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John Fitzsimons
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 27 ส.ค. 2013
วีดีโอ
The Boy on the Hill
มุมมอง 80ปีที่แล้ว
Captain Cook rules Source: www.accessradiotaranaki.com/player?ShowID=5669
The Wreck of the Wahine - Phillipa Patterson & Hilary Sutton
มุมมอง 47ปีที่แล้ว
The Wreck of the Wahine - Phillipa Patterson & Hilary Sutton
Down the Hall on Saturday Night - Arthur Toms
มุมมอง 88ปีที่แล้ว
Down the Hall on Saturday Night - Arthur Toms
Inter Island Steamer Express - Peter Cape
มุมมอง 313ปีที่แล้ว
Inter Island Steamer Express - Peter Cape
Old Joe Becher & Young Joe Bayer - Arthur Toms & Christopher Cape
มุมมอง 122ปีที่แล้ว
Old Joe Becher & Young Joe Bayer - Arthur Toms & Christopher Cape
underrated
It's wong to take something is not yours
Thanks john
Name movie
listened with my dad back in the mid 60,s ,,,,bought a cassette from the Waiouru army musem which i still have probably bout 1980 ,,its a treasure
Fantastic band, saw them in 1981, Esther, bought the album from the band who each signed it on the front cover...have been playing this for many years until somehow I lost the album in a move, years ago, but delighted to find them on you tube !!!
How do maori tolerate brit settlers today...?😮
Maybe cause the British out number then 3 to 1??
The history of the brit empire,same done in ireland for far longer 😮
The brits invading other peoples lands,no thing new😮😅
No land exists that wasnt taken from someone else at some point. It belongs to ehoever can take it and defend it.
@ethank.6602 not a very good moral argument however..?
The problems when invading other peoples lands 😮😅
Did jg add to the Dunedin Pog 'n Scrogg reminisces, awhile back - or was that wiped? Ne' mind, shall relay it again: Picture it, George Street School fair day, '82. Poggin' Scrog' were there, as were all us wee buggers ran about, n' fathers' disassociates, cavorting with substitutes. This was many a scene which remains. Don't scrub this too, as it's Dunedin history... or at least the history related to a man who once loved Dunedin City. And who still recalls that love.
Anybody knows the lyrics and dialects?
Thank you very much for this, I listened to these while I was younger on record, best time sitting listening to them all once again. Do you by chance have the second lot of songs? “More songs we sang in the New Zealand forces”? Would love to hear them too if possible :)
Disappointed that the " hoss" in the cover drawing doesn't have a hat ! Fun song though.
Something of an anthem to those of us who worked on the hydro schemes.
Love it! Enunciation counts!
My grandad told me that as a school boy back in the 50s, he knew a girl who sang this song often,
Only history we learn in school today is African history. Pathetic
gets you singing along :)
Syd Vicious Sex Pistols did a version of this.
Folk dancing at Redwood Primary School ~ memories
So pleased to have found this channel _ thank you for the great upload
At first I thought this was about the Italian War of Unification. But then I noticed the actors were speaking English. And Rangiriri doesn’t sound the most Italian of names. What film is this?
title of film in in the description sir
Why did the Maori have trenches in 1863 like in the Great War? Did they have a trench warfare there?
Yup, trenches were already a thing long before the maori, but maori did upgrade trench warfare and invented a lot of new trench based defenses, due to these new maori defensive tactics small numbers of maori were able to hold out against larger British armies on multiple occasions
This is an engagement between the British Empire and the Maori of New Zealand. Why in heck are the soldiers carrying an American Flag??
My great great great great grand uncle Koro (Te Waru Tamatea ) was chief of the Hau Hau we still are fighting to this verry day it didn't happen like this is only a poor re enactment i am a descendant of Te Waru Tamatea ( UPOKOKŌHUA YOU PAKEHA) KA WHAWHAI TONU AKE AKE
We see many such battles in the second half of the 19th Century. By and large, on land and sea, they presented models for both world wars. It's just that no one bothered to learn from them
Damm i think i been there and broke my leg
Surprise! another useless war I'd never heard of but should've. Thx. for the knowledge.... I think. 🌍✌️🌎. Go natives.
