Wiradjuri

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Wiradjuri people
Hierarchy
Language family:Pama–Nyungan
Language branch:Yuin–Kuric
Language group:Wiradhuric
Group dialects:Wiradjuri
Area (approx. 97,100 square kilometres (37,500 sq mi))
Bioregion:Central New South Wales
Location:Central New South Wales
Coordinates:33°50′S 147°30′E / 33.833°S 147.500°E / -33.833; 147.500Coordinates: 33°50′S 147°30′E / 33.833°S 147.500°E / -33.833; 147.500[1]
RiversLachlan (Kalare), Macquarie (Wambool), Murrumbidgee, Murray (Millewa)
Notable individuals
Windradyne, Linda Burney, Tai Tuivasa

The Wiradjuri people (Wiradjuri northern dialect pronunciation [wiraːjd̪uːraj]; Wiradjuri southern dialect pronunciation [wiraːjɟuːraj]) are a group of Aboriginal Australian people scattered throughout central New South Wales, united by common descent through kinship and shared traditions. They survived as skilled hunter-fisher-gatherers, in family groups or clans, and many still use knowledge of hunting and gathering techniques as part of their customary life.

In the 21st century, major Wiradjuri groups live in Condobolin, Peak Hill, Narrandera and Griffith. There are significant populations at Wagga Wagga and Leeton and smaller groups at West Wyalong, Parkes, Dubbo, Forbes, Cootamundra, Darlington Point, Cowra and Young.

Name[]

A Wiradjuri warrior, thought to be Windradyne[2]

The Wiradjuri autonym is derived from wirraay, meaning "no" or "not", with the comitative suffix -dhuurray or -juuray meaning "having".[3] That the Wiradjuri said wirraay, as opposed to some other word for "no", was seen as a distinctive feature of their speech, and several other tribes in New South Wales, to the west of the Great Dividing Range, are similarly named after their own words for "no".[4] A similar distinction was made between Romance languages in medieval France, with the langues d'oc and the langues d'oïl distinguished by their word for "yes".

In his book Aboriginal tribes of Australia (1974), Norman Tindale wrote that "Wiradjuri" was one of several terms coined later, after the 1890s had seen a "rash of such terms", following the publication of a work by ethnologist John Fraser. In 1892, Fraser had published a revised and expanded edition[5] of Lancelot Threlkeld's 1834 work on the Awabakal language, An Australian Grammar,[6] in which he created his own names for groupings, such as Yunggai, Wachigari and Yakkajari.[5]

Tindale says that some of the later terms had entered the literature, although not based on fieldwork and lacking Aboriginal support, as artificial, collective names for his "Great Tribes" of New South Wales. He writes that there was such a "literary need for major groupings that [Fraser] set out to provide them for New South Wales, coining entirely artificial terms for his 'Great tribes'. These were not based on field research and lacked aboriginal support. His names such as Yunggai, Wachigari and Yakkajari can be ignored as artifacts...During the 1890s the idea spread and soon there was a rash of such terms...Some of these have entered, unfortunately, into popular literature, despite their dubious origins."[7]

He goes on to list the Bangarang[a] (Pangerang) (Vic.); Booandik (Vic. & SA); Barkunjee (Barkindji) (NSW), Kurnai (Vic.), Thurrawal (Dharawal) (NSW), Wiradjuri (NSW) and Malegoondeet (?) (Vic.) as some of these names, and mentions R.H. Mathews, A.W.Howitt and John Mathew as promulgators of the "nations" concept. However, Tindale refers to Wiradjuri in his own work (p. 200): "Wiradjuri 'Wiradjuri (Wi'raduri)".[7][8]

Wiradjuri language[]

Wiradjuri is a Pama–Nyungan family and classified as a member of the small Wiradhuric branch of Australian languages of Central New South Wales.[9]

The Wiradjuri language is effectively extinct, but attempts are underway to revive it, with a reconstructed grammar, based on earlier ethnographic materials and wordlists and the memories of Wiradjuri families, which is now used to teach the language in schools.[10] This reclamation work was originally propelled by elder Stan Grant and John Rudder who had previously studied Australian Aboriginal languages in Arnhem Land.[11][12]

Country[]

The Wiradjuri are the largest Aboriginal group in New South Wales. They once occupied a vast area in central New South Wales, on the plains running north and south to the west of the Blue Mountains. The area was known as "the land of the three rivers",[13] the Wambool later known as the Macquarie, the Kalare later known as the Lachlan and the Murrumbidgee, or Murrumbidjeri.[14]

