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{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2017}}
{{Infobox monarch
{{Infobox royalty
|name = Makea Takau Ariki
|name = Makea Takau Ariki
|title = High Chiefess of Rarotonga <br>[[Kingdom of Rarotonga|Queen of the Cook Islands]]
|title = High Chiefess of Rarotonga <br>[[Kingdom of Rarotonga|Queen of the Cook Islands]]
Line 22: Line 23:
[[Image:Makeapalace.jpg|right|thumb|Para O Tane Palace and Summer cottage (1908).]]
[[Image:Makeapalace.jpg|right|thumb|Para O Tane Palace and Summer cottage (1908).]]
[[Image:Cook Islands Annexation Ceremony.jpg|right|thumb|Queen Makea and [[Lord Ranfurly]] at the Annexation Ceremony (1900).]]
[[Image:Cook Islands Annexation Ceremony.jpg|right|thumb|Queen Makea and [[Lord Ranfurly]] at the Annexation Ceremony (1900).]]
'''Makea Takau Ariki''' (1839–1911) was a sovereign of the [[Cook Islands]]. She was the ''[[Ariki#Cook Islands|ariki]]'' (queen) of the dynasty ''Makea Nui'' (Great Makea), one of the three chiefdoms of the tribe ''[[Rarotonga#Subdivisions|Te Au O Tonga]]'' (The mist of the south) on the island of [[Rarotonga]].
'''Makea Takau Ariki''' (c. 1839–1911) was a sovereign of the [[Cook Islands]]. She was the ''[[Ariki#Cook Islands|ariki]]'' (queen)<ref>{{Cite book |last=Chitham |first=Karl |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1118996645 |title=Crafting Aotearoa : a cultural history of making in New Zealand and the wider Moana Oceania |date=2019 |publisher=Te Papa Press |others=Kolokesa Uafā Māhina-Tuai, Damian Skinner, Rigel Sorzano |isbn=978-0-9941362-7-5 |location=Wellington, New Zealand |pages=148 |oclc=1118996645}}</ref> of the dynasty ''Makea Nui'' (Great Makea), one of the three chiefdoms of the tribe ''[[Rarotonga#Demographics and settlements|Te Au O Tonga]]'' (The mist of the south) on the island of [[Rarotonga]].


She succeeded her uncle Makea Abera Ariki in 1871.<ref>{{cite web|title=Cook Islands Heads of State|url=http://www.guide2womenleaders.com/Cook_Islands_Heads.htm|publisher=guide2womenleaders.com}}</ref> Her reign lasted forty years during a crucial time in the history of Rarotonga and the Cook Islands. It was under her reign that the Cook Islands became a [[British protectorate]] in 1888 before being [[annexed]] to New Zealand in 1900.<ref>{{cite web|title=History of the Cook Islands: The British period|url=http://www.ck/history.htm#british|publisher=www.ck}}</ref>
She succeeded her uncle Makea Abera Ariki in 1871.<ref>{{cite web|title=Cook Islands Heads of State|url=http://www.guide2womenleaders.com/Cook_Islands_Heads.htm|publisher=guide2womenleaders.com|access-date=27 May 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110606090805/http://www.guide2womenleaders.com/Cook_Islands_Heads.htm|archive-date=6 June 2011|url-status=dead}}</ref> Her reign lasted forty years during a crucial time in the history of Rarotonga and the Cook Islands. It was under her reign that the Cook Islands became a [[British protectorate]] in 1888 before being [[annexed]] to New Zealand in 1900.<ref>{{cite web|title=History of the Cook Islands: The British period|url=http://www.ck/history.htm#british|publisher=www.ck}}</ref>


