. . . . . "Mua\u016Bpoko is a M\u0101ori iwi on the Kapiti Coast of New Zealand. Mua\u016Bpoko are descended from the ancestor Tara, whose name has been given to many New Zealand landmarks, most notably Te Whanganui-a-Tara (Wellington). His people were known as Ng\u0101i Tara, although more recently they took the name Mua\u016Bpoko, meaning the people living at the head (\u016Bpoko) of the fish of M\u0101ui (that is, the southernmost end of the North Island.)"@en . "2499"^^ . . . . . . . . . "16822108"^^ . . . "Mua\u016Bpoko is a M\u0101ori iwi on the Kapiti Coast of New Zealand. Mua\u016Bpoko are descended from the ancestor Tara, whose name has been given to many New Zealand landmarks, most notably Te Whanganui-a-Tara (Wellington). His people were known as Ng\u0101i Tara, although more recently they took the name Mua\u016Bpoko, meaning the people living at the head (\u016Bpoko) of the fish of M\u0101ui (that is, the southernmost end of the North Island.) Mua\u016Bpoko's traditional area is in the Horowhenua/Kapiti Coast/Wellington region. In the early nineteenth century Ng\u0101i Tara were a large iwi occupying the area between the Tararua Ranges in the east and the Tasman Sea in the west, from Sinclair Head in the south to the Rangitikei River in the north. Some hap\u016B had even settled in Queen Charlotte Sound in the 17th century."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Mua\u016Bpoko"@en . . . "31"^^ . . . . . . . "1104192331"^^ . . . . . . "3605"^^ . "Mua\u016Bpoko"@en .