Difference between revisions of "New Zealand" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Category:countries]]
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{{Copyedited}}{{Paid}}{{Approved}}{{Images OK}}{{Submitted}}{{Status}}
[[Category:Geography and demographics]]
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{{Infobox Country
{{Contracted}}{{Status}}
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|native_name = <small>''Aotearoa''</small>
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|conventional_long_name = <big>New Zealand</big>
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|common_name = New Zealand
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|image_flag = Flag of New Zealand.svg
 +
|image_coat = New_zealand_coa.png
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|image_map = LocationNewZealand.png
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|map_caption =
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|national_anthem ="'''[[God Defend New Zealand]]'''" <br/>"[[God Save the King]]"<sup>1</sup>
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|capital = [[Wellington]]
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|latd=41 |latm=17 |latNS=S |longd=174 |longm=27 |longEW=E
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|largest_city = [[Auckland]]
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|official_languages = [[Māori language|Māori]] (4.2%)<sup>2</sup><br/>[[New Zealand Sign Language|NZ&nbsp;Sign&nbsp;Language]] (0.6%)
 +
|languages_type        = [[National language]]
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|languages    = [[New Zealand English|English]] (98%)
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|ethnic_groups = European 64.1%, Maori 16.5%, Chinese 4.9%, Indian 4.7%, Samoan 3.9%, Tongan 1.8%, Cook Islands Maori 1.7%, English 1.5%, Filipino 1.5%, New Zealander 1%, other 13.7%<ref name=CIAPeople>Central Intelligence Agency, [https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/new-zealand/#people-and-society New Zealand - People and Society] ''The World Factbook''. Retrieved July 25, 2023.</ref>
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|demonym = [[New Zealanders|New Zealander]], <br />[[Kiwi (people)|Kiwi]] (colloquial)
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| ethnic_groups_year    = 2018
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| sovereignty_type      = Formation
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| established_event1    = [[Treaty of Waitangi]]
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| established_date1      = February 6, 1840
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| established_event2    = [[Responsible government]]
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| established_date2      = [[1856 Sewell Ministry|May 7, 1856]]
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| established_event3    = [[Dominion of New Zealand|Dominion]]
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| established_date3      = September 26, 1907
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| established_event4    = [[Statute of Westminster 1931|Statute of Westminster]] adopted
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| established_date4      = [[Statute of Westminster Adoption Act 1947|November 25, 1947]]
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| government_type        = [[Unitary state|Unitary]] [[Parliamentary system|parliamentary]] [[constitutional monarchy]]
 +
| leader_title1          = [[Monarchy of New Zealand|Monarch]]
 +
| leader_name1          = [[Charles III]]
 +
| leader_title2          = [[Governor-General of New Zealand|Governor-General]]
 +
| leader_name2          = [[Cindy Kiro]]
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| leader_title3          = [[Prime Minister of New Zealand|Prime Minister]]
 +
| leader_name3          = [[Chris Hipkins]]
 +
|area_rank = 75th
 +
|area_magnitude = 1 E11
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|area_km2 = 268,021
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|area_sq_mi = 103,483 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
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|percent_water = 1.6
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|population_estimate = 5,109,702<ref name=CIAPeople/>
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|population_estimate_year = 2023
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|population_estimate_rank = 125th
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| population_census      = 4,699,755<ref>[https://www.stats.govt.nz/information-releases/2018-census-population-and-dwelling-counts 2018 Census population and dwelling counts] ''Statistics New Zealand'', September 23, 2019. Retrieved July 25, 2023.</ref>
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| population_census_year = 2018
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|population_density_km2 = 19.1
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|population_density_sq_mi = 49.5
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|population_density_rank = 167th
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| GDP_PPP                = {{increase}} $261 billion<ref name="IMF">[https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/WEO/weo-database/2022/October World Economic Outlook Database, October 2022] ''International Monetary Fund''. Retrieved July 25, 2023.</ref>
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| GDP_PPP_rank          = 63rd
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| GDP_PPP_year          = 2022
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| GDP_PPP_per_capita    = {{increase}} $50,851<ref name=IMF />
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| GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank = 32th
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| GDP_nominal            = {{increase}} $242 billion<ref name="IMF"/>
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| GDP_nominal_rank      = 51th
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| GDP_nominal_year      = 2022
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| GDP_nominal_per_capita = {{increase}} $47,278<ref name="IMF" />
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| GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank = 23rd
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| Gini_year              = 2020
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| Gini_change            = increase<!--increase/decrease/steady—>
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| Gini                  = 32.0<ref>[https://data.oecd.org/inequality/income-inequality.htm Income inequality] ''OECD''. Retrieved July 25, 2023.</ref><!--number only—>
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| Gini_ref              =
 +
| Gini_rank              =
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|currency = [[New Zealand dollar]]
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|currency_code = NZD
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|country_code = NZ
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|time_zone = [[Time in New Zealand|NZST]]<sup>3</sup>
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|utc_offset = +12
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|time_zone_DST = [[Time in New Zealand|NZDT]]
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|DST_note = (Sep to Apr)
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|utc_offset_DST = +13
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|date_format= dd/mm/yyyy
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|drives_on = left
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|cctld = [[.nz]]<sup>4</sup>
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|calling_code = [[+64]]
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|footnote1 = "God Save the King" is officially a national anthem but is generally used only on regal and vice-regal occasions.<ref>[https://mch.govt.nz/nz-identity-heritage/national-anthems New Zealand's National Anthems] ''Ministry for Culture and Heritage''. Retrieved July 25, 2023. </ref><ref>[https://mch.govt.nz/nz-identity-heritage/national-anthems/protocols Protocol for using New Zealand's National Anthems] ''Ministry for Culture and Heritage''. Retrieved July 25, 2023.</ref>
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|footnote2 = Language percentages add to more than 100 percent because some people speak more than one language.<ref name=CIAPeople/>
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|footnote3 = The [[Chatham Islands]] have a separate time zone, 45 minutes ahead of the rest of New Zealand.
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|footnote4 = The territories of [[Niue]], the [[Cook Islands]] and [[Tokelau]] have their own [[Country code top-level domain|cctlds]], [[.nu]], [[.ck]] and [[.tk]] respectively.
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}}
  
{| border=1 align=right cellpadding=4 cellspacing=0 width=300 style="margin: 0 0 1em 1em; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px #aaa solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 95%;"
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'''New Zealand''' is an island country located in the southwestern [[Pacific Ocean]]. It is also called '''Aotearoa''' or the "Land of the Long White Cloud" in the language of the [[Maori]] (rhymes with "dowry"), the [[Polynesia|Polynesian]] people who settled the islands four centuries before the first Europeans arrived. Geographically, the country consists of two large islands and a number of smaller islands. It is separated from [[Australia]] to the northwest by the [[Tasman Sea]], which is some 2,000 km across. The closest neighbors to the north are [[New Caledonia]], [[Fiji]], and [[Tonga]].
|+ <big><big>'''New Zealand'''<br>'''Aotearoa'''</big></big>
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|-
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New Zealand's total land area, nearly 270,000 km², is about the same as that of [[Colorado]] and somewhat smaller than the [[Philippines]]. The population, in slight excess of four million, is similar in size to [[Costa Rica]]'s. The two main islands are named North and South islands in English, or Te-Ika-a-Maui and Te Wai Pounamu, respectively, in Maori. Maori legends describe South Island as a canoe and North Island as a fish.
| style="background:#efefef;" align="center" colspan=2 |
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{{toc}}
{| border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"
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New Zealand aligned itself with the allied nations in [[World War I]], [[World War II]], and the [[Korean War]]. In the First World War, New Zealand recorded the highest casualties per head of population of any combatant nation.
|-
 
| align="center" width="140px" | [[Image:Flag of New Zealand.png|125px|Flag of New Zealand]]
 
| align="center" width="140px" rowspan="2" | [[Image:New_zealand_coa.png|150px|New Zealand - Coat of Arms]]
 
|-
 
| align="center" width="140px" | Flag of New Zealand
 
|}
 
|-
 
| align=center colspan=2 | [[image:LocationNewZealand.png]]
 
|-
 
| '''Principal languages'''
 
| English, M&#257;ori
 
|-
 
| '''Capital'''
 
| Wellington
 
|-
 
| '''Largest city'''
 
| Auckland
 
|-
 
| '''Queen of New Zealand'''
 
| Elizabeth II
 
|-
 
| '''Prime minister'''
 
| Helen Clark
 
|-
 
| '''Area'''<br>&nbsp;- Total <br>&nbsp;- % water
 
| [[Ranked 73rd]] <br> 268,680 km&sup2; <br> 2.1%
 
|-
 
| '''Population'''<br>&nbsp;- Total (2004)<br>&nbsp;- Density
 
| [[Ranked 120th]]<br> 4,061,300 <br> 15/km&sup2;
 
|-
 
| '''Independence'''
 
| 1907
 
|-
 
| '''Currency'''
 
| New Zealand dollar
 
|-
 
| '''Time zone'''
 
| Universal Time +12
 
|-
 
| '''National anthem'''
 
| ''God Defend <br>New Zealand''
 
|-
 
| '''Internet TLD'''
 
| .nz
 
|-
 
| '''Calling Country Code'''
 
| +64
 
|}
 
'''New Zealand''' is a country of two large islands and a number of smaller islands in the south-western [[Pacific Ocean]]. The nation also came to be dubbed ''[[Aotearoa]]*'' or the "Land of the Long White Cloud," as use of the Maori language was increasingly promoted. New Zealand is separated from [[Australia]] to the northwest by the [[Tasman Sea]], some 2,000 km across. Closest neighbours to the north are [[New Caledonia]], [[Fiji]] and [[Tonga]]. The population is mostly of European descent, with Māori being the largest minority. Non-Māori [[Polynesian]] and [[Asia]]n peoples are also significant minorities, especially in the cities.
 