==Family==
==Family==
Makea Takau was adopted by her uncle, Makea Davida, her birth mother was his sister, [[Makea Te Vaerua Ariki]], who was the eldest daughter of [[Makea Pori Ariki]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.guide2womenleaders.com/Cook_Islands_Heads.htm|title=Cook Islands Heads of State|publisher=guide2womenleaders.com}}</ref>
Makea Takau was adopted by her uncle, Makea Davida, her birth mother was his sister, [[Makea Te Vaerua Ariki]], who was the eldest daughter of [[Makea Pori Ariki]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.guide2womenleaders.com/Cook_Islands_Heads.htm|title=Cook Islands Heads of State|publisher=guide2womenleaders.com|access-date=27 May 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110606090805/http://www.guide2womenleaders.com/Cook_Islands_Heads.htm|archive-date=6 June 2011|url-status=dead}}</ref>


==Succession==
==Succession==
Makea Davida, was ''ariki'' of ''Te Au O Tonga'' from 1839 until 1849 and succeeded by his sister, [[Makea Te Vaerua Ariki|Te Vaerua]], until her death in 1857. She was succeeded by her younger brother Makea Daniela, until his death in 1866. He was succeeded by another brother, Makea Abera (also spelled Abela), who was in office until his death in 1871.<ref>{{cite book|title=Cannibals and Converts|author=Maretu, Marjorie Crocombe|date=1983|page=96|url=https://books.google.co.nz/books?isbn=9820201667}}</ref>
Makea Davida, was ''ariki'' of ''Te Au O Tonga'' from 1839 until 1849 and succeeded by his sister, [[Makea Te Vaerua Ariki|Te Vaerua]], until her death in 1857. She was succeeded by her younger brother Makea Daniela, until his death in 1866. He was succeeded by another brother, Makea Abera (also spelled Abela), who was in office until his death in 1871.<ref>{{cite book|title=Cannibals and Converts|author=Maretu, Marjorie Crocombe|date=1983|page=96|url=https://books.google.com/books?isbn=9820201667}}</ref>


==Marriage==
==Marriage==
In the 1860s she married [[Ngamaru Rongotini Ariki]], one of the three high chiefs of [[Atiu]] and of the adjoining islands of [[Mauke]], and [[Mitiaro]]. The marriage, however, was childless. The Prince Consort, Ngamaru, was known to be more warlike than she; it was his way to threaten people who offended him, by making the "cannibal sign" at them—rapidly drawing his clenched fist across his teeth; the significance being: "I will tear you with my teeth!".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.blackdogbooks.net/index.php?Itemid=4&option=com_zoo&view=item&category_id=0&item_id=59|publisher=Black Dog Books|title=Beatrice Grimshaw}}</ref> Prince Ngamaru Rongotini died in 1903.
In the 1860s she married [[Ngamaru Rongotini Ariki]], one of the three high chiefs of [[Atiu]] and of the adjoining islands of [[Mauke]], and [[Mitiaro]]. The marriage was childless. The Prince Consort, Ngamaru, was known to be more warlike than she; he threatened people who offended him by making the "cannibal sign" at them—rapidly drawing his clenched fist across his teeth; the significance being: "I will tear you with my teeth!"<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.blackdogbooks.net/index.php?Itemid=4&option=com_zoo&view=item&category_id=0&item_id=59|publisher=Black Dog Books|title=Beatrice Grimshaw}}</ref> He died in 1903.


According to [[Beatrice Grimshaw]], a journalist from Ireland who visited in 1907, shortly after the death of Prince Ngamaru, it seems that it was a happy marriage.
According to [[Beatrice Grimshaw]], a journalist from Ireland who visited in 1907, it was a happy marriage.
<blockquote>''"Their married life was a happy one, in spite of the prince's violent character, and when he died, the widowed queen took all her splendid robes of velvet, silk, and satin gorgeously trimmed with gold, tore them in fragments, and cast them into his grave, so that he might lie soft, as befitted the prince who had been loved so well by such a queen."'' <ref>{{cite book|title=In the Strange South Seas|author=Beatrice Grimshaw|date=1907|page=71|url=https://books.google.co.nz/books?id=b78RAAAAYAAJ}}</ref></blockquote>
<blockquote>Their married life was a happy one, in spite of the prince's violent character, and when he died, the widowed queen took all her splendid robes of velvet, silk, and satin gorgeously trimmed with gold, tore them in fragments, and cast them into his grave, so that he might lie soft, as befitted the prince who had been loved so well by such a queen.<ref>{{cite book|title=In the Strange South Seas|publisher=Hutchinson & Company|author=Beatrice Grimshaw|date=1907|page=[https://archive.org/details/instrangesouths01grimgoog/page/n109 71]|url=https://archive.org/details/instrangesouths01grimgoog}}</ref></blockquote>


