2024-03-28T10:33:31Z
https://tsukuba.repo.nii.ac.jp/oai
oai:tsukuba.repo.nii.ac.jp:00047843
2023-02-06T03:13:41Z
3:2622:4984:6960
K?piti Island: A Sacred Landscape
FORDE, Xavier
open access
Te Waewae K?piti o Tara r?ua ko Rangit?ne is a 20 km 2 island just off the coast of Te Ika ? M?ui in Aotearoa New Zealand. For centuries it was a plentiful source of food and a strategic defensive position for many M?ori tribes, and is covered with ancestral and sacred places. At the time of European arrival in the early 19th century, it became a stronghold of the Ng?ti Toa Rangatira tribe, who used it for as a base for conquest, trade, and whaling. The majority of the island was forcibly purchased by the government from 1897 in order to create a bird sanctuary. The northern end remained in the ownership of M?ori, who have established a lodge and nature tours company. The M?ori concept of kaitiakitanga, or traditional custodianship, is examined as a useful term to negotiate the tension between the protection of natural and cultural values on the island.
筑波大学大学院人間総合科学研究科世界遺産専攻・世界文化遺産学専攻
University of Tsukuba World Heritage Studies
2018
eng
departmental bulletin paper
https://doi.org/10.15068/00153225
http://hdl.handle.net/2241/00153225
https://tsukuba.repo.nii.ac.jp/records/47843
10.15068/00153225
2189-4728
世界遺産学研究
JOURNAL OF WORLD HERITAGE STUDIES
SPECIAL ISSUE 2018
53
58
https://tsukuba.repo.nii.ac.jp/record/47843/files/JWHS_si2018-07.pdf
application/pdf
846.7 kB
2018-09-18