  
 
==Geography==
 
==Geography==
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New Zealand's landscape ranges from the fjord-like sounds of the southwest to the tropical beaches of the far north. South Island is dominated by the Southern Alps, the highest peak of which is Aoraki/Mount Cook, at 3,754 m. The closest mountains surpassing it in elevation are found not in Australia, but in [[New Guinea]] and [[Antarctica]]. The tallest peak on North Island is Mount Ruapehu (2,797 m), an active, cone-shaped volcano.
  
[[Image:Satellite image of New Zealand in December 2002.jpg|left|thumb|200px|A satellite image of New Zealand. Lake Taupo and Mount Ruapehu are visible in the centre of the North Island. The Southern Alps and the rain shadow they create are clearly visible on the South Island]]
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Smaller islands include Stewart Island, which lies south of South Island; Waiheke and Great Barrier islands, near the north end of North Island; and the Chatham Islands, more than 800 km east of South Island.
  
The two main islands are called the North and South Islands in English, or Te-Ika-a-Maui and Te Wai Pounamu in Māori. There are a number of smaller islands. The total land area, 268,680 km², is slightly less than [[Japan]] and a little more than the [[United Kingdom]]. The country extends more than 1,600 km along its main, north-north-east axis. Stewart Island/Rakiura; Waiheke Island, in Auckland's Hauraki Gulf; Great Barrier Island, east of the Hauraki Gulf; and the Chatham Islands, named Rekohu by [[Moriori]]are the most significant smaller inhabited islands. The country has the fifth-largest Exclusive Economic Zone in the world covering over four million square kilometres of ocean, more than 15 times its land area.
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Temperatures rarely fall below 0°C or rise above 30°C. Conditions vary from wet and cold on South Island's west coast to dry and continental a short distance away across the mountains and subtropical in the northern reaches of North Island.  
  
The [[South Island]] is largest, and is divided along its length by the [[Southern Alps]], the highest peak of which is [[Aoraki/Mount Cook]], at 3,754 m. There are 18 peaks of more than 3,000 m on the South Island. The North Island is less mountainous, and is volcanic. The tallest North Island mountain, Mount Ruapehu (2,797 m), is an active cone volcano. The dramatic and varied landscape has made it a popular location for the production of television programs and films, including the ''Lord of the Rings'' trilogy.
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[[Image:NewZealand.A2002365.2235.500m.jpg|right|thumb|300px|A satellite image of New Zealand. Lake Taupo and Mount Ruapehu are visible in the middle of North Island. The Southern Alps and the rain shadow they create are clearly visible on South Island.]]
 +
[[Image:New Zealand countryside.jpg|right|thumb|400px|New Zealand countryside: Waipukurau district is the heart of a sheep and cattle region on the east coast of the North Island.]]
  
[[Image:Aoraki-Mount Cook from Hooker Valley.jpg|right|thumb|220px|[[Aoraki/Mount Cook]] is the tallest mountain in New Zealand]]
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New Zealand also includes the [[Cook Islands]] and [[Niue]], each lying about 2,200 km to the northeast and entirely self-governing; [[Tokelau]], another island territory situated about 3,200 km to the north and moving towards self-government; and [[Ross Dependency]], New Zealand's claim in Antarctica, located about 2,500 km to the south.
  
The climate is mild, cool-temperate to warm-temperate. Temperatures rarely fall below 0°C. or rise above 30°C. Conditions vary from wet and cold on the west coast of the [[South Island]] to dry and continental in the Mackenzie Basin of inland Canterbury and subtropical in the Northland. Christchurch city is the driest, receiving only 640 mm of rain per year. Auckland city, the wettest, receives about three times that amount.
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Because of its long isolation from the rest of the world, New Zealand has unique flora. Evergreens such as the giant kauri and southern beech dominate the forests. It also has a diverse range of birds, including the flightless ''moa'' (now extinct) and the kiwi, the ''kakapo,'' and the ''takahē,'' all of which are endangered.
  
==History==
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Human settlement had a huge impact on fauna and flora. Over 75 percent of the forest cover has been burnt or felled, and the land converted into pasture. Many bird species, including the giant moa, became extinct after the arrival of Polynesians, who brought dogs and rats, and Europeans, who introduced additional dog and rat species, as well as cats, pigs, ferrets, and weasels.
Evidence so far indicates that human settlement began in the 13th century C.E., and those first settlers, the Maori people, comprised up to 200 men and women from East Polynesia who arrived in a number of canoes. DNA mapping of their Maori descendants indicate links to the indigenous people of Taiwan. The Moriori people of the Chatham Islands, located 800km east of New Zealand, multiplied from a group of New Zealand Polynesians who transferred themselves there by canoe some time in the 14th or 15th centuries.
 
  
The abundance of a large flightless bird, the moa, the drumsticks of which were as big as a leg of beef, was a ready food source, and soon was hunted to extinction. Sweet potato (kumara) cultivation, fishing, the gathering of shellfish, berries and other raw foods from the forest, along with native birds, led to the growth of settlements.
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[[Image:Kiwifugl.jpg|350px|right|thumb|The [[kiwi]], a flightless bird, is one of New Zealand's most famous species and a national icon.]]
 +
Conservationists recognized that threatened bird populations could be saved on offshore islands, where, once predators were exterminated, bird life flourished again. Around 30 species are listed as endangered. The kiwi, a national symbol, is also under threat. A curious bird, it cannot fly, has loose, hair-like feathers and long whiskers, and is largely nocturnal.
  
Tribal culture developed 16th century. Individuals identified with their family (whanau) and tribe (iwi), membership of which was traced to the canoe an ancestor arrived in. There were paramount chiefs (ariki), chiefs (rangatira), commoners (tutua) and slaves. Both aristocrats and commoners could increase their status (mana) by becoming experts (tohunga) in activities of physical, artistic or spiritual nature. The country was divided into tribal districts (rohe). Ownership of an area was established by length of occupation, active use of resources or conquest.
+
New Zealand's landscape has appeared in television series such as ''Xena: Warrior Princess.'' An increasing number of movies have also been filmed there, the most well-known being the hugely successful ''Lord of the Rings'' trilogy, which took cinematic advantage of the dramatic scenery in various parts of the country.
  
“Utu,” a Maori word meaning “reciprocity” or “revenge," regulated behaviour. Failure to seek authorization to be in an area, defeat in battle or a grievance of any sort would be grounds to seek revenge and trigger bloody battles in which whole villages could be wiped out. Conquered peoples were killed, eaten or enslaved. Cannibalism continued until the 1830s. By the 18th century, the Maori population reached about 110,000.
+
The relative proximity of New Zealand to Antarctica has made South Island a gateway of sorts for scientific expeditions and tourist excursions to the icebound continent.
  
'''Abel Janszoon Tasman''', the commander of a two-ship Dutch East India Company trading expedition, was the first European to visit. An encounter with two double-hulled canoes full of Maori warriors on December 18, 1642, led to the deaths of four Dutch men. Tasman sailed away without setting foot on land. He named that area Murderers’ Bay, and named the country ''Staten Landt.'' This was changed by Dutch cartographers to ''Nova Zeelandia'', after the Dutch province of Zeeland.
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==History==
 +
{{readout||left|250px|[[Maori]] settlers originally called the North Island of New Zealand "Aotearoa," a name which is now used for the entire country}}
 +
[[Image:Aoraki-Mount Cook from Hooker Valley.jpg|right|thumb|400px|[[Aoraki/Mount Cook]] is the tallest mountain in New Zealand.]]
  
