From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- For a more complete list of Sovereign Original
peoples
of "Australia" (groups, kinship groups, communities and other
collective designations) see List of
Indigenous Australian group names
There are several hundred Original people of
Australia, many are groupings that existed before
the British colonisation of Australia in 1788. Before
Anglo-Europeans, the number was over 400.
Indigenous or groups will generally talk of their
"people" and their "country".
These countries [1] are ethnographic areas, usually the size of an
average European country, with around two hundred on the Australian
continent at the time of White arrival.
Within each country, people lived in clan groups – extended families defined by various
forms of Australian Aboriginal
kinship. Inter-clan contact was common, as was inter-country
contact, but there were strict protocols around this contact.
The largest Sovereign Original language group people today are
the Anangu Pitjantjatjara who live in the area
around Uluru (Ayers Rock) and
south into the Anangu Pitjantjatjara
Yankunytjatjara Lands in South Australia, while the second
largest Aboriginal community are the Arrernte people who live in and around
Mparntwe (Alice Springs). The third largest are the
Anangu Luritja, who live in
the lands between the two largest just mentioned. The Aboriginal
languages and dialects with the largest number of speakers today
are the Pitjantjatjara, Warlpiri and Arrernte.
Australian Capital
Territories
- Ngunnawal people or Ngunnawal
people were the first inhabitants of the area which is now occupied
by the city of Canberra, Australia and the Australian Capital
Territory. They spoke the Ngunnawal language. The city of Canberra is named after the
Ngunnawal word 'Kambera'. Many other place names around Canberra
are given Ngunnawal names, such as Tuggeranong, Ginninderra, Murrumbidgee, the suburb Ngunnawal and
many road names.
New South
Wales
- The Cammeraygal (also called Awabakal)
were people that inhabited the Lower North Shore area of the
present day North Sydney Council in Sydney, Australia. The name
'Cammeraygal' is ensigned on the North Sydney Municipal Emblem and
also gave name to the suburb of Cammeray. The Awakabal also lived
in the area of present day Newcastle
- The Eora
people were the original occupants of the Sydney region in 1788
when the first Anglo-European colonists arrived. Some of the words
of original provenance still in use today in Australian English are
from the Eora language: dingo,
woomera, wallaby, wombat, waratah, boobook owl, wallaroo. Bennelong was a senior
member of the Eora people, who served as an interlocutor between
the British and Eora people, and travelled to England, and later
returned to Australia in 1795. He died at Kissing Point (known now
as Ryde) on 3 January 1813. Bennelong Point, where the Sydney Opera
House now stands, is named after him. He lived there after he
persuaded New South Wales Governor Arthur Phillip to build a brick hut for
him on the point.
- The Tharawal people are an Aboriginal
sub-group of the Dharug language nation in the area around Wollongong, south of
Sydney. They are famous for the name of the boomerang coming from their language.
- The Wonnarua people (‘people of the hills
and plains’) have territory located in the upper Hunter Valley.
Northern
Territory
- Alyawarre who live north-east of
Alice Springs. In 1980 they lodged a land claim, which was handed
back to them on 22 October 1992. The size of the land was
2065 km².
- Anmatjera from an area near Mount
Leichhardt, Hann and Reynolds Ranges, and northeast to Central
Mount Stuart. Artist Clifford Possum is
an Anmatjera man. Emily Kngwarreye was also an Anmatjera woman.
- Arrernte is a language, a group of
people, and also an area of land in Central Australia. The
population of Arrernte people living on Arrernte land (including
Alice Springs) is estimated at 25,000, making it the 2nd largest of
all Central Australian Aboriginal countries, after Pitjantjatjara.
In most primary schools in Alice Springs, students (of all races
and nationalities) are taught Arrernte (or in some cases Western
Arrernte) as a compulsory language, often alongside French or
Indonesian languages. Additionally, most Alice Springs High Schools
give the option to study Arrernte language throughout High School
as a separate subject, and it can also be learned at Centralian
College as part of a TAFE course. Future plans are that it will
be included as a university subject. Approximately 25% of Alice
Springs residents speak Arrernte as their first language.
- Luritja
is a name used to refer to several dialects of the Western Desert
Language, and thereby also to the people who speak these varieties,
and their traditional lands. The Luritja lands include areas to the
west and south of Alice Springs, extending around the edge of
Arrernte country, which lie roughly between Alice Springs and
Uluru. The total population of Luritja people (including Papunya
Luritja) is probably in the thousands making them the 3rd largest
of the Central Australian Aboriginal populations. It includes the
town of Papunya.