==Reign==
==Reign==
France's armed takeover of [[Tahiti]] and the [[Society Islands]] in 1843 caused considerable apprehension among the Cook Islands' ''ariki'' and led to requests from them to the British for protection in the event of French attack. This nervousness continued for many years and the call for protection was repeated in 1865 in a petition to [[Governor Grey]] of New Zealand.
France's armed takeover of [[Tahiti]] and the [[Society Islands]] in 1843 caused considerable apprehension among the Cook Islands' ''ariki'' and led to requests from them to the British for protection in the event of French attack. This nervousness continued for many years and the call for protection was repeated in 1865 in a petition to [[George Grey|Governor Grey]] of New Zealand.


During the 1870s the Cook Islands enjoyed prosperity and peace under the authority of Queen Makea, Makea Takau as she was known. A wily negotiator, she secured good prices for exports and cut the debts which had piled up before she became ''ariki''. By 1882 four of the five ''ariki'' of Rarotonga were women. Since the sovereign of the [[British Empire]] was [[Queen Victoria]], Makea probably found it easier to achieve a paramount status. In 1888 she formally petitioned the British to set up a [[Protectorate]] to head off what she believed to be imminent invasion by the French.
During the 1870s the Cook Islands enjoyed prosperity and peace under the authority of Queen Makea, Makea Takau as she was known. A wily negotiator, she secured good prices for exports and cut the debts which had piled up before she became ''ariki''. By 1882 four of the five ''ariki'' of Rarotonga were women. In 1888 she formally petitioned the British to set up a [[Protectorate]] to head off what she believed to be imminent invasion by the French.


The British were reluctant [[Administrator of the Government|administrators]] and continued pressure was applied to them from New Zealand and from European residents of the islands to pass the Cook Islands over to New Zealand. The first [[British Resident]] was [[Frederick Moss]], a New Zealand [[politician]] who tried to help the local chiefs form a [[central government]]. In 1898 another New Zealander, [[Walter Edward Gudgeon|Major W.E. Gudgeon]], a veteran of the [[New Zealand Wars]], was made British Resident with the aim of paving the way for New Zealand to take over from [[United Kingdom|Britain]] as part of the [[expansionist]] ambitions of New Zealand's [[Prime Minister]], [[Richard Seddon]]. This was not favored by Makea Takau who preferred the idea of being [[annexed|annexed to Britain]]. One of the results of the British annexation was [[freedom of religion]] and a new influx of [[missionaries]] from different [[Religious denomination|denomination]]s. The first [[Roman Catholic church]] was dedicated in 1896.
The British were reluctant [[Administrator of the Government|administrators]] and continued pressure was applied to them from New Zealand and from European residents of the islands to pass the Cook Islands over to New Zealand. The first [[British Resident]] was [[Frederick Moss]], a New Zealand politician who tried to help the local chiefs form a [[central government]]. In 1898 another New Zealander, [[Walter Edward Gudgeon|Major W.E. Gudgeon]], a veteran of the [[New Zealand Wars]], was made British Resident with the aim of paving the way for New Zealand to take over from [[United Kingdom|Britain]] as part of the [[expansionist]] ambitions of New Zealand's [[Prime Minister]], [[Richard Seddon]]. This was not favored by Makea Takau who preferred the idea of being [[annexed|annexed to Britain]]. One of the results of the British annexation was [[freedom of religion]] and a new influx of [[missionaries]] from different [[Religious denomination|denomination]]s. The first [[Roman Catholic church]] was dedicated in 1896.


