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Introduction

Improvements

Airstrip

Alcázar

Barricade

Batey

Cahokia Mounds

Camp

Château

Chemamull

City Park

Colossal Head

Corporation

Farm

Feitoria

Fishery

Fishing Boats

Fort

Geothermal Plant

Golf Course

Great Wall

Hacienda

Ice Hockey Rink

Industry

Kampung

Kurgan

Lumber Mill

Mahavihara

Mekewap

Mine

Missile Silo

Mission

Moai

Modernized Trap

Monastery

Mountain Tunnel

Nazca Line

Nubian Pyramid

Offshore Oil Rig

Offshore Wind Farm

Oil Well

Open-Air Museum

Outback Station

Pā

Pairidaeza

Pasture

Plantation

Polder

Qhapaq Ñan

Quarry

Reinforced Barricade

Rock-Hewn Church

Roman Fort

Seaside Resort

Seastead

Ski Resort

Solar Farm

Sphinx

Stepwell

Terrace Farm

Trading Dome

Trap

Vampire Castle

Wind Farm

Ziggurat

Routes

Pā
Description
Unlocks the Toa ability to construct a Pā, unique to Māori.

Occupying unit receives +4 Defense Strength, and automatically gains 2 turns of fortification. A Māori unit occupying a Pā heals even if they just moved or attacked. Must be built on a Hill tile.

Deals minor damage to and depletes the movement of hostile units walking onto this tile.
Historical Context
The Maori constructed sophisticated hilltop fortifications, called Pā. These consisted of clearing and terracing a hilltop, erecting a palisade wall (or series of palisades), and constructing earthworks, foot storage pits, and water sources. Some Pā were large enough to support limited agriculture at their heart. A Pā conveyed a great deal of mana on the iwi which constructed it, in much the way a castle conveyed power to the nobility of feudal cultures.

During the Maori wars with the British, the Pā of the North Island were centers of strong resistance for the Maori. In response to the introduction of gunpowder weapons, the Maori quickly modified their Pā design to include interlocking fields of fire for the defenders, and soft flax padding on the palisades that would dissipate the damage from bullets and shells. Only with heavy artillery could the colonial troops crack a Pā.

Pā represent ingenious use of local resources to build strong defenses. The Maori quickly adapted the design of the Pā as new European weapons were introduced to the island, rapidly recapitulating the history of European fortification development in only a few generations on their own. There are many old Pā sites still visible around New Zealand today.
PortraitSquare
icon_improvement_maori_pa

Traits

Unique To
icon_civilization_maori
Māori

Requirements

icon_terrain_plains_hills
Plains (Hills)
icon_terrain_grass_hills
Grassland (Hills)
icon_terrain_desert_hills
Desert (Hills)
icon_terrain_tundra_hills
Tundra (Hills)
icon_terrain_snow_hills
Snow (Hills)

Usage

Built By
icon_unit_maori_toa
Toa
PortraitSquare
icon_improvement_maori_pa
Description
Unlocks the Toa ability to construct a Pā, unique to Māori.

Occupying unit receives +4 Defense Strength, and automatically gains 2 turns of fortification. A Māori unit occupying a Pā heals even if they just moved or attacked. Must be built on a Hill tile.

Deals minor damage to and depletes the movement of hostile units walking onto this tile.
Historical Context
The Maori constructed sophisticated hilltop fortifications, called Pā. These consisted of clearing and terracing a hilltop, erecting a palisade wall (or series of palisades), and constructing earthworks, foot storage pits, and water sources. Some Pā were large enough to support limited agriculture at their heart. A Pā conveyed a great deal of mana on the iwi which constructed it, in much the way a castle conveyed power to the nobility of feudal cultures.

During the Maori wars with the British, the Pā of the North Island were centers of strong resistance for the Maori. In response to the introduction of gunpowder weapons, the Maori quickly modified their Pā design to include interlocking fields of fire for the defenders, and soft flax padding on the palisades that would dissipate the damage from bullets and shells. Only with heavy artillery could the colonial troops crack a Pā.

Pā represent ingenious use of local resources to build strong defenses. The Maori quickly adapted the design of the Pā as new European weapons were introduced to the island, rapidly recapitulating the history of European fortification development in only a few generations on their own. There are many old Pā sites still visible around New Zealand today.

Traits

Unique To
icon_civilization_maori
Māori

Requirements

icon_terrain_plains_hills
Plains (Hills)
icon_terrain_grass_hills
Grassland (Hills)
icon_terrain_desert_hills
Desert (Hills)
icon_terrain_tundra_hills
Tundra (Hills)
icon_terrain_snow_hills
Snow (Hills)

Usage

Built By
icon_unit_maori_toa
Toa
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