Banks Peninsula
Banks Peninsula is located in the Canterbury region on the east coast of the South Island of New Zealand, partly surrounded by the Pacific Ocean, and adjacent to the largest city in the South Island, Christchurch, which has approximately 340,000 residents. The peninsula has a land area of approximately 1,000 km². The Banks Peninsula District Council has 7,833 residents (2001 census).
History
Three successive phases of Maori settlement took place on the peninsula. Waitaha settled there first, followed by Kati Mamoe. Ngai Tahu took over in the 17th century.
Related Topics:
Maori - Waitaha - Kati Mamoe - Ngai Tahu
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The crew of Captain James Cook became the first European to sight the peninsula. This happened during Cook's first circumnavigation of New Zealand in 1769, and he named the feature in honour of the Endeavours botanist, Joseph Banks. The peninsula occasioned one of Cook's two major New Zealand cartographical errors - unable to see the low plains adjoining the peninsula he charted it as an island. Distracted by a phantom sighting of land to the southeast, he sailed away before exploring any closer and never discovered the two good harbours.
Related Topics:
James Cook - 1769 - Endeavour - Joseph Banks
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By the 1830s, Banks Peninsula had become a European whaling centre - to the detriment of the Maori, who succumbed in large numbers to disease and inter-tribal warfare exacerbated by the use of muskets. Two significant events in the assumption of British sovereignty over New Zealand occurred at Akaroa. First, in 1830 the Maori settlement at Takapuneke became the scene of a notorious incident. The Captain of the British brig Elizabeth, John Stewart, helped North Island Ngati Toa chief, Te Rauparaha, to capture the local Ngai Tahu chief, Te Maiharanui. The settlement of Takapuneke was sacked. (Partly as a result of this massacre, the British authorities sent an official British Resident, James Busby, to New Zealand in 1832 in an effort to stop such atrocities. The events at Takapuneke thus led directly to the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi.) Then in 1838 Captain Langlois, a French whaler, decided that Akaroa would make a good settlement to service whaling ships and "purchased" the peninsula in a dubious land deal with the local Maori. He returned to France, floated the Nanto-Bordelaise company, and set sail for New Zealand with a group of French and German families aboard the ship Comte de Paris, with the intention of forming a French colony on a French South Island of New Zealand.
Related Topics:
1830s - Whaling - Musket - Akaroa - Ngati Toa - Te Rauparaha - James Busby - Treaty of Waitangi - France - French colony
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However, by the time Langlois and his colonists arrived at Banks Peninsula in August 1840, many Maori had already signed the Treaty of Waitangi (the signatories including two chiefs at Akaroa in May) and New Zealand's first British Governor, William Hobson, had declared British sovereignty over the whole of New Zealand. On hearing of the French plan for colonisation, Hobson quickly dispatched the HMS Britomart from the Bay of Islands to Akaroa with police magistrates on board. While Langlois and his colonists sheltered from unfavourable winds at Pigeon Bay on the other side of the peninsula, the British raised their flag at Greens Point between Akaroa and Takapuneke and courts of law convened to assert British sovereignty over the South Island.
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From the 1850s, Lyttelton and then Christchurch outgrew Akaroa, which has developed into a holiday resort and retained many French influences as well as many of its nineteenth-century buildings.
Related Topics:
1850s - Lyttelton - Christchurch - Akaroa
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Historic harbour defence works dating from 1874 onwards survive at Ripapa Island in Lyttelton Harbour and at Godley Head.
Related Topics:
Ripapa Island - Lyttelton Harbour - Godley Head
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~ Table of Content ~
| ► | Introduction |
| ► | History |
| ► | Geology |
| ► | Land use |
| ► | Statistics |
| ► | External links |
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