The next European contact was by '''Lieutenant James Cook''', of the British Royal Navy, who sailed south from Tahiti where, in July 1769, he observed the transit of the planet Venus across the Sun. In a six-month journey around the archipelago, Cook met Maori on dozens of occasions, and was able to communicate with them thanks to the presence of a Tahitian chief who had learned some English.
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Evidence indicates human settlement began in the thirteenth century C.E., and those first settlers, the [[Maori]], comprised up to 200 men and women from eastern [[Polynesia]] who arrived in [[canoe]]s. DNA mapping of their Maori descendants indicates links to the indigenous people of [[Taiwan]]. The Moriori people of the Chatham Islands, located to the east of the main islands, multiplied from a group of New Zealand Polynesians who traveled there by canoe in the fourteenth or fifteenth century.
  
Cook created a considerably accurate map of the main islands, as well as the east coast of Australia, thus dispelling the myth of Terra Australis Incognita. He named the country New Zealand. He recognized the relationship between the Maori and Tahitian people. His three voyages and four visits to the country provided a body of knowledge for scientists, historians and anthropologists for years to come. He introduced Maori to metal (nails), potatoes, turnips, cannons, muskets and his crew introduced venereal disease.
+
The Maori called the North Island ''Aotearoa'', a name which is now the most widely known and accepted Maori name for the entire country.  
  
The year of Cook's first visit was the year French explorer '''Jean de Surville''' conducted the first Christian service in New Zealand waters on Christmas Day.
+
Tribal culture developed in the sixteenth century. Individuals identified with their family ''(whanau)'' and tribe ''(iwi),'' membership of which was traced to the canoe an ancestor arrived in. There were paramount chiefs ''(ariki),'' chiefs ''(rangatira),'' commoners ''(tutua),'' and slaves. Both aristocrats and commoners could increase their status ''(mana)'' by becoming experts ''(tohunga)'' in activities of a physical, artistic, or spiritual nature. The country was divided into tribal districts ''(rohe)''. They were a savage, warrior people who practiced [[cannibalism]].  
  
The first Europeans to live in New Zealand were seamen who jumped ship, convicts who had escaped from British '''penal colonies'''in Australia, sealers, whalers and traders. '''Sealing''' for skins in the south created the first European commercial operation in the 1790s, and the first European community in 1793. '''Ocean whaling,''' to provide oil for lamps in Europe, started in New Zealand in the 1790s and peaked in the 1830s.
+
[[Abel Janszoon Tasman]], the commander of a two-ship [[Dutch East India Company]] trading expedition, was the first European to visit. An encounter with two canoes full of Maori warriors in 1642 led to the deaths of four Dutchmen. Tasman did not set foot on land. He named that area Murderers’ Bay, and called the country Staten Landt. This was changed by Dutch cartographers to ''Nova Zeelandia,'' after the Dutch province of Zeeland.
 
Timber and flax attracted '''traders''', and led to tribes acquiring of muskets, initially for hunting, but inevitably for inter-tribal fighting known as the '''Musket Wars'''. A flood of cheap European weapons became the main item traded for flax, timber, pork or potatoes. The fiercest fighting occurred from 1822-36. More than 20,000 were killed over 30 years. Tribes were displaced. There was much cruelty after battles. Feasting on corpses could go on for days. The last of these wars was fought in 1840.
 
  
The first missionary was '''Samuel Marsden''' sent by the Church Missionary Society, in 1814, to evangelise the Maori people. Maori had always been a spiritual people, so once bi-lingualism made discussion possible, it did not take a huge leap of faith for Maori to believe in a single God. Successive missionaries can take the credit for brokering peace between warring tribes, and ending slavery and cannibalism.
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Lieutenant James Cook, of the [[British Royal Navy]], brought the next European contact in 1769. Cook mapped the main islands and the east coast of Australia, and named the country New Zealand. He recognized the relationship between the Maori and the Tahitian people his expedition had already visited.  
  
'''The Treaty of Waitangi''' was concluded between the British Queen and Maori chiefs in early 1840. Missionary activity, requests from tribes for protection, and a plan by the New Zealand Company to buy land from tribes and to sell to colonists prompted the British Government to send Governor William Hobson to conclude a treaty. In the three-sentence treaty, the chiefs cede to the Queen, government of their lands; the Queen acknowledges that the chiefs and tribes own their lands, and if they wish to sell, must sell to a Queen-appointed agent; and the Queen promises to protect Maori people as British subjects. Forty five chiefs were the first to sign on February 6, 1840. As further chiefs signed, Hobson proclaimed British sovereignty over the whole country on May 21, 1840.
+
In the same year as Cook's first visit, French explorer Jean de Surville conducted the first [[Christianity|Christian]] service in New Zealand waters on [[Christmas]] Day.
  
But the first English colonists had arrived before the treaty was signed, and large areas of land had already been sold by chiefs who did not appreciate that under English land laws, once land is sold it is gone forever. Because the unsophisticated Maori language lacked words for “sovereignty” and “government,” it was later argued that the chiefs had not knowingly ceded sovereignty to the Queen. As land was surveyed and developed, skirmishing escalated into a series of armed clashes, known as the Maori Wars, the NZ Wars, or the Land Wars, that continued until 1872.
+
The first Europeans to live in New Zealand were seamen who jumped ship, convicts who had escaped from British penal colonies in Australia, sealers, whalers, and traders.  
 +
Timber and flax attracted traders and led to tribes acquiring muskets, initially for hunting, but inevitably were wielded in inter-tribal fighting known as the Musket Wars, in which more than 20,000 were killed over 30 years.  
  
New Zealand was administered as a part of the colony of [[New South Wales]], until it became separate. The third governor, '''Sir George Grey''', was the first governor with the resources to enforce the rule of law with military strength. His Constitution Act of 1853 set up a national system of representative government, and a prime minister. Voters had to be male owners of property. The Governor retained responsibility for Maori affairs. Foreign policy was controlled by Britain. From 1867, all Maori men could vote, and from 1893, all women could vote. The ballot was secret from 1870, and the property qualification was abolished in 1879.
+
The first missionary was Samuel Marsden, sent by the Church Missionary Society in 1814 to evangelize the Maori. Successive missionaries were eventually able to broker peace between the warring tribes and end the practice of slavery and cannibalism.
  
The first capital was in the Bay of Islands, in the far north, but shortly afterwards moved to Auckland. European settlement progressed rapidly, and by 1860 Europeans outnumbered Maoris. The discovery of gold in Central Otago in 1861 sparked concerns that the South Island would form a separate colony, so in 1865 the capital was moved to the more central city of Wellington.
+
The Treaty of Waitangi was concluded between the British government and Maori chiefs in early 1840. In the three-sentence treaty, the chiefs ceded to the Queen the government of their lands; the monarch in turn acknowledged that the chiefs and tribes owned their lands, and if they wished to sell, had to sell to an agent in the Queen's service. The crown also promised to protect Maori people as British subjects. But unresolved disputes over land ownership and sovereignty led to a series of armed clashes, known as the Maori Wars, the NZ Wars, or the Land Wars, which continued until 1872.
  
New Zealand became an independent dominion in 1907, by royal proclamation. Full independence was granted with the Statute of Westminster in 1931, which was adopted by the New Zealand Parliament in 1947. Since then, New Zealand has been a sovereign constitutional monarchy within the Commonwealth of Nations.
+
New Zealand was initially administered as a part of the colony of New South Wales. Sir George Grey was the first governor with the resources to enforce the rule of law. His Constitution Act of 1853 set up a national system of representative government and a prime minister. Voters had to be male owners of property. The governor retained responsibility for Maori affairs, and foreign policy was controlled by [[United Kingdom|Britain]]. From 1867, all Maori men could vote, and from 1893, all women could vote. The ballot was secret from 1870, and the property qualification was abolished in 1879.
  
In 1975 the Treaty of Waitangi Act established the Waitangi Tribunal, charged with hearing claims of Crown violations of the Treaty of Waitangi dating back to 1840. Some Māori tribes and the Moriori never signed the treaty.
+
The first capital was in the Bay of Islands, in the far north, but soon moved to Auckland. European settlement progressed rapidly, and by 1860 Europeans outnumbered Maoris. The discovery of gold on South Island in 1861 sparked concerns that settlers there would form a separate colony, so in 1865 the capital was moved to the more central city of Wellington.
  