Norman Tindale estimated the territorial range of the Wiradjuri tribal lands at 127,000 km2 (49,000 sq mi). Their eastern borders ran from north to south from above Mudgee, through Orange to the vicinity of Bathurst, and east of Cowra, Young and Tumut and south to the upper Murray at Albury and east to about Tumbarumba. The southern border ran to Howlong. Its western reaches went along Billabong Creek to beyond Mossgiel. They extended southwest to the vicinity of Hay and Narrandera. Condobolin southwards to Booligal, Carrathool, Wagga Wagga, Cootamundra, Parkes, Trundle; Gundagai, Boorowa, and Rylstone, Wellington, and Carcoar all lay within Wiradjuri territory.[1]

The Murray River forms the Wiradjuri's southern boundary and the change from woodland to open grassland marks their eastern boundary.[citation needed]

Social organisation[]

The Wiradjuri were organised into bands or, what ethnographers traditionally called hordes. Norman Tindale quotes Alfred William Howitt as mentioning several of these local groups of the tribe:

  • Narrandera (prickly lizard)
  • Cootamundra (kuta-mundra, kutamun turtle)
  • Murranbulla (maring-bula, two bark canoes).[1]

Burial rite[]

The Wiradjuri, together with the Gamilaraay (who however used them in bora ceremonies), were particularly known for their use of carved trees which functioned as taphoglyphs,[15] marking the burial site of a notable medicine-man, ceremonial leader, warrior or orator of a tribe. On the death of a distinguished Wiradjuri, initiated men would strip the bark off a tree to allow them to incise symbols on the side of the trunk which faced the burial mound. The craftsmanship on remaining examples of this funeral artwork displays notable artistic power. Four still stand near Molong at the Grave of Yuranigh.

They are generally to be found near rivers where the softer earth allowed easier burial.[16] Alfred William Howitt remarked that these trees incised with taphoglyphs served both as transit points to allow mythological cultural heroes to ascend to, and descend from, the firmament as well as a means for the deceased to return to the sky.[15]

Lifestyle[]

The Wiradjuri diet included yabbies and fish such as Murray cod from the rivers. In dry seasons, they ate kangaroos, emus and food gathered from the land, including fruit, nuts, yam daisies (Microseris lanceolata), wattle seeds, and orchid tubers. The Wiradjuri travelled into Alpine areas in the summer to feast on Bogong moths.[17]

The Wiradjuri were also known for their handsome possum-skin cloaks stitched together from several possum furs. Governor Macquarie was presented with one of these cloaks by a Wiradjuri man when he visited Bathurst in 1815.[2]

European penetration[]

Wiradjuri territory was first penetrated by European colonists in 1813.[13] In 1822 George Suttor took up an extensive lot of land, later known as Brucedale Station, after Wiradjuri guides showed him an area with ample water sources. Suttor learnt their language, and befriended Windradyne, nicknamed "Saturday", and attributed conflict to the harshness of white behaviour, since the Wiradjuri were in his view, fond of white people.[18] Clashes between European settlers however multiplied as the influx of whites increased, and became known as the Bathurst Wars. The occupation of their lands and their cultivation began to cause famine among the Wiradjuri, who had a different notion of what constituted property.[b] In the 1850s there were still corroborees around Mudgee but there were fewer clashes.

Notable people[]

Historical[]

  • William Punch, massacre survivor and World War One serviceman
  • Windradyne, important Aboriginal leader during the Bathurst War
  • Yuranigh, a much prized guide for the explorer Thomas Mitchell, especially during his expedition to the Gulf of Carpentaria in 1845–1846. On hearing of Yuranigh's passing in 1852, Mitchell put up £200 to have his gravesite marked with a tombstone.[19]

Modern[]

  • Tony Briggs, actor, writer and producer
  • Linda Burney, member of the Australian House of Representatives (and formerly a member of the NSW Legislative Assembly)
  • Evonne Goolagong Cawley, tennis great
  • Jimmy Clements, present at the opening of Provisional Parliament House in 1927
  • Paul Coe, lawyer and activist
  • Kevin Gilbert, 20th century author
  • Stan Grant, journalist, son of Stan Grant Sr
  • Stan Grant Sr, a Wiradjuri elder, has been working on the reconstruction of the language.[20]
  • Anita Heiss contemporary novelist
  • Kate Howarth author
  • , author and academic[citation needed]
  • Faye McMillan, academic
  • Kerry Reed-Gilbert, poet, author and elder
  • Aunty Isabel Reid (born 1932), elder and advocate for the Stolen Generation; NSW State Recipient of Senior Australian of the Year 2021; oldest living survivor of those forcibly removed under the Aborigines Protection Act 1909 (NSW), having been sent to the Cootamundra Domestic Training Home for Aboriginal Girls[21]
  • Jessa Rogers, Founding Principal of the Cape York Girl Academy
  • Mum (Shirl) Smith MBE OAM, community activist
  • Malcolm Towney aka MFC, Mayor's Office Queanbeyan NSW
  • Margaret Tucker, co-founder of the Australian Aborigines League and author of If Everyone Cared (1977) one of the first autobiographies to deal with the experience of the Stolen Generations
  • Joyce Williams, Wiradjuri Elder, Health Campaigner, Native Title Activist
  • Neville "Uncle Chappy" Williams, land activist and proponent in the Lake Cowal Campaign
  • Tara June Winch, author