After much maneuvering and politicking, the Cook Islands was formally [[annexed|annexed by New Zealand]] on October 7, 1900 when a [[deed]] of [[cession]] was signed by five ''ariki'' and seven lesser chiefs without any debate or examination of its ramifications or implications.<ref>{{cite web|title=History of the Cook Islands: The British period|url=http://www.ck/history.htm#british|publisher=www.ck}}</ref>
After much maneuvering and politicking, the Cook Islands was formally [[annexed|annexed by New Zealand]] on 7 October 1900 when a [[deed]] of [[cession]] was signed by five ''ariki'' and seven lesser chiefs without any debate or examination of its ramifications or implications.<ref>{{cite web|title=History of the Cook Islands: The British period|url=http://www.ck/history.htm#british|publisher=www.ck}}</ref>

==Titles and styles==
*1871–1911 Makea Takau Ariki, 27th Makea Nui Ariki of the Te-Au-o-Tonga Tribe
*1874–1911 Queen/Supreme High Chiefess of the Cook Islands
*1888–1900 Leader of the Council of Chiefs
*1891–1901 President of the Executive Council


==Para O Tane Palace==
==Para O Tane Palace==
In a shady park-like setting, in [[Avarua]], are the Para O Tane Palace and its surrounding area, the ''[[marae|Taputapuatea marae]]''. Named after a ''marae'' in the Society Islands, ''Taputapuatea'' was once the largest, most scared ''marae'' in Rarotonga. The palace is where Makea Takau, signed the treaty accepting the Cook Islands' status as a British protectorate on the 26th of October 1888. Beatrice Grimshaw gives a brief description of the palace during her visit to Rarotonga in 1907.
In [[Avarua]] are the [[Para O Tane Palace]] and its surrounding area, the ''[[marae|Taputapuatea marae]]''. Named after a ''marae'' in the Society Islands, ''Taputapuatea'' was once the largest, most sacred ''marae'' in Rarotonga. The palace is where the queen signed the treaty accepting the Cook Islands' status as a British protectorate on 26 October 1888. Beatrice Grimshaw gives a brief description of the palace during her visit to Rarotonga in 1907.


<blockquote>''"We walked through the blazing hot sun of the tropic afternoon, down the palm-shaded main street of Avarua town, to the great grassy enclosure that surrounds the palace of the queen. One enters through a neat white gate; inside are one or two small houses, a number of palms and flowering bushes, and at the far end, a stately two-storeyed building constructed of whitewashed concrete, with big railed-in verandahs, and handsome arched windows. This is Makea's palace, but her visitors do not go there to look for her. In true South Sea Islander fashion, she keeps a house for show and one for use."'' <ref>{{cite book|title=In the Strange South Seas|date=1907|author=Beatrice Grimshaw|page=68|url=https://books.google.co.nz/books?id=b78RAAAAYAAJ}}</ref></blockquote>
<blockquote>We walked through the blazing hot sun of the tropic afternoon, down the palm-shaded main street of Avarua town, to the great grassy enclosure that surrounds the palace of the queen. One enters through a neat white gate; inside are one or two small houses, a number of palms and flowering bushes, and at the far end, a stately two-storeyed building constructed of whitewashed concrete, with big railed-in verandahs, and handsome arched windows. This is Makea's palace, but her visitors do not go there to look for her. In true South Sea Islander fashion, she keeps a house for show and one for use.<ref>{{cite book|title=In the Strange South Seas|publisher=Hutchinson & Company|date=1907|author=Beatrice Grimshaw|page=[https://archive.org/details/instrangesouths01grimgoog/page/n104 68]|url=https://archive.org/details/instrangesouths01grimgoog}}</ref></blockquote>


