Why was Bishop Pompallier against the treaty?

Pompallier was worried the treaty would hamper his mission and Colenso overheard that he had advised some Catholic Maori chiefs not to sign the treaty. Having secured the statement of religious freedom he did not stay, he left the gathering after the discussion and before the parties signed.

What was Bishop Pompallier known for?

Bishop Pompallier was born in Lyons, France, in 1801. He was consecrated Bishop with responsibility for Western Oceania (including New Zealand) in 1836. He arrived in New Zealand in 1838, and by the mid-1840s had established a number of Catholic missions. By 1843 the French missions claimed about 45,000 Maori converts.

How is Bishop Pompallier remembered?

Pompallier was not well known in France but New Zealanders remembered him and visited and tidied his grave in Puteaux near Paris. After being taken on a hikoi around New Zealand he was laid to rest beneath the altar of St Mary’s Church in Motuti in the Hokianga. This is the hikoi in Te Karaka, Northland.

Who is Bishop Pompallier family?

Bishop Jean Baptiste François Pompallier
Birthdate: December 11, 1801
Death: December 21, 1871 (70) Puteaux, Île-de-France, France
Place of Burial: Motuti, Hokianga , North Island, New Zealand
Immediate Family: Son of Pierre Pompallier and Françoise Solichon Half brother of Jean-Mathieu François Catherin Solichon

What did Thomas and Mary Poynton do?

They were instrumental in bringing Bishop Jean Baptiste Pompallier to New Zealand and were involved in the growth of Catholicism and Catholic missions in the Hokianga and later on in the North Shore of Auckland.

Where does Bishop Pompallier lie now?

Today, the bishop’s remains lay in the meeting house at Motuti for people to be welcomed on to the marae and pay their respects. Others prepared food and worked on final preparations. Mr Adams said the return of Pompallier had happened with a lot of tolerance and hospitality of the marae and the people of Panguru.

How did Pompallier get to NZ?

Pompallier travelled extensively in France, Belgium, England and Ireland, with a side trip to the Holy Land, gathering funds and personnel for his new diocese. He sailed from Antwerp with two priests, ten seminarians and eight Irish Sisters of Mercy, arriving in Auckland on 8 April 1850.

How did Bishop Pompallier get to New Zealand?

Is Bishop Pompallier a saint?

Over the next few months, the bishop’s remains will be carried north from Dunedin in a hikoi finishing in April at Russell, the site of his Catholic mission headquarters from 1839 to 1850. Amid scenes of such devotion, it is hard to remember that Bishop Pompallier was not always regarded as close to a saint.

Why was Bishop Pompallier in NZ?

Pompallier left France in 1836 with four priests and three brothers of the Marist Order to lead a pioneering Roman Catholic mission to western Oceania. His arrival in New Zealand alarmed James Busby, the official British Resident, who feared it foreshadowed a French attempt to colonise New Zealand.

How have Thomas and Mary Poynton contributed to the development of Christianity?

When was Bishop Pompallier ordained?

13 June 1829
John Baptist Francis (Jean Baptiste Francois) Pompallier was born at Lyons, France, on 11 December 1801, of a well-to-do silk-manufacturing family. He worked in the silk trade; then was a dragoon officer; then passed through the Lyons’ Seminaries (1825–29) and was ordained priest on 13 June 1829.

Who was Bishop Jean Pompallier?

He virtuously organised the Roman Catholic Church in New Zealand where it flourished. Bishop Pompallier was born Jean Baptiste François Pompallier in Lyon, France, 11 December 1802. Jean Pompallier was the third eldest son to his father, Pierre Pompallier, who died 8 months after his birth.

What is the significance of the Pompallier House in Russell?

Pompallier House is a nineteenth-century building located in Russell, New Zealand which once served as the headquarters to the French Catholic mission to the Western Pacific. It is named after Jean Baptiste Pompallier, the first vicar apostolic to visit New Zealand, who founded a number of missions in the North Island .

Where is Bishop Pompallier buried?

Cardinal Thomas Williams celebrated the mass at the Church of St Mary the morning before Bishop Pompallier’s remains were buried there. He is now buried in St Mary’s Church, Motuti, in the Hokianga region north of Auckland.

What is the history of Pompallier Mission?

Built in 1842, Pompallier Mission originally housed a printery where Church texts were translated from Latin to te reo Māori, then printed and bound. It is just one of several buildings, including a chapel and various outhouses, which once stood in this crowded enclave.