==Politics==
+
New Zealand became an independent dominion in 1907. Full independence was granted with the Statute of Westminster in 1931, which was adopted by the New Zealand parliament in 1947. Since then, the country has been a sovereign constitutional monarchy within the [[Commonwealth of Nations]].
New Zealand is the only country where all the highest offices in the land are occupied by women, including the sovereign, the governor-general, the prime minister, the speaker of the house of representatives, and the chief justice.  
 
  
The Prime Minister is [[Helen Clark]] of the [[New Zealand Labour Party]]. She has served two complete terms as Prime Minister and has begun her third.
+
New Zealand recorded the highest casualties per head of population of any combatant nation during [[World War I]], when 100,000 served and 17,000 were killed. In [[World War II]], 204,000 served and 11,500 were killed, and in the [[Korean War]], 1,550 served and 38 were killed.
  
New Zealand is a parliamentary democracy. The executive branch comprises Head of State Queen Elizabeth II of Great Britain, represented by Governor General Dame Silvia Cartwright, the Prime Minister, and a cabinet of ministers appointed by the Governor General on the recommendation of the Prime Minister.
+
For 100 years, New Zealand followed Britain's lead on foreign policy. However, British inability to protect the country from [[Japan|Japanese]] aggression in World War II began a period of [[United States|American]] influence. New Zealand is a party to the ANZUS security treaty between Australia, New Zealand, and the U.S. The formal relationship with the U.S. changed, in 1986, however, after the Labour government adopted an anti-nuclear position, which ended visits of American warships.
  
The legislative branch is the House of Representatives, or parliament, comprising 120 seats filled by 69 members elected by popular vote in single-member electorates, including seven Maori electorates, and 51 proportional members chosen from party lists, all serving three-year terms.
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New Zealand dismantled its air combat capability in 2001. It has contributed forces to various peacekeeping missions—in [[Cyprus]], [[Somalia]], [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]], the [[Sinai Peninsula|Sinai]], [[Angola]], [[Cambodia]], the [[Iran]]/[[Iraq]] border, Bougainville, and [[East Timor]].
  
New Zealand also includes the [[Cook Islands]] and [[Niue]], which are entirely self-governing; [[Tokelau]], which is moving towards self-government, and [[Ross Dependency]], New Zealand's claim in Antarctica.
+
==Economy==
 +
[[File:Auckland night life (9207165350).jpg|thumb|300px|Auckland at night, with the Sky Tower in the background]]
  
==Race relations==
+
After financial reforms in 1984, successive governments transformed New Zealand from a highly protectionist and regulated economy to a liberalized [[free market]] economy. The government sold its telecommunications company, railway network, a number of radio stations, and two financial institutions. The businesses the government retained, known as "state-owned enterprises," are required to operate profitably as stand-alone businesses.
Issues to do with sovereignty and land ownership remained unresolved, and, for a long time, invisible while Māori continued to live in rural communities. The '''Kotahitanga movement''' of the late 19th and early 20th centuries showed the resilience of Māori culture. Maori politician '''Sir Āpirana Ngata''' fostered the development of Maori land. '''Te Puea Hērangi''' revitalised the Māori King movement. '''Wiremu Rātana''' founded the '''Rātana Church''' in the early 1920s.
 
  
After 1945, many Maori people relocated to towns and cities to work. During the propserous 1950s and 1960s, New Zealand prided itself on racial harmony. But the emergence of young Maori leaders, in the early 1970s, who began to promote the use of Maori language and discuss sovereignty issues, together with a tightening economy, put strains of relations between Maori and non-Maori.  The '''Waitangi Tribunal''' was set up in 1975 to consider alleged breaches of the treaty.  
+
An economic bubble developed in the New Zealand stock market starting in 1984. After it burst in 1987, the total value of the market fell by half within a year. A period of poor economic growth lasted until the mid-1990s, when the government began a program of immigration to boost [[Gross domestic product|GDP]]. A favorable rate of currency exchange and strong demand for housing buoyed the economy for the next six years until inflationary pressures in 2005 caused the central reserve bank to raise interest rates.
  
The issue of sporting contacts with apartheid South Africa divided the nation and led affected domestic race relations. During the 1981 Springbok rugby tour, police and protestors fought street battles. After the tour, some protest leaders turned to Maori issues and agitated for compensation for land confiscations and alleged treaty breaches. In 1985, the tribunal was empowered to investigate grievances back to 1840.
+
In 2005, agriculture made up about 5 percent of gross domestic product; industry, 28 percent; and services, 67 percent. New Zealand is dependent on trade—particularly in agricultural products—and has been affected by global economic slowdowns and slumps in commodity prices. Primary export industries are agriculture (sheep, cattle, dairy), horticulture (apples, kiwifruit), fishing, and forestry.  
  
From the 1970s, efforts to foster the Māori language and culture led to New Zealand society being promoted as bicultural. But with increasing numbers of migrants arriving from the Pacific islands in the 1970s, from South Africa after the collapse of apartheid, Zimbabwe, Somalia, the Arab countries, and Asian countries, it was clear New Zealand had become multicultural. After the September 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Centre towers in New York, New Zealand was seen as a safe destination and immigration, largely from the third world, skyrocketed.
+
The national economy has seen many changes in recent years. New Zealand once had about 20 times more sheep than people; by 2001 there were only 12 times as many. During the 1990s, tourism became the country’s leading earner of foreign exchange. The number of overseas students receiving education in New Zealand expanded dramatically and the importance of "export education" to the national economy rivaled that of other more established industries. Vineyards have proliferated since the 1990s in areas of the country, with a focus on high-quality sauvignon blanc and pinot noir.
  
==Foreign relations and military==
+
==Demographics==
For its first hundred years, New Zealand followed [[Britain]]'s lead on foreign policy. "Where she goes, we go; where she stands, we stand," said Prime Minister Michael Savage in declaring war on [[Germany]] in 1939. However, Britain's inability to protect New Zealand from [[Japan]]ese aggression in [[World War II]] led New Zealand to come under the influence of the [[United States]] for the generation following the war.
+
[[Image:New Zealand map.PNG|thumb|300px|right|A map of New Zealand showing the major cities and towns]]
 
 
New Zealand has traditionally worked closely with [[Australia]], whose foreign policy followed a similar historical trend. In turn, many Pacific Islands such as [[Samoa]] have looked to New Zealand's lead.
 
 
 
New Zealand is a party to the [[ANZUS]] security treaty between Australia, New Zealand and the United States. The formal relationship with the United States changed when the Labour Government of David Lange adopted an anti-nuclear position, which ended visits of U.S. warships which may have been nuclear-armed or powered. In 1986 the United States suspended its treaty security obligations to New Zealand pending the restoration of port access. The New Zealand Nuclear Free Zone, Disarmament and Arms Control Act of 1987 prohibits the stationing of nuclear weapons on the territory of New Zealand and the entry into New Zealand waters of nuclear armed or propelled ships. This legislation remains a source of contention, has become an issue that few New Zealand politicians are willing to debate, and remains the basis for the United States' continued suspension of treaty obligations.
 
 
 
New Zealand fought in the [[Second Boer War]], [[World War I]] (100,000 served and 17,000 were killed — the highest casualties per head of population of any combatant nation), [[World War II]] (204,000 served, 11,500 killed), the [[Korean War]] (1550 served, 38 killed), the Malayan Emergency (and committed troops, fighters and bombers to the subsequent confrontation with [[Indonesia]]), the [[Vietnam War]], the [[Gulf War]], and the [[Afghanistan War]], and has briefly sent a unit of army engineers to help with rebuilding [[Iraq]]i infrastructure.
 
 
 
New Zealand considers its own national defence needs to be modest; it dismantled its air combat capability in 2001. New Zealand has contributed forces to peacekeeping missions, in [[Cyprus]], [[Somalia]], [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]], the [[Sinai]], [[Angola]], [[Cambodia]], the [[Iran]]/[[Iraq]] border, [[Bougainville]] and [[East Timor]].
 
 
 
New Zealand maintains a strong profile on environmental protection, human rights, and free trade, particularly for agriculture.
 
 
 
==Environmentalism==
 
New Zealand has promoted an image of being clean and green.
 
The lush “native bush” has an almost tropical feel. Huge kauri and tall trees known as podocarps tower over ferns and creepers, evoking a primeval scene. Such vegetation has links to the forests of Gondwana, the supercontinent of 190 million years ago. Before people arrived, New Zealand was a land of birds — over 120 species of geese, ducks, rails, moa, parrots, owls, wrens and other perching birds. Around 70 of these were found only in New Zealand. About a quarter were nocturnal, and many were giants.
 