The palace was reputedly a lively place when Queen Makea was around in the 19th century. The building was a picturesque ruin for many years, and was closed to the public, although officially it remained one of the island's main seats of power. In 1990 a group of Auckland University Students joined with local volunteers inspired to rebuild the important structure. Over a period of 3 years the building was restored and is now largely as it was in its heyday.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.flickr.com/photos/36372149@N00/7542289056/sizes/l/|title=Image of restored Para O Tane Palace|publisher=Flickr images}}</ref>
The building was a ruin for many years and was closed to the public, although officially it remained one of the island's main seats of power. In 1990 a group of Auckland University Students joined with local volunteers to rebuild the structure. Over a period of 3 years the building was restored and is now largely as it was in its heyday.<ref name=cin1>{{cite web |url=http://www.cookislandsnews.com/national/local/item/57404-architect-leading-light-in-palace-restoration |title=Architect leading light in palace restoration |publisher=Cook Islands News |date=30 March 2016 |accessdate=28 November 2020}}</ref>


==Death==
==Death==
After a prolonged illness, Queen Makea died at midnight on the 1st of May, 1911. During her illness she was looked after by Doctor Perceval, the [[Chief Medical Officer]] in Rarotonga. The [[Resident Commissioner]], Captain J. Eman Smith, visited the Palace daily for several weeks and was with her when she died. She was 72 years of age. Her body [[lay in state]] until Wednesday the 3rd of May, and viewed by numbers of the residents. She was buried in the family graveyard on the Palace grounds.<ref>{{cite web | url= http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&d=AS19110526.2.27&e= |title= Death of Queen Makea | publisher = Auckland Star | date= May 26, 1911 }}</ref>
After a prolonged illness, Queen Makea died at midnight on 1 May 1911. During her illness she was looked after by Doctor Perceval, the [[Chief Medical Officer]] in Rarotonga. The [[Resident Commissioner]], Captain J. Eman Smith, visited the Palace daily for several weeks and was with her when she died. She was 72 years of age. Her body [[lay in state]] until Wednesday 3 May, and viewed by numbers of the residents. She was buried in the family graveyard on the Palace grounds.<ref>{{cite web | url= https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&d=AS19110526.2.27&e= |title= Death of Queen Makea | work=[[Auckland Star]] | date= 26 May 1911 }}</ref>


