Everything about M Ui M Ori Mythology totally explained
In
Māori mythology,
Māui is a
culture hero famous for his exploits and his trickery.
Māui's birth
The offspring of
Tū (humankind) increased and multiplied and didn't know death until the generation of Māui-tikitiki (Biggs 1966:449). Māui is the son of
Taranga, the wife of
Makeatutara. He has a miraculous birth—his mother throws her premature infant into the sea wrapped in a tress of hair from her
topknot (tikitiki)—hence Māui is known as Māui-tikitiki-a-Taranga. Ocean spirits find and wrap the child in sea-weed. Māui's divine ancestor, Tama-nui-ki-te-rangi (or Rangi) then takes the child and nourishes it to adolescence.
Finds his mother and brothers
Māui emerges from the sea and goes to his mother's foot, with the whole around it while the father is looking for food that all the chickens eat while they're asleep, finding there his four brothers, Māui-taha, Māui-roto, Māui-pae, and Māui-waho. Māui's brothers at first are wary of the new-comer but, after he performs several feats such as transforming himself into different kinds of birds, they acknowledge his power and admire him.
At first Taranga doesn't recognise Māui as her child. At first she denies him, saying, "This is the first time I've seen you. Get out of this house. You are not my child." Reluctantly, Māui moves towards the door, muttering as he goes, "I'll go, then, if you say so. Perhaps I'm the child of a stranger, but I did believe that I was born near the ocean, wrapped by you in your girdle, and cast into the sea. And I was rescued by Rangi, and nurtured by him in the sky, where I used to gaze down and watch this house, and listen to your voices. Indeed, I know the names of your children. There is Māui-to-the-side, and Māui-within; there's Māui-opposite, and Māui-without. And I say to you that I'm Māui-the-girdle-of-Taranga!" Then, at last, Taranga calls out to him, "You are indeed my last-born, the child of my old age, Māui-the-girdle-of-Taranga" and she kisses him and takes him to sleep in her own bed.
At first the older brothers are jealous and suspicious of the newcomer, saying, “We were conceived in wedlock, and born on the wide-wefted sleeping mat of legitimacy, and we're not asked to sleep with our mother. Yet this abortion, cast into the sea and nursed by seaweed, returns to life and is called to her couch. How are we to know he's really our brother?" After a while though, the brothers accept that the newcomer is one of them (Biggs 1966:449, Tregear 1891:233).
Restrains the sun
Māui takes the jaw-bone of his ancestress Muri-ranga-whenua and uses it as a weapon in his first expedition. This is to snare the Sun and make it go slower because the days were too short for people to get their work done. With the help of his brothers, Māui nooses the Sun and beats him severely with the jaw-bone club until the Sun promises to go slower in future (Tregear 1891:233-234).
Hauls up the North Island
His next exploit is to haul up land from the depth of the ocean—here he again uses the jaw-bone, this time as a fish-hook. Māui, using blood from his nose for bait, hauls the great fish up from the depths. When it emerges from the water Māui goes to find a priest to perform the appropriate ceremonies and prayers, leaving his brothers in charge of the fish. They, however, don't wait for Māui to return but begin to cut up the fish (to grab their share), which immediately begins to writhe in agony, causing it to break up into mountains, cliffs and valleys. If the brothers had listened to Māui the island would have been a level plain and people would have been able to travel with ease on its surface. Thus the
North Island of New Zealand is known as
Te Ika-a-Māui (The Fish of Māui) (Tregear 1891:234).
Discovers the secret of fire
Māui, finding that fire has been lost on the earth, resolves to find
Mahuika the Fire-goddess and learn the secret art of obtaining fire. He visits her but his tricks make her furious and, although he obtains the secret of fire, he barely escapes with his life. He transforms himself into a hawk, but to no avail for Mahuika sets both land and sea on fire. Māui prays to his great ancestors,
Tāwhirimātea and
Whatiri-matakataka who answer with pouring rain and extinguish the fire. Māui soon after goes out fishing with Irawaru, the husband of
Hina, Maui's sister. They disagree when their fishing lines get tangled and, when they return to shore, Māui turns Irawaru into a dog. Hina is distraught and throws herself into the sea, but she doesn't die. (Tregear 1891:234).