 
 
In the 700 years since human arrival, over 75 per cent of the forest cover has been burnt or felled, and the land converted into pasture. Many bird species, including the giant moa, became extinct after the arrival of Polynesians, who brought dogs and rats, and Europeans, who introduced other rat species, ferrets, weasels, stoats, cats, pigs and more dogs.
 
 
 
Some species of birds managed to survive on offshore islands. Some conservationists recognised this and relocated threatened bird populations to these “arks,” which by the 21st century became a focus of conservation. Once introduced predators were exterminated, birdlife flourished again. Around 30 species are listed as endangered. The kiwi is also under threat. A curious bird, it cannot fly, has loose, hair-like feathers, long whiskers and is largely nocturnal.
 
 
The Department of Conservation was formed in 1987 integrating the Department of Lands and Survey, the Forest Service, and the Wildlife Service The department administers most Crown land in New Zealand. This is almost a third of New Zealand's land area, including national, forest and maritime parks, marine reserves, nearly 4000 reserves, river margins, some coastline, several hundred wetlands, and many offshore islands.The department works to save native theatened species, to manage pests and weeds, to care for marine life, and help landowners to preserve natural heritage. It also looks after historic sites on public conservation land. Providing for recreation is a big part of its core work, from managing family picnic sites to maintaining rugged backcountry tracks. The department also administers the Nature Heritage Fund and is responsible for rural fire control.
 
 
 
Environmental concerns opened a niche for The Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand, a which holds six seats in parliament. It focuses firstly on environmentalism, arguing that all other aspects of humanity will cease to be of concern if there is no environment to sustain it. Left-wing economics, progressive social policie participatory democracy, and non-violence make up the balance of its platform.
 
 
 
==External territories==
 
[[Image:New Zealand map.PNG|thumb|200px|right|A map of New Zealand showing the major cities and towns]]
 
  
As a major [[Pacific Ocean|South Pacific]] nation, New Zealand has a close working relationship with many of the smaller [[Pacific Island]] nations, and continues a political association with the [[Cook Islands]], [[Niue]], and [[Tokelau]]. New Zealand operates [[Scott Base]] in its [[Antarctica|Antarctic]] territory, the [[Ross Dependency]]. Other countries use Christchurch to support their Antarctic bases and the city is sometimes known as the "Gateway to Antarctica."
+
About 70 percent of New Zealand's population is of European descent, mostly English, Scottish, Welsh, Irish, and Dutch. Those of full or part-Maori ancestry comprise about 15 percent while most of the remainder are of Asian and Pacific Island origin. British migrants form the largest single group (30 percent), but new migrants are drawn from many nations, increasingly those of East Asia. A result of Pacific Island immigration is that South Auckland has become the world's largest Polynesian city.
  
==Flora and fauna==
+
English and Maori are the two official languages, although most visitors would find New Zealand exclusively an English-speaking country. The Maori language is used on sign posts, at Maori culture concerts, as secondary names of government departments, on the Maori-language television channel, and on a number of tribal radio stations.
[[Image:Kiwi.jpg|100px|right|thumb|The [[Kiwi]], a flightless bird, is one of New Zealand's most famous species and a national icon.]]
 
  
Because of its long isolation from the rest of the world, New Zealand has extraordinary flora and fauna. About 80 per cent of the flora only occurs in New Zealand, including more than 40 endemic genera. [[Podocarp]]s, including the giant kauri and southern beech, dominate the forests. Other vegetation types are grass and tussock, usually in sub-alpine areas, and low shrublands between grasslands and forests.
+
Successive government policies on the relationship between Maori and non-Maori people have worsened race relations. After 1840, many issues to do with sovereignty and land ownership remained unresolved and, for a long time, invisible while Maori lived in rural communities. Agitation regarding treaty issues intensified in the 1970s. The Waitangi Tribunal was set up in 1975 to consider alleged breaches, and in 1984 was empowered to look back to 1840. In 20 years, a grievance industry has ballooned, generating hostility from voters.  
  
Until the arrival of the first humans, 80 percent of the land was forested and two species of bat were the only non-marine mammals. A diverse range of birds, including the flightless ''moa'', now extinct, and kiwi, the ''kakapo'', and the ''takahē'', which are all endangered, inhabited the forests. Unique birds capable of flight include the Haast's eagle, the world's largest bird of prey before it became extinct, and the large parrots known as the ''kaka'' and the ''kea''. Reptiles include skinks and geckos and the tuatara. There are no snakes, but there are many species of insects&mdash; including the ''weta'', which may grow as large as a common mouse.
+
[[Christianity]] is the predominant religion in New Zealand, although nearly 40 percent of the population has no religious affiliation. The main Christian denominations are [[Anglican]], [[Presbyterian]], [[Roman Catholic]], and [[Methodist]]. Significant numbers identify themselves with [[Pentecostal]], [[Baptist]], and the [[Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints|LDS (Mormon)]] church. The [[Ratana]] church has many adherents among Maori. Increasing immigration since the late 1990s brought adherents of [[Hinduism]], [[Buddhism]], and [[Islam]].
 
 
==Economy==
 
[[Image:DowntownAucklandNight.jpg|thumb|250px|Auckland at night, with the Sky Tower in the background]]
 
 
 
Since 1984, after reforms by then finance minister Sir Roger Douglas, successive governments transformed New Zealand from a highly protectionist and regulated economy to a liberalised [[free-market]] economy. The Government sold its telecommunications company, railway network, a number of radio stations, and two financial institutions. The businesses the Government retained, collectively known as State-Owned Enterprises, are operated as stand-alone businesses that are required to operate profitably.
 
 
 
An economic bubble developed in the New Zealand stock market starting in 1984. This burst in 1987, and the total value of the market halved within a year (it has still to recover this lost value). A period of poor economic growth lasted until the mid-1990s, when the government began a program of immigration to boost [[Gross domestic product|GDP]].  A favourable rate of currency exchange and strong demand for housing buoyed the economy for the next six years, until inflationary pressures in 2005 caused the central Reserve Bank to raise interest rates.
 
 
 
The government's economic objectives, from 1999 to 2002, aimed to move up from the lower ranks of the OECD countries, to pursue free-trade agreements, close the gaps between Maori and others, and build a "knowledge economy." In 2004, it began discussing free trade with China, one of the first countries to do so.
 
 
 
New Zealand is dependent on trade&mdash;particularly in agricultural products&mdash;, and has been affected by global economic slowdowns and slumps in commodity prices. Since agricultural exports are sensitive to currency values and a large percentage of consumer goods are imported, any changes in the value of the New Zealand dollar has a strong impact on the economy. There had been some discussion about adopting Australian currency or the U.S. dollar.
 
 
 
In 2005, agriculture made up 4.7 percent of gross domestic product, industry 27.8 percent and services 67.5 percent.
 
 
 
Primary export industries are agriculture (sheep, cattle, dairy), horticulture (apples, kiwifruit), fishing and forestry. Residential construction is a big part of the building industry. During the 1990s tourism became the country’s leading earner of foreign exchange. [[International student|export education]] industries flourished. The trilogy ''The Lord of the Rings'' put New Zealand’s film industry on the world stage. Vineyards proliferated since the 1990s in Marlborough, Hawke’s Bay and Gisborne, focusing on high-quality sauvignon blanc and pinot noir.
 
 
 
==Demographics==
 
New Zealand has a population of about 4.1 million. About 70 percent of the population are of European descent. Maori people, in the nineteenth century, referred to Europeans as "Pākeha." This term has continued, and some Māori use it to refer to all non-Māori New Zealanders. Most European New Zealanders are of English, Scottish, Welsh, Irish and Dutch ancestry. Māori people are the second-largest ethnic group (the percentage of the population of full or part-Māori ancestry is 14.7 percent; those who checked ''only'' Māori are 7.9 percent). Between the 1996 and 2001 censuses, the number of people of Asian origin (6.6 percent) overtook the number of people of Pacific Island origin (6.5 percent) (note that the census allowed multiple ethnic affiliations). New Zealand is positive about immigration and is committed to increasing its population by about 1 percent per annum. At present, migrants from the U.K. constitute the largest single group (30 percent), but new migrants are drawn from many nations, increasingly from East Asia.
 
 
 
==Religion==
 
[[Christianity]] is the predominant religion in New Zealand, although nearly 40 percent of the population has no religious affiliation. The main Christian denominations are [[Anglican]], [[Presbyterian]], [[Roman Catholic]] and [[Methodist]]. There are also significant numbers who identify themselves with [[Pentecostal]] and [[Baptist]] churches and with the [[LDS (Mormon)]] church. The New Zealand-based [[Ratana]] church has many adherents among Māori. A wave of new religious movements, including The Divine Light Mission, Hare Krishna, Children of God, Bahai, and the Unification Church of the Reverend Sun Myung Moon arrived in the early 1970s. Increasing immigration since the late 1990s brought other significant minority religions including [[Hinduism]], [[Buddhism]], and [[Islam]].
 