==Succession==
==Succession==
Queen Makea named Rangi Makea as her successor.<ref>[http://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/ObjectDetails.aspx?oid=122711&coltype=Photography&regno=C.003058 Photograph of Lord Liverpool & Rangi Makea Ariki], Museum of New Zealand</ref> On the 24th of October 1911 he was installed as Ariki. The late Queen was head of Government and her successor did not receive a similar appointment, but was of equal status to all the other Arikis.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=GRA19111120.2.27.5&srpos=2&e= | publisher=Grey River Argus |title=Late Queen's Successor | date=November 20, 1911}}</ref>
Queen Makea named Rangi Makea as her successor.<ref>[http://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/ObjectDetails.aspx?oid=122711&coltype=Photography&regno=C.003058 Photograph of Lord Liverpool & Rangi Makea Ariki], Museum of New Zealand</ref> On 24 October 1911 he was installed as Ariki. The late Queen was head of Government and her successor did not receive a similar appointment, but was of equal status to all the other Arikis.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=GRA19111120.2.27.5&srpos=2&e= | publisher=Grey River Argus |title=Late Queen's Successor | date=20 November 1911}}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
Line 77: Line 72:
==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
* Rev. William Wyatt Gill, B.A., LL.D.
* Rev. William Wyatt Gill, B.A., LL.D.
**''[https://books.google.com/books?id=OvxEAAAAIAAJ&dq=From%20darkness%20to%20light%20in%20Polynesia&source=gbs_book_other_versions From Darkness to Light in Polynesia]'' (1894)
**''[https://archive.org/details/fromdarknesstol00gillgoog <!-- quote=From darkness to light in Polynesia. --> From Darkness to Light in Polynesia]'' (1894)
**''[http://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-GilGene.html The Genealogy of the Kings of Rarotonga and Mangaia]'' (1889)
**''[http://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-GilGene.html The Genealogy of the Kings of Rarotonga and Mangaia]'' (1889)
* Beatrice Ethel Grimshaw, ''In the Strange South Seas'', Ayer Publishing (1909)
* Beatrice Ethel Grimshaw, ''In the Strange South Seas'', Ayer Publishing (1909)
* Richard Philip Gilson, ''The Cook Islands, 1820-1950'', Victoria University of Wellington (1980) {{ISBN|0705507351}}
* Richard Philip Gilson, ''The Cook Islands, 1820–1950'', Victoria University of Wellington (1980) {{ISBN|0705507351}}
* Marjorie Crocombe (editor) & Maretu ''Cannibals and Converts'', University of the South Pacific (1987) {{ISBN|9820201667}}
* Marjorie Crocombe (editor) & Maretu ''Cannibals and Converts'', University of the South Pacific (1987) {{ISBN|9820201667}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{commons category|Makea Takau Ariki}}
{{Commons category|Makea Takau Ariki}}
*[http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&d=AS19030321.2.62.4&l=mi&e=-------10--1----0-- Queen Makea's Country, Auckland Star (1903)] (Papers Past)
*[http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&d=AS19030321.2.62.4&l=mi&e=-------10--1----0-- Queen Makea's Country, Auckland Star (1903)] (Papers Past)
*[http://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-WarNarr-t1-body-d3.html Hoisting of the British Flag at Rarotonga and other Islands] (NZETC)
*[http://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-WarNarr-t1-body-d3.html Hoisting of the British Flag at Rarotonga and other Islands] (NZETC)
*[http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-GilGene-t1-body1-d1-d2-d3.html Pedigree of Makea Takau, as given by herself in 1883] (NZETC)
*[https://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-GilGene-t1-body1-d1-d2-d3.html Pedigree of Makea Takau, as given by herself in 1883] (NZETC)
*[http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-TreMaor-b4-2-8.html Rarotongan Genealogy - Genealogy of the Kings of Rarotonga] (NZETC)
*[https://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-TreMaor-b4-2-8.html Rarotongan Genealogy Genealogy of the Kings of Rarotonga] (NZETC)
*[http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-GilGene-t1-body1-d1-d2-d1.html Kings of Rarotonga, as given by the "Wise Men" of Makea & Tinomana in 1869] (NZETC)
*[https://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-GilGene-t1-body1-d1-d2-d1.html Kings of Rarotonga, as given by the "Wise Men" of Makea & Tinomana in 1869] (NZETC)
*[http://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/party.aspx?irn=39193 Collections Online - Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa] (Photographs)
*[http://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/party.aspx?irn=39193 Collections Online Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa] (Photographs)
* {{cite web|url=http://members.iinet.net.au/%7Eroyalty/states/cookislands/makeanui.html|title=Cook Islands Makea Nui|publisher= Royalty and Nobility from around the world|language=|accessdate=2017-09-09}}
* {{cite web|url=http://members.iinet.net.au/%7Eroyalty/states/cookislands/makeanui.html|title=Cook Islands Makea Nui|publisher=Royalty and Nobility from around the world|language=|accessdate=9 September 2017}}

{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Ariki, Makea Takau}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Takau, Makea}}
[[Category:1839 births]]
[[Category:1830s births]]
[[Category:People from Rarotonga]]
[[Category:People from Rarotonga]]
[[Category:Rarotongan monarchs]]
[[Category:Rarotongan monarchs]]
[[Category:Royalty of the Cook Islands]]
[[Category:Royalty of the Cook Islands]]
[[Category:1911 deaths]]
[[Category:1911 deaths]]
[[Category:19th-century female rulers]]
[[Category:19th-century women monarchs]]
[[Category:20th-century women monarchs]]
[[Category:19th-century monarchs in Oceania]]
[[Category:20th-century monarchs in Oceania]]

