The Mystery of New Zealand’s Tamil Bell, an Archaeological ‘UFO’
The strange bronze artifact perplexed scholars for more than a century, including how it traveled so far from home.

The Mystery of New Zealand’s Tamil Bell, an Archaeological ‘UFO’

Tamil Bell, located in a Maori village in 1837 by the British missionary William Colenso, caused speculation about who the first Europeans in New Zealand really were. It was being used as a pot to boil potatoes by Māori women near Whangarei in the Northland Region of New Zealand.

A Māori woman cooking in a hot spring in Rotorua, circa 1933. Before the availability of metal vessels, cooking in Aotearoa New Zealand typically involved placing heated stones in wooden containers.

There is speculation from time to time that the Dutch explorer Abel Tasman and British Captain James Cook were not the first Europeans to reach New Zealand. Researchers devote a lifetime to proving their theories. Often these theories are very believable, but because of length of time involved, the truth will never be known.

Maori people questioned through Cook’s Tahitian interpreter, were consistent in their belief that no white men had been seen in the country before the Endeavour’s arrival. If this is so, how does one explain the existence of the ancient Tamil bell?

Some of the characters in the inscription are of an archaic form no longer seen in modern Tamil script, thus suggesting that the bell could be about 500 years old, possibly from the Later Pandya period.

Missionary William Colenso - In 1837 the British missionary, William Colenso, visited a remote inland Maori village in the north, near Whangarei. To his surprise he found the local Maori people were using an old upturned ship bell as a cooking utensil. When questioned as to where the bell had come from, they gave an interesting reply. The bell had been discovered hidden in the roots of an old tree uprooted in a storm. Other than that they had no idea about what the bell was or how it had arrived there. There was nothing similar in their culture with which to compare it.

A portrait of missionary William Colenso, published in 1898 (left) beside an 1871 illustration of the Tamil Bell, including the line of script that, some 150 years later, a visiting scholar used to solve part of the artifact’s mystery

Colenso managed to exchange the bell for a large iron cooking pot and kept the bell, hoping to find out more about it. The bell was donated to the Dominion Museum in 1890 and now belongs to the New Zealand national museum, Te Papa.

The Inscription on the Tamil Bell - The Tamil bell is made of bronze, approximately 166 mm high and 153 mm in diameter. The inscription has been identified as being in ancient Tamil characters. The Tamils were an ancient seafaring people, from Tamil and in south east India.

Experts have studied the 24 letters of the inscription, which seem to make up six or seven words and appears to date from the period 1400 to 1500, making the bell, at the time of Colenso’s discovery of it, already four hundred years old. The closest translation of the inscription suggests the bell was from a ship, reading “Bell of the Ship of Mohaideen Bakhsh”. How the bell came to New Zealand is completely unknown.

Theories about the Tamil Bell - There are several theories about the arrival of the Tamil Bell in New Zealand. One suggests the ship the bell was from was overcome in a storm and its crew washed overboard or abandoning the ship for another. It was common in the days of Tamil seafaring to leave an abandoned ship to drift in the ocean, eventually breaking up and sinking or becoming shipwrecked on distant shores.

An early 20th-century ship in Whangerai Harbor on New Zealand’s North Island and near the Māori village where Cornish missionary William Colenso traded a cast iron pot for an artifact now known as the Tamil Bell

Another theory suggests the bell was taken by Spanish traders, later being carried on board a caravel that was eventually shipwrecked in the Pacific. This theory would link it with an ancient Spanish helmet discovered in New Zealand’s Wellington Harbour.

The Mystery of the Tamil Bell - How the bell came to be in New Zealand will remain a mystery forever. Researchers have linked it with the Tamils in south east India, but cannot establish with any certainty how it came to be in New Zealand.

The debate on who the first Europeans to reach New Zealand were, continues to be a subject of speculation. For now, the bell rests in Te Papa, still wearing its mantle of mystery.

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