  
 
==Culture==
 
==Culture==
Contemporary, P&#257;keh&#257; New Zealand has a diverse contemporary culture with influences from British, Irish, and M&#257;ori cultures, along with those of other European cultures (such as Dutch, Dalmatian, and Polish) and - more recently - Polynesian (including Samoan, Tongan, Niuean, Cook Islands M&#257;ori, Tahitian, and Hawai'ian) and Southern and Southeast Asian (Indian, Chinese, Korean, Cambodian, and Japanese) cultures.  There were many people from [[Scotland]] amongst the early British settlers and elements of their culture persist; New Zealand is said to have more [[bagpipe]] bands than Scotland. Cultural links between New Zealand and the UK are maintained by a common language, sustained migration from the UK and the fact that many young New Zealanders spend time in the UK on their "overseas experience (OE)".
+
British colonists brought a legal, political, and economic system that has flourished, along with the English system of [[agriculture]] that has transformed the landscape.  
 
+
The British brought the Protestant work ethic—the industrious newcomers astonished Maori people. In return, settlers noted the athletic ability, musicality, and courage of the Maori. However, English paternalism soon brought an extensive welfare system that created a large, poor Maori underclass.  
The Government promotes Maori culture by naming government departments in both English and Maori, by insisting on traditional Maori welcomes (powhiri) at Government functions and state school prizegivings, by allowing Maori spiritual beliefs special status if development work is to have any impact on the environment, and by having tribes run welfare services targeted at Maori people.  
 
  
The Māori language (Te Reo Māori) was used only in a few remote areas in the post war years but it is now being promoted, with generous state support for Māori language schools and a Māori language [[Māori Television|television]] channel. Out of the four television channels, M&#257;ori television is the only TV channel where the majority of it's prime time content is delivered in the M&#257;ori language with English sub-titles. M&#257;ori television is also the only television channel which tries to generate new content in M&#257;ori, and, subtitle English programmes in to M&#257;ori. M&#257;ori has been made an official language equal to English.
+
Cultural links between New Zealand and Great Britain are maintained by a common language, sustained [[immigration]] from the UK, and the fact that many spend time in Britain on the "overseas experience," known as "OE," that young adult New Zealanders are practically expected to undertake before returning to settle down in their remote corner of the world.
  
New Zealand's landscape has appeared in television programs and films. The television series ''Hercules: The Legendary Journeys'' and ''Xena: Warrior Princess'' were filmed around Auckland. ''The Lord of the Rings'' trilogy in various locations around the country. Mount Taranaki was used as a stand-in for Mount Fuji in ''The Last Samurai''. The latest of such international films to be released are ''King Kong'' and ''The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe''.
+
Today, the government promotes [[Maori]] culture by supporting Maori-language schools, by ensuring the language is visible in government departments and literature, by insisting on traditional Maori welcomes ''(powhiri)'' at government functions and state school award programs, and by having Maori run the welfare services targeted at their people.  
  
==Sport==
+
Rugby union is the national sport. The national rugby team, the All Blacks, has the best winning record of any national team in the world, including being the inaugural winner of the 1987 Rugby Union World Cup. New Zealand is to host the 2011 Rugby Union World Cup. The country's national sporting colors are black and white, and the silver fern is a national emblem. The All Blacks perform a traditional Maori war dance, or ''haka,'' before the start of international matches.
New Zealand's most popular [[sport]]s are [[rugby union]], [[cricket]], [[netball]], [[lawn bowling]], [[football (soccer)|soccer]] (perhaps surprisingly, the most popular football code in terms of participation in NZ) and [[rugby league]]. Also popular are [[golf]], [[tennis]],  [[cycling]] and a variety of [[Water sport (recreation)|water sports]], particularly [[sailing]], [[whitewater kayaking]], [[Surf Lifesaving New Zealand|surf lifesaving skills]] and [[Sport rowing|rowing]]. In the latter, New Zealand enjoyed an extraordinary [[Magic 45 minutes]] when winning four successive gold medals at the 2005 world championships. Snow sports such as [[skiing]] and [[snowboarding]] are also popular. Equestrian sportsmen and sportswomen make their mark in the world, with [[Mark Todd (equestrian)|Mark Todd]] being chosen international "Horseman of the Century."
 
  
The country is recognised for achieving well on a medals-to-population ratio at [[Olympic Games]] and [[Commonwealth Games]].  
+
Other popular sports are [[cricket]], [[netball]], [[lawn bowling]], [[soccer]], [[golf]], [[tennis]], [[cycling]], and a variety of water sports, particularly [[sailing]], [[whitewater kayaking]], [[surf lifesaving]], and [[rowing]]. Snow sports such as [[skiing]] and [[snowboarding]] are also popular.
  
===Rugby union===
+
New Zealand hosted the last two competitions for international yacht racing's top prize, the America's Cup (2000 and 2003), by virtue of being the home of the winning team in 1995 and 2000. The country has the distinction of being the only one outside the U.S. to hold multiple America's Cup races, but lost the cup in 2003 to a Swiss team (with a New Zealander skipper).  
[[Rugby union]] is closely linked to New Zealand's national identity. The national rugby team is called the [[All Blacks]] and has the best winning record of any national team in the world, including being the inaugural winner of the [[1987 Rugby Union World Cup|World Cup in 1987]]. The style of name has been followed in naming the national team in other sports — for instance, the nation's basketball team is known as the [[Tall Blacks]]. New Zealand is to host the [[2011 Rugby Union World Cup]]. New Zealand's national sporting colours are not the colours of its flag, but are black and white (silver). The [[silver fern]] is a national emblem worn by New Zealanders representing their country in sport. The All Blacks perform a traditional Maori war dance, or haka, before the start of international matches.
 
  
===Yachting, a leading nation in world yachting, especially open water long distance or around the world races. Round-the-world yachtsman, [[Peter Blake (yachtsman)|Sir Peter Blake]] was a national hero. In inshore yachting, [[Auckland]] hosted the last two [[America's Cup]] regattas ([[2000]] and [[2003]]). In [[2000]], [[Team New Zealand]] successfully defended the trophy they had won in [[1995]] in [[San Diego]], which made them the only team in the history of the Cup to successfully defend a challenge other than a [[United States]] team, but in [[2003]] they lost to a team headed by [[Ernesto Bertarelli]] of [[Switzerland]], whose [[Alinghi]] syndicate was skippered by [[Russell Coutts]], the former skipper of Team New Zealand.  
+
New Zealanders, known internationally as “Kiwis,” are distinctive for their twangy dialect of English and propensity to travel long distances, and are quickly associated with the All Blacks rugby team and the ''haka''. A tradition of resourcefulness came from the pioneering backgrounds of both European and Maori colonists.
  
Team New Zealand will compete for the America's Cup at the next regatta in [[Valencia]] in 2007.
+
==Notes==
 +
<references/>
  
References:
+
==References==
 
+
*King, Michael. ''The Penguin History of New Zealand''. Penguin, 2012. ISBN 978-0143567578
King, Michael, ''The Penguin History of New Zealand'', Penguin Books (NZ)Ltd, 2003
+
*Rawlings-Way,  Charles, Brett Atkinson, Sarah Bennett, and Peter Dragicevich. ''New Zealand''. Lonely Planet, 2012. ISBN 978-1742200170
 +
*Turner, Peter. ''National Geographic Traveler: New Zealand''. National Geographic, 2013. ISBN 978-1426211614
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
 +
All links retrieved July 25, 2023.
 +
*[https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/new-zealand/ New Zealand] ''The World Factbook''
 +
*[https://www.newzealand.com/int/ New Zealand Tourism]
 +
*[https://www.govt.nz/ New Zealand Government]
  
* [http://www.teara.govt.nz/ Te Ara, the Encyclopedia of New Zealand]
+
{{credit|39162398}}
* [http://webdirectory.natlib.govt.nz/index.htm Te Puna Web Directory ] - A directory to New Zealand web sites
 
* [http://www.mch.govt.nz/ Ministry for Culture and Heritage] - includes information on flag, anthems and coat of arms.
 
* [http://www.govt.nz/ New Zealand Government Portal]
 
* {{wikitravelpar|New Zealand}}
 
* [http://www.metservice.co.nz/ New Zealand weather]
 
* [http://www.nzhistory.net.nz/ NZHistory.net.nz New Zealand history website]
 
* [http://www.stats.govt.nz/ Statistics New Zealand] - Official statistics.
 
