Photo: RNZ / Peter de Graaf

A bill returning one of New Zealand's most historic sites to Māori is due to be passed by Parliament on Wednesday, ending a 20-year quest by Northland iwi Ngāpuhi.

To the untrained eye Kororipo Pā, at Kerikeri Basin, looks like a modest headland across the water from the better-known Stone Store.

However, these grassy terraces were the stage for some of the most formative events in this country's history.

In fact, some historians argue it's the place where modern New Zealand began.

The land is currently managed by the Department of Conservation but the Kororipo Pā Vesting Bill, due for its third and final reading on 17 December, will return it to Ngāpuhi.

Local hapΕ« Ngāti RΔ“hia will act as kaitiaki [caretakers] on the iwi's behalf.

The return is also significant because it offers a glimmer of hope for Ngāpuhi's long-stalled Treaty settlement.

Photo: RNZ / Peter de Graaf

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