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Captain William Hobson and roughly forty Maori chiefs signed the Treaty of Waita
Featured Event 1840 Event

February 6

Treaty Signed: New Zealand Becomes British Colony

Captain William Hobson and roughly forty Maori chiefs signed the Treaty of Waitangi on February 6, 1840, establishing British sovereignty over New Zealand while guaranteeing Maori chiefs 'full exclusive and undisturbed possession' of their lands, forests, and fisheries. The treaty existed in two versions, English and Maori, and the translations did not match. The English version ceded sovereignty to the Crown; the Maori version used the word 'kawanatanga' (governance), which Maori chiefs understood as granting administrative authority while retaining their own 'rangatiratanga' (chieftainship). This translation gap became the fault line for 180 years of conflict. British settlers arrived in massive numbers, and within decades, confiscation, fraudulent purchases, and armed conflicts stripped Maori of most of their land. The Waitangi Tribunal, established in 1975, continues to adjudicate treaty grievances. February 6 is New Zealand's national day.

February 6, 1840

186 years ago

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