* [http://www.newzealand.com/ Tourism New Zealand]
 
* [http://www.zoomin.co.nz/ www.zoomin.co.nz Maps of New Zealand]
 
  
 
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[[Category:Countries]]
{{credit|39162398}}
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[[Category:Geography]]
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[[Category:Islands]]

Latest revision as of 18:04, 25 July 2023

Aotearoa
New Zealand
Flag of New Zealand Coat of arms of New Zealand
Anthem"God Defend New Zealand"
"God Save the King"1
Location of New Zealand
CapitalWellington
41°17′S 174°27′E / -41.283, 174.45
Largest city Auckland
Official languages Māori (4.2%)2
NZ Sign Language (0.6%)
National language English (98%)
Ethnic groups (2018) European 64.1%, Maori 16.5%, Chinese 4.9%, Indian 4.7%, Samoan 3.9%, Tongan 1.8%, Cook Islands Maori 1.7%, English 1.5%, Filipino 1.5%, New Zealander 1%, other 13.7%[1]
Demonym New Zealander,
Kiwi (colloquial)
Government Unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy
 -  Monarch Charles III
 -  Governor-General Cindy Kiro
 -  Prime Minister Chris Hipkins
Formation
 -  Treaty of Waitangi February 6, 1840 
 -  Responsible government May 7, 1856 
 -  Dominion September 26, 1907 
 -  Statute of Westminster adopted November 25, 1947 
Area
 -  Total 268,021 km² (75th)
103,483 sq mi 
 -  Water (%) 1.6
Population
 -  2023 estimate 5,109,702[1] (125th)
 -  2018 census 4,699,755[2] 
 -  Density 19.1/km² (167th)
49.5/sq mi
GDP (PPP) 2022 estimate
 -  Total Green Arrow Up (Darker).png $261 billion[3] (63rd)
 -  Per capita Green Arrow Up (Darker).png $50,851[3] (32th)
GDP (nominal) 2022 estimate
 -  Total Green Arrow Up (Darker).png $242 billion[3] (51th)
 -  Per capita Green Arrow Up (Darker).png $47,278[3] (23rd)
Gini (2020) 32.0[4] 
Currency New Zealand dollar (NZD)
Time zone NZST3 (UTC+12)
 -  Summer (DST) NZDT (UTC+13)
(Sep to Apr)
Internet TLD .nz4
Calling code [[++64]]
1 "God Save the King" is officially a national anthem but is generally used only on regal and vice-regal occasions.[5][6]
2 Language percentages add to more than 100 percent because some people speak more than one language.[1]
3 The Chatham Islands have a separate time zone, 45 minutes ahead of the rest of New Zealand.
4 The territories of Niue, the Cook Islands and Tokelau have their own cctlds, .nu, .ck and .tk respectively.

New Zealand is an island country located in the southwestern Pacific Ocean. It is also called Aotearoa or the "Land of the Long White Cloud" in the language of the Maori (rhymes with "dowry"), the Polynesian people who settled the islands four centuries before the first Europeans arrived. Geographically, the country consists of two large islands and a number of smaller islands. It is separated from Australia to the northwest by the Tasman Sea, which is some 2,000 km across. The closest neighbors to the north are New Caledonia, Fiji, and Tonga.

New Zealand's total land area, nearly 270,000 km², is about the same as that of Colorado and somewhat smaller than the Philippines. The population, in slight excess of four million, is similar in size to Costa Rica's. The two main islands are named North and South islands in English, or Te-Ika-a-Maui and Te Wai Pounamu, respectively, in Maori. Maori legends describe South Island as a canoe and North Island as a fish.

New Zealand aligned itself with the allied nations in World War I, World War II, and the Korean War. In the First World War, New Zealand recorded the highest casualties per head of population of any combatant nation.

Geography

New Zealand's landscape ranges from the fjord-like sounds of the southwest to the tropical beaches of the far north. South Island is dominated by the Southern Alps, the highest peak of which is Aoraki/Mount Cook, at 3,754 m. The closest mountains surpassing it in elevation are found not in Australia, but in New Guinea and Antarctica. The tallest peak on North Island is Mount Ruapehu (2,797 m), an active, cone-shaped volcano.

Smaller islands include Stewart Island, which lies south of South Island; Waiheke and Great Barrier islands, near the north end of North Island; and the Chatham Islands, more than 800 km east of South Island.

Temperatures rarely fall below 0°C or rise above 30°C. Conditions vary from wet and cold on South Island's west coast to dry and continental a short distance away across the mountains and subtropical in the northern reaches of North Island.

A satellite image of New Zealand. Lake Taupo and Mount Ruapehu are visible in the middle of North Island. The Southern Alps and the rain shadow they create are clearly visible on South Island.
New Zealand countryside: Waipukurau district is the heart of a sheep and cattle region on the east coast of the North Island.

New Zealand also includes the Cook Islands and Niue, each lying about 2,200 km to the northeast and entirely self-governing; Tokelau, another island territory situated about 3,200 km to the north and moving towards self-government; and Ross Dependency, New Zealand's claim in Antarctica, located about 2,500 km to the south.

Because of its long isolation from the rest of the world, New Zealand has unique flora. Evergreens such as the giant kauri and southern beech dominate the forests. It also has a diverse range of birds, including the flightless moa (now extinct) and the kiwi, the kakapo, and the takahē, all of which are endangered.

Human settlement had a huge impact on fauna and flora. Over 75 percent of the forest cover has been burnt or felled, and the land converted into pasture. Many bird species, including the giant moa, became extinct after the arrival of Polynesians, who brought dogs and rats, and Europeans, who introduced additional dog and rat species, as well as cats, pigs, ferrets, and weasels.

The kiwi, a flightless bird, is one of New Zealand's most famous species and a national icon.

Conservationists recognized that threatened bird populations could be saved on offshore islands, where, once predators were exterminated, bird life flourished again. Around 30 species are listed as endangered. The kiwi, a national symbol, is also under threat. A curious bird, it cannot fly, has loose, hair-like feathers and long whiskers, and is largely nocturnal.

New Zealand's landscape has appeared in television series such as Xena: Warrior Princess. An increasing number of movies have also been filmed there, the most well-known being the hugely successful Lord of the Rings trilogy, which took cinematic advantage of the dramatic scenery in various parts of the country.

The relative proximity of New Zealand to Antarctica has made South Island a gateway of sorts for scientific expeditions and tourist excursions to the icebound continent.

History

Did you know?
Maori settlers originally called the North Island of New Zealand "Aotearoa," a name which is now used for the entire country
Aoraki/Mount Cook is the tallest mountain in New Zealand.

Evidence indicates human settlement began in the thirteenth century C.E., and those first settlers, the Maori, comprised up to 200 men and women from eastern Polynesia who arrived in canoes. DNA mapping of their Maori descendants indicates links to the indigenous people of Taiwan. The Moriori people of the Chatham Islands, located to the east of the main islands, multiplied from a group of New Zealand Polynesians who traveled there by canoe in the fourteenth or fifteenth century.

The Maori called the North Island Aotearoa, a name which is now the most widely known and accepted Maori name for the entire country.

Tribal culture developed in the sixteenth century. Individuals identified with their family (whanau) and tribe (iwi), membership of which was traced to the canoe an ancestor arrived in. There were paramount chiefs (ariki), chiefs (rangatira), commoners (tutua), and slaves. Both aristocrats and commoners could increase their status (mana) by becoming experts (tohunga) in activities of a physical, artistic, or spiritual nature. The country was divided into tribal districts (rohe). They were a savage, warrior people who practiced cannibalism.

Abel Janszoon Tasman, the commander of a two-ship Dutch East India Company trading expedition, was the first European to visit. An encounter with two canoes full of Maori warriors in 1642 led to the deaths of four Dutchmen. Tasman did not set foot on land. He named that area Murderers’ Bay, and called the country Staten Landt. This was changed by Dutch cartographers to Nova Zeelandia, after the Dutch province of Zeeland.

Lieutenant James Cook, of the British Royal Navy, brought the next European contact in 1769. Cook mapped the main islands and the east coast of Australia, and named the country New Zealand. He recognized the relationship between the Maori and the Tahitian people his expedition had already visited.

In the same year as Cook's first visit, French explorer Jean de Surville conducted the first Christian service in New Zealand waters on Christmas Day.

The first Europeans to live in New Zealand were seamen who jumped ship, convicts who had escaped from British penal colonies in Australia, sealers, whalers, and traders. Timber and flax attracted traders and led to tribes acquiring muskets, initially for hunting, but inevitably were wielded in inter-tribal fighting known as the Musket Wars, in which more than 20,000 were killed over 30 years.