- The Murrinh-Patha are a small group,
living inland from the settlement of Wadeye, between the rivers
Moyle and Fitzmaurice. Their language, also called Murrinh-Patha,
is still spoken by about 900. The Murrinh-Patha culture is
characterized by typical Native Australian social structure,
including a complex kinship system with elaborate behavioral norms
for interactions between the different kinship groups.
- Pitjantjatjara is the name of
both an Aboriginal people (or Anangu) of the Central Australian
desert and their language. Their influence extends from the area
near Uluru in the Northern
Territory to the Nullarbor Plain in South Australia.
Their language is one of the most widely spoken Aboriginal
languages.
- Warlpiri is a large group in the
Northern Territory. There are 5,000–6,000 Warlpiri, living mostly
in a few towns and settlements scattered through their traditional
land, north and west of Alice Springs. Their largest community is
at Yuendumu. Many Warlpiri, unlike people from
other Aboriginal language and community groups, do not speak even a
word of English. Warlpiri are famous for their tribal dances. Many
Warlpiri have toured England, Japan, and most recently Russia, performing their dances.
- The Yolngu inhabit north-eastern Arnhem
Land in Australia. Some Yolngu communities of Arnhem land
re-figured their economies from being largely land-based to largely
sea-based with the introduction of Macassan technologies such as
dug-out canoes, after the Macassan contact with
Australia. These seaworthy boats, unlike their traditional bark
canoes, allowed Yolngu to fish the ocean for dugongs and turtles.
Some Aboriginal workers willingly accompanied the Macassans back to
their homeland across the Arafura Sea. The Yolngu people also
remember with grief the abductions and trading of Yolngu women, and
the introduction of smallpox, which was epidemic in the islands
east of Java at the time.
Queensland
- The Guugu Yimithirr are another
language group. There are still several hundred speakers of the
language, mostly living in and around Hopevale, Cooktown, and Wujal
Wujal on Cape York Peninsula in northern
Queensland. The site of modern Cooktown was a meeting place of two
vastly different cultures when, in June 1770, the local Aboriginal
Guugu Yimithirr people cautiously watched James Cook's crippled sailing vessel – HM Bark Endeavour – limp up the coast of
their territory seeking a safe harbour. kangaroo was to be entered into the English
language, coming from the local Guugu-Yimidhirr name for a Grey
Kangaroo, which was gangaroo.
- The Kalkadoon people live in the area
around Mount Isa in Western Queensland.
There was fighting between the Kalkadoon and police in the
nineteenth century; in 1884, 200 of them were massacred at "Battle
Mountain", in a fight against police.
- There are a number of Torres Strait
Islanders groups inhabiting the Torres
Strait Islands between mainland Australia and Papua New
Guinea.
South
Australia
- The Dieri
is an Australian Aboriginal group and (now extinct) language from
the South Australian desert—specifically Cooper and Leigh Creek,
Lake Howitt, and Lake Hope, Lake Gregory and Clayton River and low
country north of Mount Freeling. The Dieri protested the Marree Man geoglyph,
saying that it had caused them harm and was exploiting their
Dreamtime stories.
- The Kaurna people have traditional lands in
and around the Adelaide Plains. The Kaurna people
lived in independent family structures in defined territories
called pangkarra. The Kuarna performed circumcision as an
initiatory right and were the southernmost community to do so. The
last surviving speaker of Kaurna as a mother-tongue died in 1931;
her name was Ivaritji .
- The Maralinga Tjarutja
inhabit the remote western areas of South Australia. They are a
Southern Pitjantjatjara people. The Maralinga Tjarutja native title
land was handed back to the Maralinga people in January 1985 under
legislation passed by both houses of the South Australian
Parliament in December 1984 and proclaimed in January 1985.
Maralinga people resettled on the land in 1995 and named the place
Oak Valley Community. The local Aboriginal people were not warned
effectively of the explosions from 1950s nuclear testing and many
suffered terrible after-effects from fallout, although the 1984/1985 Royal Commission
could find no evidence of this for the Maralinga Tjarutja.
Tasmania
Indigenous Tasmanian communities
Tasmanian Aborigines at Oyster Cove
- 20th century historians previously held that Tasmanian
Aborigines had become extinct with the death of Truganini in 1873, but this is no longer
the accepted view. The original population, estimated at 8,000
people was reduced to a population of around 300 between 1802 and
1833 mainly due to the actions of white settlers who came to
Australia from the United Kingdom, combined with disease and
cultural disruption. The Black War and subsequent Black Line were turning
points in the relationship with European settlers. Even though the
various managed to avoid capture during these events, they were
shaken by the size of the campaigns against them. Mannalargenna was
the leader of the Ben Lomond people (Plangermaireener).
