updates, new images and records are added weekly. In some cases, records have yet to be confirmed by Museum staff, and there could be mistakes or omissions in the information provided.

Creative Commons LicenseOnline Cenotaph Data by Auckland War Memorial Museum is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.