The first missionary was Samuel Marsden, sent by the Church Missionary Society in 1814 to evangelize the Maori. Successive missionaries were eventually able to broker peace between the warring tribes and end the practice of slavery and cannibalism.

The Treaty of Waitangi was concluded between the British government and Maori chiefs in early 1840. In the three-sentence treaty, the chiefs ceded to the Queen the government of their lands; the monarch in turn acknowledged that the chiefs and tribes owned their lands, and if they wished to sell, had to sell to an agent in the Queen's service. The crown also promised to protect Maori people as British subjects. But unresolved disputes over land ownership and sovereignty led to a series of armed clashes, known as the Maori Wars, the NZ Wars, or the Land Wars, which continued until 1872.

New Zealand was initially administered as a part of the colony of New South Wales. Sir George Grey was the first governor with the resources to enforce the rule of law. His Constitution Act of 1853 set up a national system of representative government and a prime minister. Voters had to be male owners of property. The governor retained responsibility for Maori affairs, and foreign policy was controlled by Britain. From 1867, all Maori men could vote, and from 1893, all women could vote. The ballot was secret from 1870, and the property qualification was abolished in 1879.

The first capital was in the Bay of Islands, in the far north, but soon moved to Auckland. European settlement progressed rapidly, and by 1860 Europeans outnumbered Maoris. The discovery of gold on South Island in 1861 sparked concerns that settlers there would form a separate colony, so in 1865 the capital was moved to the more central city of Wellington.

New Zealand became an independent dominion in 1907. Full independence was granted with the Statute of Westminster in 1931, which was adopted by the New Zealand parliament in 1947. Since then, the country has been a sovereign constitutional monarchy within the Commonwealth of Nations.

New Zealand recorded the highest casualties per head of population of any combatant nation during World War I, when 100,000 served and 17,000 were killed. In World War II, 204,000 served and 11,500 were killed, and in the Korean War, 1,550 served and 38 were killed.

For 100 years, New Zealand followed Britain's lead on foreign policy. However, British inability to protect the country from Japanese aggression in World War II began a period of American influence. New Zealand is a party to the ANZUS security treaty between Australia, New Zealand, and the U.S. The formal relationship with the U.S. changed, in 1986, however, after the Labour government adopted an anti-nuclear position, which ended visits of American warships.

New Zealand dismantled its air combat capability in 2001. It has contributed forces to various peacekeeping missions—in Cyprus, Somalia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Sinai, Angola, Cambodia, the Iran/Iraq border, Bougainville, and East Timor.

Economy

Auckland at night, with the Sky Tower in the background

After financial reforms in 1984, successive governments transformed New Zealand from a highly protectionist and regulated economy to a liberalized free market economy. The government sold its telecommunications company, railway network, a number of radio stations, and two financial institutions. The businesses the government retained, known as "state-owned enterprises," are required to operate profitably as stand-alone businesses.

An economic bubble developed in the New Zealand stock market starting in 1984. After it burst in 1987, the total value of the market fell by half within a year. A period of poor economic growth lasted until the mid-1990s, when the government began a program of immigration to boost GDP. A favorable rate of currency exchange and strong demand for housing buoyed the economy for the next six years until inflationary pressures in 2005 caused the central reserve bank to raise interest rates.

In 2005, agriculture made up about 5 percent of gross domestic product; industry, 28 percent; and services, 67 percent. New Zealand is dependent on trade—particularly in agricultural products—and has been affected by global economic slowdowns and slumps in commodity prices. Primary export industries are agriculture (sheep, cattle, dairy), horticulture (apples, kiwifruit), fishing, and forestry.

The national economy has seen many changes in recent years. New Zealand once had about 20 times more sheep than people; by 2001 there were only 12 times as many. During the 1990s, tourism became the country’s leading earner of foreign exchange. The number of overseas students receiving education in New Zealand expanded dramatically and the importance of "export education" to the national economy rivaled that of other more established industries. Vineyards have proliferated since the 1990s in areas of the country, with a focus on high-quality sauvignon blanc and pinot noir.

Demographics

A map of New Zealand showing the major cities and towns

About 70 percent of New Zealand's population is of European descent, mostly English, Scottish, Welsh, Irish, and Dutch. Those of full or part-Maori ancestry comprise about 15 percent while most of the remainder are of Asian and Pacific Island origin. British migrants form the largest single group (30 percent), but new migrants are drawn from many nations, increasingly those of East Asia. A result of Pacific Island immigration is that South Auckland has become the world's largest Polynesian city.

English and Maori are the two official languages, although most visitors would find New Zealand exclusively an English-speaking country. The Maori language is used on sign posts, at Maori culture concerts, as secondary names of government departments, on the Maori-language television channel, and on a number of tribal radio stations.

Successive government policies on the relationship between Maori and non-Maori people have worsened race relations. After 1840, many issues to do with sovereignty and land ownership remained unresolved and, for a long time, invisible while Maori lived in rural communities. Agitation regarding treaty issues intensified in the 1970s. The Waitangi Tribunal was set up in 1975 to consider alleged breaches, and in 1984 was empowered to look back to 1840. In 20 years, a grievance industry has ballooned, generating hostility from voters.

Christianity is the predominant religion in New Zealand, although nearly 40 percent of the population has no religious affiliation. The main Christian denominations are Anglican, Presbyterian, Roman Catholic, and Methodist. Significant numbers identify themselves with Pentecostal, Baptist, and the LDS (Mormon) church. The Ratana church has many adherents among Maori. Increasing immigration since the late 1990s brought adherents of Hinduism, Buddhism, and Islam.

Culture

British colonists brought a legal, political, and economic system that has flourished, along with the English system of agriculture that has transformed the landscape. The British brought the Protestant work ethic—the industrious newcomers astonished Maori people. In return, settlers noted the athletic ability, musicality, and courage of the Maori. However, English paternalism soon brought an extensive welfare system that created a large, poor Maori underclass.

Cultural links between New Zealand and Great Britain are maintained by a common language, sustained immigration from the UK, and the fact that many spend time in Britain on the "overseas experience," known as "OE," that young adult New Zealanders are practically expected to undertake before returning to settle down in their remote corner of the world.

Today, the government promotes Maori culture by supporting Maori-language schools, by ensuring the language is visible in government departments and literature, by insisting on traditional Maori welcomes (powhiri) at government functions and state school award programs, and by having Maori run the welfare services targeted at their people.

Rugby union is the national sport. The national rugby team, the All Blacks, has the best winning record of any national team in the world, including being the inaugural winner of the 1987 Rugby Union World Cup. New Zealand is to host the 2011 Rugby Union World Cup. The country's national sporting colors are black and white, and the silver fern is a national emblem. The All Blacks perform a traditional Maori war dance, or haka, before the start of international matches.

Other popular sports are cricket, netball, lawn bowling, soccer, golf, tennis, cycling, and a variety of water sports, particularly sailing, whitewater kayaking, surf lifesaving, and rowing. Snow sports such as skiing and snowboarding are also popular.

New Zealand hosted the last two competitions for international yacht racing's top prize, the America's Cup (2000 and 2003), by virtue of being the home of the winning team in 1995 and 2000. The country has the distinction of being the only one outside the U.S. to hold multiple America's Cup races, but lost the cup in 2003 to a Swiss team (with a New Zealander skipper).

New Zealanders, known internationally as “Kiwis,” are distinctive for their twangy dialect of English and propensity to travel long distances, and are quickly associated with the All Blacks rugby team and the haka. A tradition of resourcefulness came from the pioneering backgrounds of both European and Maori colonists.

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Central Intelligence Agency, New Zealand - People and Society The World Factbook. Retrieved July 25, 2023.
  2. 2018 Census population and dwelling counts Statistics New Zealand, September 23, 2019. Retrieved July 25, 2023.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 World Economic Outlook Database, October 2022 International Monetary Fund. Retrieved July 25, 2023.
  4. Income inequality OECD. Retrieved July 25, 2023.
  5. New Zealand's National Anthems Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved July 25, 2023.
  6. Protocol for using New Zealand's National Anthems Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved July 25, 2023.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • King, Michael. The Penguin History of New Zealand. Penguin, 2012. ISBN 978-0143567578
  • Rawlings-Way, Charles, Brett Atkinson, Sarah Bennett, and Peter Dragicevich. New Zealand. Lonely Planet, 2012. ISBN 978-1742200170
  • Turner, Peter. National Geographic Traveler: New Zealand. National Geographic, 2013. ISBN 978-1426211614

External links

All links retrieved July 25, 2023.

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