A popular claim, one promoted most prominently by Professor James Belich, whom John Campbell once introduced as “Our National Treasure”, is that Māori not only invented trench warfare but that their innovations directly influenced British military doctrine in the First World War. Belich’s early work goes further than celebrating Māori ingenuity: it explicitly implies a causal line from nineteenth‑century pā fortifications to the trench systems of the Western Front.
Trench Warfare Long Predates the New Zealand Wars
Trench warfare is not a nineteenth‑century invention, nor a uniquely Māori development. It has been documented since antiquity. Roman siegecraft manuals describe saps, trenches, covered approaches, and earthworks designed to protect advancing troops. These practices never disappeared; they evolved.
By the late Middle Ages, as gunpowder weapons spread across Europe, trench‑based fighting became increasingly common. The Hussite Wars of the early fifteenth century are a textbook example: field fortifications, wagon‑laagers, and gun positions dug into the earth were central to their battlefield tactics. These were not obscure or isolated events; they were widely studied and widely copied.
Why Trenches Were Less Visible in Western Europe
Belich’s argument often relies on the assumption that Europeans “didn’t use trenches” until the nineteenth century. This is a misunderstanding of context.
In Western Europe, warfare from the medieval period through the early modern era revolved around fortified places—castles, walled towns, and later star‑forts. Battles in open fields were comparatively rare. Most military action involved sieges, and siege warfare was dominated by:
- saps and approach trenches
- parallels
- gun batteries dug into earthworks
- covered ways and glacis
The Rise of Artillery Made Trenches Even More Essential
As artillery improved, fortifications adapted, and so did the trenches used to attack or defend them. By the seventeenth century, the Vauban system had formalised trench warfare into a science. By the eighteenth century, trench‑based artillery positions were ubiquitous. By the Crimean War in the 1850s, British forces were already fighting from extensive trench networks.
All of this predates the New Zealand Wars by centuries.
Where Māori Innovation Fits
None of this diminishes Māori ingenuity. Māori communities independently developed sophisticated musket‑era pā that incorporated:
- firing pits
- traversed trenches
- bomb‑proof shelters
- complex layers of defence
But independent invention is not the same as global primacy. Māori did not invent trench warfare, and the historical record does not support the idea that British military engineers in the early twentieth century were drawing on Māori precedents.
Belich’s Secondary Claim: A Causal Line to WWI
Belich’s more ambitious assertion, that British Great War trench doctrine was influenced by the New Zealand Wars, has never been substantiated. No British military manuals, engineering treatises, doctrinal papers, or staff college lectures from the period cite Māori fortifications as a source. There is no archival evidence of transmission, no documented influence, and no chain of custody for the idea.
In short: Māori developed their own trench systems. They did not invent trench warfare. And there is no evidence that their designs shaped British practice in the First World War.
A Point‑by‑Point Rebuttal of Belich’s Claims
Belich’s argument rests on two major claims:
- Māori invented trench warfare.
- British WWI trench doctrine was influenced by Māori pā fortifications.
Below is a systematic dismantling of each.
Claim 1: “Māori invented trench warfare.”
Rebuttal 1: Trench warfare predates Māori by millennia
- Ancient Near East: Assyrian reliefs show saps, trenches, and covered approaches.
- Classical world: Roman siege manuals (e.g., De Munitionibus Castrorum) describe trenches, ditches, and earthworks used both offensively and defensively.
- Medieval Europe: Trench‑based approaches were standard in sieges from the 10th century onward.
- Early gunpowder era: From the 1400s, artillery was routinely deployed in dug‑in positions.
Rebuttal 2: Trench warfare was a core component of European siegecraft for centuries
Belich’s argument implicitly assumes Europeans “didn’t use trenches” until the 19th century. This is historically false.
- Sieges dominated European warfare, not open‑field battles.
- Siegecraft required:
- approach trenches
- parallels
- gun batteries dug into earthworks
- covered ways
- glacis and counter‑scarps
These were not occasional improvisations; they were codified engineering practices.
Rebuttal 3: The Hussite Wars (1420s) show trench‑artillery systems centuries before Māori musket pā
The Hussites used:
- wagon‑laagers
- firing pits
- trenches between defensive positions
- early gunpowder weapons fired from earthworks
Rebuttal 4: The rise of artillery made trenches universal long before the 19th century
By the 1500s–1600s:
- artillery outmatched medieval walls
- trench systems became essential
- engineers like Vauban formalised trench warfare into a geometric science
- every major European army used trench‑based siege approaches
Rebuttal 5: Māori innovation was real — but not globally unique
Māori developed:
- traversed trenches
- firing pits
- bomb‑proof shelters
- multi‑layered defensive systems
But independent invention ≠ global primacy.
Māori did not invent trench warfare; they created a distinctive regional expression of a very old idea.
Claim 2: “British WWI trench doctrine was influenced by Māori fortifications.”
Rebuttal 1: There is no documentary evidence of influence
No British:
- staff college lectures
- engineering manuals
- doctrinal papers
- officer correspondence
- War Office memoranda
- Royal Engineers treatises
There is zero archival evidence of transmission.
Rebuttal 2: British trench doctrine has a clear, documented European lineage
The British Army’s trench practices in WWI derive from:
- Vauban’s 17th‑century siege systems
- 18th‑century manuals on parallels and saps
- Napoleonic siege doctrine
- Crimean War trench operations (1850s)
- Boer War entrenchments (1899–1902)
- British field manuals from the 1860s–1910s
No Māori influence is required — or visible.
Rebuttal 3: The British Army already used trenches extensively before the New Zealand Wars
Examples include:
- Peninsular War (1808–1814)
- Crimean War (1853–1856)
- Siege of Delhi (1857)
- Siege of Sevastopol (1854–55)
Rebuttal 4: WWI trenches were shaped by industrial firepower, not colonial memory
WWI trench systems were responses to:
- machine guns
- rapid‑fire artillery
- barbed wire
- mass mobilisation
- industrial logistics
The idea that British generals in 1916 were thinking about Māori pā from the 1860s is historically implausible.
Rebuttal 5: Belich’s causal chain is speculative and unsupported
Belich’s argument relies on:
- analogy
- inference
- rhetorical flourish
Without documentation, the claim is not history — it is conjecture.
Conclusion
Māori fortifications were innovative, sophisticated, and deserve recognition. But Belich’s two central claims:
- Māori invented trench warfare, and
- Māori influenced British WWI trench doctrine,
The global history of trench warfare is long, complex, and well‑documented — and it does not begin in New Zealand.
Colinxy regularly blogs at No Minister, This article was sourced HERE

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