. . . . . "Te P\u016Boho-o-te-rangi (died 1836 or 1837) was a notable New Zealand tribal leader. A M\u0101ori, he identified with the Ng\u0101ti Tama and Ng\u0101ti Toa iwi. Te P\u016Boho was born in Poutama, Taranaki, New Zealand, possibly in the late eighteenth century. Late in his life, he moved to the South Island and settled at Parapara."@en . . . . . . . . . . "1108237614"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Te P\u016Boho-o-te-rangi"@en . . "Te P\u016Boho-o-te-rangi (died 1836 or 1837) was a notable New Zealand tribal leader. A M\u0101ori, he identified with the Ng\u0101ti Tama and Ng\u0101ti Toa iwi. Te P\u016Boho was born in Poutama, Taranaki, New Zealand, possibly in the late eighteenth century. Late in his life, he moved to the South Island and settled at Parapara. In 1836, Te P\u016Boho led a 100-person war party (taua), armed with muskets, down the West Coast and over the Haast Pass / Tioripatea: they fell on the Ng\u0101i Tahu encampment between Lake W\u0101naka and Lake H\u0101wea, capturing ten people and killing and eating two children. Some of the Ng\u0101i Tahu fled down the Waitaki River to the coast; Te P\u016Boho took his captives over the Crown Range to Lake Wakatipu and thence to Southland where he was killed and his war party destroyed by the southern Ng\u0101i Tahu leader T\u016Bhawaiki."@en . . . . . . . . . . "34478164"^^ . "1878"^^ . .