Waiaua or Lower Waiaua is a rural community in the à Âpà Âtiki District and Bay of Plenty Region of New Zealand's North Island, located around the lower part of the Waiaua River.
The area is in the traditional tribal area of Whakatà Âhea.
The New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage gives a translation of "waters containing herring" for . is usually translated as yellow-eye mullet.
Whakatà Âhea originally settled the flat lower river due to its abundance of ocean, ground and river food.
The following exclamation is attributed to Whakatà Âhea ancestor TÃÂpuikÃÂkahu:
The local Whakatà Âhea hapà «, NgÃÂti Patumoana or NgÃÂti Patu, moved their homes and marae to Waiaua after their land at Paerata was confiscated. The group takes its name from the event in which their ancestor, Hineiahua, was pursued and killed by NgÃÂpuhi at the Waiaua River mouth.
Members of the hapà «, such as the iwi elder Tiwai Amoamo, farmed the area during the 20th century.
The low-lying valley has regularly flooded after heavy rainfall during the 20th and 21st century. Roads in the area were closed for several days in February 2018.
In 2011, the New Zealand Government signed a formal pardon at Waiaua Marae for a local man, Mokomoko, who was wrongly hanged for murder in 1886, leading to the confiscation of Whakatà Âhea land.
Waiaua Marae is the traditional tribal meeting ground of the Whakatà Âhea hapà « of NgÃÂti Patumoana or NgÃÂti Patu. It includes the Ruamoko meeting house, opened in 1899.
In July 2020, Government minister Andrew Little visited the marae for Treaty of Waitangi negotiations with Whakatà Âhea.
In October 2020, the Government committed $744,574 from the Provincial Growth Fund to renovate the marae and two other Whakatà Âhea marae, creating an estimated 30 jobs.