Latest revision as of 04:31, 17 December 2023

Makea Takau Ariki
High Chiefess of Rarotonga
Queen of the Cook Islands
Makea Takau Ariki, Auckland visit (1885)
Reign1871–1911
PredecessorMakea Apera Ariki
SuccessorMakea Rangi Ariki
Borncirca 1839
Avarua, Rarotonga
Died1 May 1911 (aged 72)
SpouseNgamaru Rongotini Ariki
Issuenone
HouseHouse of Te Au O Tonga
DynastyMakea Nui Dynasty
FatherPapelna (?–1901) or Tiberio, Pastor of the LMS
MotherMakea Te Vaerua Ariki
Prince Consort Ngamaru Rongotini (1885).
An 1893 stamp of the Cook Islands showing Queen Makea.
Para O Tane Palace and Summer cottage (1908).
Queen Makea and Lord Ranfurly at the Annexation Ceremony (1900).

Makea Takau Ariki (c. 1839–1911) was a sovereign of the Cook Islands. She was the ariki (queen)[1] of the dynasty Makea Nui (Great Makea), one of the three chiefdoms of the tribe Te Au O Tonga (The mist of the south) on the island of Rarotonga.

She succeeded her uncle Makea Abera Ariki in 1871.[2] Her reign lasted forty years during a crucial time in the history of Rarotonga and the Cook Islands. It was under her reign that the Cook Islands became a British protectorate in 1888 before being annexed to New Zealand in 1900.[3]

Family

[edit]

Makea Takau was adopted by her uncle, Makea Davida, her birth mother was his sister, Makea Te Vaerua Ariki, who was the eldest daughter of Makea Pori Ariki.[4]

Succession

[edit]

Makea Davida, was ariki of Te Au O Tonga from 1839 until 1849 and succeeded by his sister, Te Vaerua, until her death in 1857. She was succeeded by her younger brother Makea Daniela, until his death in 1866. He was succeeded by another brother, Makea Abera (also spelled Abela), who was in office until his death in 1871.[5]

Marriage

[edit]

In the 1860s she married Ngamaru Rongotini Ariki, one of the three high chiefs of Atiu and of the adjoining islands of Mauke, and Mitiaro. The marriage was childless. The Prince Consort, Ngamaru, was known to be more warlike than she; he threatened people who offended him by making the "cannibal sign" at them—rapidly drawing his clenched fist across his teeth; the significance being: "I will tear you with my teeth!"[6] He died in 1903.

According to Beatrice Grimshaw, a journalist from Ireland who visited in 1907, it was a happy marriage.

Their married life was a happy one, in spite of the prince's violent character, and when he died, the widowed queen took all her splendid robes of velvet, silk, and satin gorgeously trimmed with gold, tore them in fragments, and cast them into his grave, so that he might lie soft, as befitted the prince who had been loved so well by such a queen.[7]

Reign

[edit]

France's armed takeover of Tahiti and the Society Islands in 1843 caused considerable apprehension among the Cook Islands' ariki and led to requests from them to the British for protection in the event of French attack. This nervousness continued for many years and the call for protection was repeated in 1865 in a petition to Governor Grey of New Zealand.

During the 1870s the Cook Islands enjoyed prosperity and peace under the authority of Queen Makea, Makea Takau as she was known. A wily negotiator, she secured good prices for exports and cut the debts which had piled up before she became ariki. By 1882 four of the five ariki of Rarotonga were women. In 1888 she formally petitioned the British to set up a Protectorate to head off what she believed to be imminent invasion by the French.