Как фильм называется
Le progrès dans les pouvoirs de destruction , est ce un progrès pour une civilisation durable.
might of lost few battles but the british always win who rules new zealand colonials[ white ]
The funny thing is, is that the British won this battle of Rangiriri. However, it wasn't an easy victory it was the bloodiest battle of the NZ Wars. The British suffered 130 casualties, while in contrast, the maori suffered 71-280 casualties with another 180 captured
Excellent doco.
Excellent film.
No fixed bayonets?
My thought exactly!
At one point the Maori sent a delegation to the British commander asking for firearms and ammunition so that the fighting would be more equal and both sides could gather more honor and spiritual power.
At one point, a British garrison was caught in a fortified area and out of food and water. The Maoris daily left them both.
As always the british crown orders murder of the people who fight for their land. 😢
This is actually pretty good.
A bygone era where men were tough as ever
The history of Europe is stained with blood all over the world, in every country they have victims, women and children, and they excelled because of the advanced weapons of those times, and in reality they are cowards and rats.
She starts out from otiria I I V
She goes to Aberdeen This isn't the Okihau express
28th Maori battalion. B Company Penny Divers. Bay of Plenty New Zealand, to all my kinsman and countrymen that died. Thankyou
full of rukahu dis movie 😂
WE'RE MAKING IT OUT OF THE OKAIHAU RAIL TUNNEL WITH THIS ONE!!!! 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣
I can almost imagine Adam cursing everytime they screwed up too.
Did anyone come here from Jet Lag The Game!?
Yep
Yes
Yes!
@@3dkidsartfairs yeah
Thank you so much for uploading this! This is, hands down, my favorite album of sea shanties I've ever come across.
Ah, "Rivers of Time" indeed! I fondly remember singing this in our a cappella harmony groups, Down Under!!!
🇼🇸🇼🇸🇼🇸🇼🇸🇼🇸
Sole, this is not Samoa during this time. Samoa was going through their 3rd or 4th civil war. Samoa did clash with Europeans and Americans troops from time to time, but no full-on war like in NZ or Tahiti
Seems like its... 10,000 miles
Just one of the times moari broke the treaty and had to pay the price later. Tough times. Move on. Or good luck with your revolution chaps haha.
unfortunately for pakeha maoi are still here and hold the Crown to account
Oh shut ya mouth up Jason 😂
@@saakauola3399 Why, you triggered like a little woke bitch?
@@tommcg7564 maoris are still there and doing what maoris do best. News 24 headline: "Shock over Maori infant brutality" They have been scalded, burned with cigarettes, raped, had bones broken and been beaten unconscious, sometimes to death. Horrific cases of Maori youngsters - some under two years of age - being tortured, abused and KILLED BY MEMBERS OF THEIR OWN FAMILIES Among the grisly headlines that have dominated the nation's media over recent weeks are stories of a 28-month-old Maori girl in a coma after suffering severe head injuries, a broken arm, cuts, bruises and cigarette burns over most of her body. The toddler's 52-year-old grandmother was being held in prison on assault charges. Police in the central North Island town of Carterton are investigating the death a week ago of 23-month-old Maori girl Hinewaoriki Karaitiana-Matiaha who was sexually abused, scalded with hot liquid and beaten before being taken to hospital by relatives. The child, who was put in the care of her grandmother by the Child, Youth and Family Service after consultations with the toddler's family just short of her second birthday, was dead on arrival at Masterton Hospital late on Sunday, July 23. And last week, a coroner in the east coast town of Tauranga found that two-month-old Marcus Te Hira Grey died from a brain haemorrhage following a severe beating by his father. These cases follow the recent release of a report into the gruesome killing last April of four-year-old James Whakaruru, beaten to death by his stepfather for failing to call him Dad. The stepfather had been jailed once for assaulting the boy, but the youngster endured a lifetime of horrific beatings, despite being under the eye of various child welfare agencies, and his hellish existence went unnoticed. The proportion of extreme cases of brutality towards children among the Maori population - which makes up about 15 percent of New Zealand's 3.8 million citizens - is far higher than for any other ethnic group.
@@tommcg7564 the crown have enslaved all nzers