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・ Wairarapa and Hawke's Bay (New Zealand electorate)
・ Wairarapa and Hawke's Bay by-election, 1858
・ Wairarapa Bush Rugby Football Union
・ Wairarapa College
・ Wairarapa Connection
・ Wairarapa Fault
・ Wairarapa Line
・ Wairarapa Mail
・ Wairarapa North
・ Wairarapa Railway Restoration Society
・ Wairarapa Rugby Football Union
・ Wairarapa South
・ Wairarapa Times-Age
・ Wairarapa United
・ Wairau
Wairau (New Zealand electorate)
・ Wairau Affray
・ Wairau Bar
・ Wairau by-election, 1858
・ Wairau by-election, 1872
・ Wairau by-election, 1875
・ Wairau Fault
・ Wairau Hydro Scheme
・ Wairau River
・ Wairau Valley
・ Wairau Valley, Auckland
・ Wairaurahiri River
・ Waireia River
・ Wairere Boulders
・ Wairere Falls


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Wairau (New Zealand electorate) : ウィキペディア英語版
Wairau (New Zealand electorate)

Wairau was a parliamentary electorate in the Marlborough Region of New Zealand. It was one of the initial 24 New Zealand electorates and existed from 1853 until its abolition in 1938, when it was succeeded by the electorate. The electorate had 13 representatives during its existence. The 1861 election in the Wairau electorate was notable in that a later Premier, Frederick Weld, was unexpectedly and narrowly defeated by William Henry Eyes.
==Population centres==
The New Zealand Constitution Act 1852, passed by the British government, allowed New Zealand to establish a representative government. The initial 24 New Zealand electorates were defined by Governor George Grey in March 1853. Wairau was one of the initial single-member electorates.
The initial area covered the Marlborough Sounds in the north to the Hurunui River in the south. Settlements within that area were Picton, Blenheim, and Kaikoura.
The Constitution Act also allowed the House of Representatives to establish new electorates, and this was first done in 1858, when four new electorates were formed by splitting existing electorates. The electorate was formed by taking area from the Wairau and electorates.
The Wairau electorate's boundaries were constantly adjusted over the years, but the electorate always covered a large, rural area around the Awatere River, with a long coastal boundary outh of Cape Campbell, at times as far south as Kaikoura. Blenheim was always included in the electorate, but Picton not always. The 1918 electoral redistribution, which applied from the , changed the shape of the electorate significantly, with it moving away from the Pacific Ocean coast to make way for the electorate moving north. Wairau gained large areas of land south of Richmond. It also covered the Marlborough Sounds, and Blenheim was the southernmost point along the coast. The 1922 electoral redistribution reversed this and Wairau moved back to its traditional area. Wairau was abolished through the 1937 electoral redistribution, which came into effect with the , and replaced by the electorate, which had more or less the same shape as Wairau had had since the 1927 electoral redistribution.

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