Victoria
- The Gunai
or Kurnai nation live in the area of south eastern Victoria, around
Wilson's Promontory, Sale, Bairnsdale, Lakes Entrance, Snowy River and Mallacoota. The Gunai people resisted the
European invasion of their land. Many were killed in fighting
between 1840 and 1850. In 1863 Reverend Friedrich Hagenauer
established Ramahyuck Mission on the banks of the Avon River near
Lake Wellington to house the Gunai survivors from west and central
Victoria.
- The Kulin
alliance is one of the indigenous nations of Australia who lived in
central Victoria, around Port Phillip where Melbourne now stands, and Western Port, up
into the Great Dividing Range and the Loddon and Goulburn River
valleys. It included the Wurundjeri and Bunurong clans. On 6
June 1835 John
Batman signed a 'treaty' (known as Batman's Treaty) with the Wurundjeri
people where he purported to buy 2,000 km² of land around
Melbourne and another 400 km² around Geelong, on Corio Bay to
the south-west. In exchange he gave the eight elders, whose marks
he acquired on his treaty, a quantity of "blankets, knives,
tomahawks, scissors, looking-glasses, flour, handkerchiefs and
shirts." By 1863 the surviving members of the Wurundjeri and other
Woiwurrung speakers were given 'permissive occupancy' of Coranderrk
Station, near Healesville. William Barak was the last ngurungaeta of
the Wurundjeri-willam clan. Bunjil is seen as the culture-hero or god of
the Kulin people. The Bunurong were referred to by Europeans as the
Western Port or Port Philip group.
- The Yorta
Yorta people are the Indigenous Australians who
traditionally lived around the junction of the Goulburn and Murray
Rivers in present-day northeast Victoria.
Yorta Yorta Family Groups include the Bangerang, Kailtheban,
Wollithiga, Moira, Ulupna, Kwat Kwat, Yalaba Yalaba and
Nguaria-iiliam-wurrung clans.[1]
The language is referred to generally as the Yorta Yorta
language.
Prominent Yorta Yorta people include Burnum Burnum and Sir
Douglas Nicholls.
Western
Australia
- The Noongar (alternate spellings:
Nyungar/Nyoongar)[1], are a group of Australian Aboriginal people
who live in the south west of Western Australia from Geraldton in the mid west
to Esperance on the south
coast. The population of the Noongar at the time of European
arrival was estimated between 6000 and 10000. The population in the
2001 census was 21000. The Beeliar group encountered English
settlers when they arrived in and established the Swan River
Colony in 1829. Captain James Stirling
declared that the local peoples were British subjects. Although the
Nyungar at first traded amicably with the settlers, as time wore
on, rifts and misunderstandings developed, and attacks and reprisal
attacks grew. This resulted in the death of Yagan, who is now seen by many as one of the
first Indigenous resistance fighters. The name of Mokare is commemorated for mediating peace
between the colonists at King George Sound and his own people,
and assisting in the exploration of the region.[3]
Many placenames in Western Australia are named after Noongar words,
especially ending in "up" or "in/ing" (both meaning "place of" in
different dialects) such as Joondalup, Manjimup, Narrogin and Merredin.
- The Spinifex people, or
Pila Nguru, have their traditional lands situated
in the Great Victoria Desert, in the Australian state of Western
Australia, adjoining the border with South Australia, to the north
of the Nullarbor Plain. They maintain in large part their
traditional hunter-gatherer existence within the territory, over
which their claims to Native title and associated collective rights
were recognised by a November 28, 2000 Federal Court decision. The
Australian Royal Commission was unable to determine if Pila Nguru
people had been exposed to damaging levels of radiation from fallout after the nuclear
testing near Maralinga in the 1950s.
- The Jarrakan are one of several
groups in the north of the state.
References
- ^
http://www.ausanthrop.net/resources/ausanthrop_db/detail.php?id_search=365
- ^
http://www.heysentrail.sa.gov.au/publish/groups/public/@visitormgt/@interp/documents/all/parks_pdfs_guide_yorke_clare.pdf
- ^ Green, Neville (2005). "Mokare (c. 1800 - 1831)".
Australian Dictionary of
Biography. Australian National
University. http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/AS10348b.htm. Retrieved
2008-08-03.
External
links