Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Living Among the Northland Māori: Diary of Father Antoine Garin, 1844–1846.

View through CrossRef
If Antoine-Marie Garin is remembered today, it’s likely to be in Nelson, where he was Roman Catholic parish priest for very nearly forty years (1850-89). Born in eastern France, near Lyon, in 1810 to a comfortable middle-class family, Garin trained as a priest for his local diocese but after ordination and three years of parish work he joined the new missionary order, the Society of Mary. Marist priests and brothers had already accompanied Bishop Jean-Baptiste Pompallier to Aotearoa in 1838; Garin was one of a number who arrived early in 1841. In late 1843 Garin went to Mangakāhia, to run the Kaipara mission, and it is his time there which is the subject of this book. It is worth noting here that Garin is one of a significant number of Frenchmen and Frenchwomen from around Lyon who were influential in New Zealand Catholicism, from Pompallier himself to Suzanne Aubert, and, indirectly, the founder of the Society of Mary, Jean-Claude Colin. Garin, therefore, dedicated his Mangakāhia mission to St Irenaeus, Hato Irene, as well as to the Holy Rosary, for St Ireneaus was an early second-century bishop of Lyon.
Victoria University of Wellington Library
Title: Living Among the Northland Māori: Diary of Father Antoine Garin, 1844–1846.
Description:
If Antoine-Marie Garin is remembered today, it’s likely to be in Nelson, where he was Roman Catholic parish priest for very nearly forty years (1850-89).
Born in eastern France, near Lyon, in 1810 to a comfortable middle-class family, Garin trained as a priest for his local diocese but after ordination and three years of parish work he joined the new missionary order, the Society of Mary.
Marist priests and brothers had already accompanied Bishop Jean-Baptiste Pompallier to Aotearoa in 1838; Garin was one of a number who arrived early in 1841.
In late 1843 Garin went to Mangakāhia, to run the Kaipara mission, and it is his time there which is the subject of this book.
It is worth noting here that Garin is one of a significant number of Frenchmen and Frenchwomen from around Lyon who were influential in New Zealand Catholicism, from Pompallier himself to Suzanne Aubert, and, indirectly, the founder of the Society of Mary, Jean-Claude Colin.
Garin, therefore, dedicated his Mangakāhia mission to St Irenaeus, Hato Irene, as well as to the Holy Rosary, for St Ireneaus was an early second-century bishop of Lyon.

Related Results

Banner Headlines: The Maori Flag Debate in Comparative Perspective
Banner Headlines: The Maori Flag Debate in Comparative Perspective
Consider these statements. On the one hand: '[H]e did not agree with flying the tino rangatiratanga flag because it argued the case of Maori sovereignty, when the Treaty was all ab...
A portrait that asks questions: John Dempsey’s 1828 painting John Rutherford, the Tattooed Englishman
A portrait that asks questions: John Dempsey’s 1828 painting John Rutherford, the Tattooed Englishman
Painted in England, John Dempsey’s portrait (until recently attributed to George Scharf) represents John Rutherford, who lived in pre-colonial New Zealand from 1816 to 1826, with a...
Hawhekaihe: Maori Voices on the Position of 'Half-castes' Within Maori Society
Hawhekaihe: Maori Voices on the Position of 'Half-castes' Within Maori Society
Racial difference underpinned the existence of the New Zealand colonial state. Frantz Fanon suggests that colonial societies are by nature 'Manichaean', founded on the division of ...
Maori TV: The First Ten Years
Maori TV: The First Ten Years
In February of 2018, Māori Television began broadcasting several shows associated with the WWE (World Wrestling Entertainment) franchise, including its flagship programs, “Raw” and...
Matauranga Wahine: Teaching Maori Women's Knowledge Alongside Feminism
Matauranga Wahine: Teaching Maori Women's Knowledge Alongside Feminism
There are always at least two stories that emerge when students on a course are split into separate ethnic groups. This is the story of the Maori women academics who taught and tut...
Paradigm warriors: Advancing a radical ecosystems view of collective leadership from an Indigenous Māori perspective
Paradigm warriors: Advancing a radical ecosystems view of collective leadership from an Indigenous Māori perspective
Collective leadership is cast as a new and emerging paradigm. However, for many Indigenous communities, collective leadership has been a way of life through the millennia. Where ma...
Ary Scheffer, een Nederlandse Fransman
Ary Scheffer, een Nederlandse Fransman
AbstractAry Scheffer (1795-1858) is so generally included in the French School (Note 2)- unsurprisingly, since his career was confined almost entirely to Paris - that the fact that...

Recent Results

Bach on other planets or why acoustic sensors make sense in planetary science
Bach on other planets or why acoustic sensors make sense in planetary science
The European Huygens probe, which landed on Titan in 2005, is the only planetary probe so far to incorporate passive and active acoustic sensing. Acoustic wave motion is intimately...
Soup Plate
Soup Plate
Porcelain, Chinese...

Back to Top