Motuara Island
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The wooden lookout tower on the summit of Motuara Island, near to where, in 1770, Captain Cook proclaimed British sovereignty over Queen Charlotte Sound | |
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| Geography | |
|---|---|
| Location | Marlborough Sounds |
| Coordinates | 41°05.5′S 174°16.5′E / 41.0917°S 174.2750°E |
| Highest elevation | 128 m (420 ft) |
| Administration | |
Department of Conservation (New Zealand) | |
| Demographics | |
| Population | 0 |
| Additional information | |
| Bird sanctuary | |
Motuara Island is a scenic and historical reserve that lies at the entrance to Queen Charlotte Sound / Tōtaranui.[1] It is notable for the actions of James Cook. During HMS Endeavour's stay at nearby Meretoto / Ship Cove, Cook climbed to the summit of Motuara, and formally (and controversially) claimed it and the adjacent lands in the name of and for the use of the sovereign of the British Empire.[2][3][4]
The island is 59 hectares (150 acres) in size. Motu means island and ara is a path; hence, Motuara literally means the island in the path (of the canoes).[5]
The entrance to the Queen Charlotte Sound / Tōtaranui area was an important point of arrival and departure for the steady flow of trading waka (canoes) crossing Cook Strait, and Motuara Island was a staging post for people and goods crossing the strait, as well as a trading post for pounamu (jade) and pakohe (argillite).[6]
Rangitāne people resided in kāinga (unfortified villages) near food gathering and growing places.[7] Although the residents enjoyed long periods of peace, due to its strategic location over the years different tribal groups contested, fought and merged there; hence, the fortified pā upon a partly attached rocky islet off the south east point of Motuara Island. Whenever trade opportunities or strife loomed, people gathered at the pā.[8] Today this islet is called Hippah Island, after the early British use of the word "Hippah" for any fortified Māori site. The islets cliffs provided protection in times of skirmishes.[6]
At the time HMS Endeavour sailed into the sound, Motuara's chief was an elderly man named Topaa. He and his people paddled waka out from the pā and encircled the ship.[9] In terms of first contact, it was friendly and prolonged encounter, smoothed by Tupaia, the Tahitian priest and interpreter.
As Cook wrote in his journal:
The inhabitants of this place invited us ashore with their usual Marks of Friendship, and shew'd us all over the place; which indeed was soon done, for it was very small, yet it contain'd a good number of people, and they had in it, Split and hanging up to dry, a prodidgious quantity of various sorts of small fish, a part of which they sold to us for such Trifles as we had about us.
— James Cook, Cook's Journal: Daily Entries, [10]
Writer Stephen Gerard describes the Rangitāne point of view:
And then one morning – it was on the 15 January [1770] – they heard the mournful blare of a conch-shell calling from the island. They abandoned their various pursuits, and launched long canoes, and paddled hurriedly across the sound, and stood to arms, for there they saw a strange ship... and with astonishment perceived their faces to be pale beyond belief... Then suddenly appeared among the white faces one of friendly coffee brown. Cries of astonishment broke from Rangitāne throats. In their own language, but with a strange accent and many unfamiliar words, this man called to them to not be afraid... So they kept the peace, and allowed the white chief Kuka to visit the island pa, and walk freely on their beaches and among their houses, and cut down their trees and take their water.
— Stephen Gerard, Strait of Adventure (1938)
During one of Topaa and Tupaia's conversations, Topaa said his ancestors came from Hawaiki. This is the same place that Tupaia came from.[9]
Cook estimated the population in the Motuara, Ship Cove, Anahou area to number 300 to 400. He wrote:[8]
… they leive desperse'd along the Shore in search of their daly bread which is fish and firn roots for they cultivate not no part of the lands… This people are poor when compared to many we have seen and their Canoes are mean and without orament, the little traffick we had with them was wholy for fish for we saw little else they had to o dispose of, they seem'd to have some knowlidge of Iron for they very readily took Nails in exchange for fish
— James Cook, Cook's Descriptions of Places