The British were reluctant administrators and continued pressure was applied to them from New Zealand and from European residents of the islands to pass the Cook Islands over to New Zealand. The first British Resident was Frederick Moss, a New Zealand politician who tried to help the local chiefs form a central government. In 1898 another New Zealander, Major W.E. Gudgeon, a veteran of the New Zealand Wars, was made British Resident with the aim of paving the way for New Zealand to take over from Britain as part of the expansionist ambitions of New Zealand's Prime Minister, Richard Seddon. This was not favored by Makea Takau who preferred the idea of being annexed to Britain. One of the results of the British annexation was freedom of religion and a new influx of missionaries from different denominations. The first Roman Catholic church was dedicated in 1896.

After much maneuvering and politicking, the Cook Islands was formally annexed by New Zealand on 7 October 1900 when a deed of cession was signed by five ariki and seven lesser chiefs without any debate or examination of its ramifications or implications.[8]

Para O Tane Palace

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In Avarua are the Para O Tane Palace and its surrounding area, the Taputapuatea marae. Named after a marae in the Society Islands, Taputapuatea was once the largest, most sacred marae in Rarotonga. The palace is where the queen signed the treaty accepting the Cook Islands' status as a British protectorate on 26 October 1888. Beatrice Grimshaw gives a brief description of the palace during her visit to Rarotonga in 1907.

We walked through the blazing hot sun of the tropic afternoon, down the palm-shaded main street of Avarua town, to the great grassy enclosure that surrounds the palace of the queen. One enters through a neat white gate; inside are one or two small houses, a number of palms and flowering bushes, and at the far end, a stately two-storeyed building constructed of whitewashed concrete, with big railed-in verandahs, and handsome arched windows. This is Makea's palace, but her visitors do not go there to look for her. In true South Sea Islander fashion, she keeps a house for show and one for use.[9]

The building was a ruin for many years and was closed to the public, although officially it remained one of the island's main seats of power. In 1990 a group of Auckland University Students joined with local volunteers to rebuild the structure. Over a period of 3 years the building was restored and is now largely as it was in its heyday.[10]

Death

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After a prolonged illness, Queen Makea died at midnight on 1 May 1911. During her illness she was looked after by Doctor Perceval, the Chief Medical Officer in Rarotonga. The Resident Commissioner, Captain J. Eman Smith, visited the Palace daily for several weeks and was with her when she died. She was 72 years of age. Her body lay in state until Wednesday 3 May, and viewed by numbers of the residents. She was buried in the family graveyard on the Palace grounds.[11]

Succession

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Queen Makea named Rangi Makea as her successor.[12] On 24 October 1911 he was installed as Ariki. The late Queen was head of Government and her successor did not receive a similar appointment, but was of equal status to all the other Arikis.[13]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Chitham, Karl (2019). Crafting Aotearoa : a cultural history of making in New Zealand and the wider Moana Oceania. Kolokesa Uafā Māhina-Tuai, Damian Skinner, Rigel Sorzano. Wellington, New Zealand: Te Papa Press. p. 148. ISBN 978-0-9941362-7-5. OCLC 1118996645.
  2. ^ "Cook Islands Heads of State". guide2womenleaders.com. Archived from the original on 6 June 2011. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  3. ^ "History of the Cook Islands: The British period". www.ck.
  4. ^ "Cook Islands Heads of State". guide2womenleaders.com. Archived from the original on 6 June 2011. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  5. ^ Maretu, Marjorie Crocombe (1983). Cannibals and Converts. p. 96.
  6. ^ "Beatrice Grimshaw". Black Dog Books.
  7. ^ Beatrice Grimshaw (1907). In the Strange South Seas. Hutchinson & Company. p. 71.
  8. ^ "History of the Cook Islands: The British period". www.ck.
  9. ^ Beatrice Grimshaw (1907). In the Strange South Seas. Hutchinson & Company. p. 68.
  10. ^ "Architect leading light in palace restoration". Cook Islands News. 30 March 2016. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  11. ^ "Death of Queen Makea". Auckland Star. 26 May 1911.
  12. ^ Photograph of Lord Liverpool & Rangi Makea Ariki, Museum of New Zealand
  13. ^ "Late Queen's Successor". Grey River Argus. 20 November 1911.

Bibliography

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