Waikato (rangatira)

Waikato (c. 1790 – 17 September 1877), sometimes known as Waikato Piriniha or Prince Waikato, also known as Hohaia Parata or Hohaia Parati, was a tribal leader (rangatira) of the Ngāpuhi and Te Hikutū iwi (tribes).

[1] Waikato's primary residence was the pā at Rangihoua Bay.

[2] As a young man, Waikato travelled to England in 1820 alongside the principal Ngāpuhi chief Hongi Hika and the missionary Thomas Kendall.

Hongi Hika and Waikato had assisted Kendall with developing a written form of the Māori language and in England, they worked with the linguist Samuel Lee at the University of Cambridge in the preparation of a grammar and vocabulary of the language.

The chiefs had an audience with King George IV.

Hongi Hika (left) and Waikato (right)
Waikato (left), Hongi Hika , and Anglican missionary Thomas Kendall in a 1820 painting