Music / The Arts[]

Sporting[]

Rugby League[]

Other sports[]

Other[]

Places of significance[]

Wiradjuri culture in fiction[]

The short story Death in the Dawntime, originally published in The Mammoth Book of Historical Detectives (Mike Ashley, editor; 1995), is a murder mystery that takes place entirely among the Wiradjuri people before the arrival of Europeans in Australia.[25]

In Bryce Courtenay's novel Jessica, the plot is centred in Wiradjuri region. Jessica's best friend (Mary Simpson) was from Wiradjuri.[26]

Noel Beddoe's novel The Yalda Crossing[27] also explores Wiradjuri history from an early settler perspective, bringing to life a little-known massacre that occurred in the 1830s.[28] Andy Kissane's poem, "The Station Owner's Daughter, Narrandera" tells a story about the aftermath of that same massacre,[29] and was the inspiration for Alex Ryan's short film, Ngurrumbang.[30]

Alternative names[]

The variety of spellings for the name Wiradjuri is extensive, with over 60 ways of transcribing the word registered.[31]

Some words[]

  • guwandhaang = native peach. The English word for this in Australia, quandong, is thought to derive from the Wirandjuri term.[32]
  • wagga = crow. The Wiradjeri term perhaps lies behind the toponym for the town of Wagga Wagga. The reduplication may be a pluralizer suggesting the idea of "(place of) many crows". This has recently been questioned by Wiradjuri elder Stan Grant Sr and Tim Wess, an academic. The word behind the toponym is, they claim, waga, meaning "dance", and the reduplicative would mean "many dances/much dancing".[33]

Notes[]

  1. ^ RH Mathews' spelling
  2. ^ Suttor wrote: "These natives have some imperfect ideas of property, and the right of possession. They say all wild animals are theirs - the tame or cultivated ones are ours. Whatever springs spontaneously from the earth or without labour is theirs also. Things produced by art and labour, are the white fellows' as they call us." (Langton 2010, p. 37)

Citations[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c Tindale 1974, p. 201.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Langton 2010, p. 33.
  3. ^ Donaldson 1984, p. 26.
  4. ^ Thieberger & McGregor 1994, pp. 79–80.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b Ridley et al. 1892, pp. ix–x, +.
  6. ^ Threlkeld et al. 2008.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b Tindale & Jones 1974, pp. 156, 191, 200.
  8. ^ Tindale 1974.
  9. ^ Dixon 2002, p. xxxiv.
  10. ^ McNaboe & Poetsch 2010, pp. 216–224.
  11. ^ Rudder & Grant 2005.
  12. ^ Rudder & Grant 2010.
  13. ^ Jump up to: a b Langton 2010, p. 32.
  14. ^ Bamblett 2013, p. 40.
  15. ^ Jump up to: a b McCarthy 1940, pp. 161–166.
  16. ^ McCarthy 1940, p. 161.
  17. ^ Warrant et al. 2016, p. 77.
  18. ^ Langton 2010, pp. 35–36.
  19. ^ Pearce 2016.
  20. ^ Innes 2016.
  21. ^ "Aunty Isabel Reid". Australian of the Year. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  22. ^ GoNSW 1996a.
  23. ^ Office of Environment and Heritage.
  24. ^ Jump up to: a b GoNSW 1996b.
  25. ^ MacIntyre 2001, p. 139.
  26. ^ Courtenay 2000.
  27. ^ Beddoe 2012.
  28. ^ Wilson 2012.
  29. ^ Kissane 1999, pp. 42–43.
  30. ^ Ngurrumbang 2013.
  31. ^ Thieberger & McGregor 1994, p. 80.
  32. ^ Clarke 2008, p. 53.
  33. ^ Owen 2016.

Sources[]

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