Topics: Culture: North West

Topic tags allow you to gather information from different pages on a particular topic. The first page, which appears when you click on the topic tag, shows relevant information from all place pages. The list of places will also appear on the right-hand side menu. You can display topic tags related to the particular place by clicking on the place name.

1818 - view

A “native corroboree” is held at full moon

1818 - view

"Carauberee"

1818 - view

Appin Massacre

1820 - view

kangaroo and possum skin cloaks

1821 - view

Bungaree and his Tribe entertained us with a Karaburie

1823 - view

Aboriginal Rock Carvings at Peates Ferry

1824 - view

Each group is painted in distinguishing designs and each is headed by a “Chief”. The guilty stand trial by spear and club

1824 - view

Darkinung language

1824 - view

“great gathering of tribes”

1825 - view

Biraban teaches Threlkeld his tribal lore and language

1825 - view

“The Aborigine, who assists me in obtaining their language, informs me, that there is a being, in the Sugar-loaf Mountains, resembling a man but taller in stature; with arms, legs, face, and hair, very long on the hair, but the feet are placed contrary to the face being behind; and the body hairy, like an animal…He is fierce, devouring men, and often pursuing the Aborigines in the mountains”

1825 - view

Australian Aboriginal Song[s]

1825 - view

Awabakal language in writing

1825 - view

Specimens of a Dialect of the Aborigines of New South Wales

1825 - view

superstitious ceremony…It appears that Berah-bahn [Biraban]…slept with two other Blacks on the grave of [a] girl…from sunsetting to sun rising for the purpose of obtaining ‘The Bone’, the mystic bone used in the mystic ring, and supposed to be in the abdomen of certain persons skilled in curing sickness and in knocking out the teeth with the bone without pair to the sufferer

1825 - view

Be-rah-bahn returned from a ceremony performed in the mountains, which has initiated him into the rights of an Aborigine. – It appears that they burn a large part of the country, then hunt kangaroos, feast upon the shank bones only, after which they pipe clay themselves all over and then everyone must rush at once into the water and bathe themselves clean

1825 - view

“murri budgel” or very sick

1825 - view

Charlewal and Dick, to dive for mud oysters, and when roasted at the bush fire, they were excellent

1827 - view

Aboriginal Dialect

1827 - view

Some of these farm camps had been in occasional or cyclical use for thousands of years. Kelvinside homestead at Aberdeen, for example, is the site of an important Bora ground