Postage Stamps as witness of New Zealand history

Postage Stamps as witness of New Zealand historyPostage Stamps as witness of New Zealand history

New Zealand is a wealthy Pacific nation dominated by two cultural groups – New Zealanders of European descent, and the Maori, who are descendants of Polynesian settlers. It is made up of two main islands and numerous smaller ones. Around three-quarters of the population lives on the North Island, which is also home to the capital, Wellington.

Agriculture is the economic mainstay, but manufacturing and tourism are important. Visitors are drawn to the glacier-carved mountains, lakes, beaches and thermal springs. Because of the islands’ geographical isolation, much of the flora and fauna is unique to the country. New Zealand plays an active role in Pacific affairs, and has special constitutional ties with the Pacific territories of Niue, the Cook Islands and Tokelau.

Some key dates in New Zealand’s history:

  • c.1200-1300AD – Ancestors of the Maori arrive by canoe from other parts of Polynesia. Their name for the country is Aotearoa (land of the long white cloud).
  • 1642 – Dutch explorer Abel Tasman sights the south island and charts some of the country’s west coast. It subsequently appears on Dutch maps as Nieuw Zeeland, named after the Dutch province of Zeeland.
  • 1769 – British captain James Cook explores coastline, also in 1773 and 1777.
  • 1840 – Treaty of Waitangi between British and several Maori tribes pledges protection of Maori land and establishes British law in New Zealand.
  • 1845-72 – The New Zealand Wars, also referred to as the Land Wars. Maori put up resistance to British colonial rule.
  • 1893 – New Zealand becomes world’s first country to give women the vote.
  • 1907 – New Zealand becomes dominion within British Empire.
  • 1914-18 – New Zealand commits thousands of troops to the British war effort during World War One. They suffer heavy casualties in the Gallipoli campaign in Turkey in 1915.
  • 1939-45 – Troops from New Zealand see action in Europe, North Africa and the Pacific during World War Two.
  • 1947 – New Zealand gains full independence from Britain.
  • 1951 – Anzus Pacific security treaty signed between New Zealand, Australia and USA.
  • 1985 – New Zealand refuses to allow US nuclear-powered or nuclear-armed ships to enter its ports. French secret service agents blow up Greenpeace ship Rainbow Warrior in Auckland Harbour. One person killed.
  • 2011 – Scores of people are killed in a major earthquake in Christchurch, New Zealand’s second-largest city, on South Island.
  • 2017 – A New Zealand-US firm, Rocket Lab, launches its first rocket into space, ushering New Zealand into the select group of countries which have carried out a space launch.
  • 2019 – Fifty people are killed when a far-right gunman attacks worshippers in two mosques in Christchurch. Government tightens gun laws.
  • 2020 – Jacinda Ardern wins landslide victory for Labour in parliamentary elections, in part over her handling of the Covid-19 pandemic.