Finds his father
Māui stays with his mother and brothers. Each morning Taranga disappears. Taking the shape of a
kererū (wood pigeon) Māui descends after her and finds her with his father, Makeatutara. When Māui’s father is performing the baptismal ceremonies for Māui he makes a mistake in the incantations and this ill omen leads, in the end, to the death of Māui (Tregear 1891:233).
Seeks immortality
Māui now considers himself ready to win immortality for humankind. His father tries to dissuade him, predicting that he'll fail because of the mistakes in his baptismal ceremony. His father says to him, “My son, I know that you're a brave fellow and that you've done all things. Yet I'm afraid that there's someone who will defeat you.”
“Who could that be?” asks Māui. “Your ancestress
Hine-nui-te-pō (Great woman of the nightworld). You can see her flashing there on the horizon.” “Is she as strong as the sun?” asks Māui. “I trapped him and beat him. Is she greater than the sea, which is greater than the land? Yet I've dragged land from it. Now let us see whether we'll find life or death.” His father answers, “You are right, my last-born, and the strength of my old age. Go, find your ancestress who lives at the side of the sky.” “What does she look like?” asks Māui. “The red flashing in the western sky comes from her,” says the father. “Her body is like a human being, but her eyes are
greenstone, her hair
sea-kelp, and her mouth is like a
barracouta's mouth” (Biggs 1966:449).
Māui, undaunted, sets out westward, with his companions, to the home of Hine-nui-te-pō. In some versions, his companions are the smallest birds of the forest, the
tomtit, the
robin, the
grey warbler, and the
fantail. In other versions, the companions are his brothers. He finds Hine asleep with her legs apart and he and his companions see sharp flints of
obsidian and greenstone between her thighs. “Now,” Māui tells his friends, “when I go into the body of this old woman, don't laugh at me. Wait until I come out again from her mouth. Then you may laugh as much as you want.”
“You will be killed!” was all the companions could say. “If you laugh I'll indeed be killed. But if I pass right through her body I'll live, and she'll die.”
Then he readied himself, winding the cord of his battle club tightly round his wrist and casting aside his garment. As Māui began his task, the cheeks of his watching friends puckered with suppressed laughter. As his head and arms disappear one of his brothers - or the fantail - can hold back no longer and bursts out laughing. The old lady wakes, opens her eyes, claps her legs together and cuts Māui in two. Now Māui has become the first being to die and, because he's failed in his task, all human beings are mortal. The goddess keeps her position at the portal to the underworld through which all humans must travel (Biggs 1966:449-450, Tregear 1891:234).
Māui and Rohe
In a rare version, a goddess named
Rohe is Māui's wife. He mistreats her in a cruel and unusual way. He wishes her to exchange faces with him because she's beautiful and he's ugly. When she objects he gets his way by reciting an incantation over her as she's sleeping. When she awakes and realises what has happened she leaves this world and goes down into the underworld where she becomes a goddess of death (Tregear 1891:421).
His canoe the South Island
In Māori traditions from the
South Island of New Zealand, Māui’s canoe became the South Island, with
Banks Peninsula marking the place supporting his foot as he pulled up the extremely heavy fish. Therefore, besides
Te Wai Pounamu, another
Māori name for the South Island is
Te Waka a Māui (
The canoe of Māui).
Names and epithets
- Māui-tikitiki ("Māui the top-knot")
- Māui-tikitiki-a-Taranga ("Māui the top-knot of Taranga")
- Māui-pōtiki ("Māui the last born”).
Further Information
Get more info on 'M Ui M Ori Mythology'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://m__ui__m__ori_mythology.totallyexplained.com">Māui (Māori mythology) Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |