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Kaurna

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The Kaurna people (English: /ˈɡɑːrnə/, Kaurna: [ɡ̊auɳa]; also Coorna, Kaura, Gaurna and other variations) are a group of Aboriginal people whose traditional lands include the Adelaide Plains of South Australia. They were known as the Adelaide tribe by the early settlers. Kaurna culture and language were almost completely destroyed within a few decades of the British colonisation of South Australia in 1836. However, extensive documentation by early missionaries and other researchers has enabled a modern revival of both language and culture. The phrase Kaurna meyunna means "Kaurna people".

Etymology

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The early settlers of South Australia referred to the various indigenous tribes of the Adelaide Plains and Fleurieu Peninsula as "Rapid Bay tribe", "the Encounter Bay tribe", "the Adelaide tribe", the Kouwandilla tribe, "the Wirra tribe", "the Noarlunga tribe" (the Ngurlonnga band) and the Willunga tribe (the Willangga band).[1]

The extended family groups of the Adelaide Plains, who spoke dialects of a common language, were named according to locality, such as Kawanda Meyunna (North men), Wirra Meyunna (Forest People), Pietta Meyunna (Murray River people), Wito Meyunna (Adelaide clan's former name), Tandanya (South Adelaide people), etc. – but they had no common name for themselves. The name Kaurna was not recorded until 1879, used by Alfred William Howitt in 1904,[2] but not widely used until popularised by Norman B. Tindale in the 1920s.[3] Most likely, it is an exonym introduced from the Ramindjeri or Ngarrindjeri word kornar meaning "men" or "people".[3]

Kaurna meyunna, meaning Kaurna people,[4] is often used in greetings and Welcome to Country or Acknowledgement of Country ceremonies.[5][6]

Language

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Kaurna'war:a (Kaurna speech)[7] belongs to the Thura-Yura branch of the Pama–Nyungan languages.[8] The first word lists taken down of the Kaurna language date to 1826.[9] A knowledge of Kaurna language was keenly sought by many of the early settlers. William Williams and James Cronk were the first settlers to gain a working knowledge of the language, and to publish a Kaurna wordlist, which they did in 1840.[10] When George Gawler, South Australia's third Governor, arrived in October 1838, he gave a speech to the local Indigenous population through a translator, William Wyatt (later third interim Protector of Aborigines), assisted by Williams and Cronk. Gawler actively encouraged the settlers to learn Kaurna, and advocated using the Kaurna names for geographic landmarks.[11]

In October 1838 two German missionaries, Christian Teichelmann and Clamor Schürmann, arrived on the same ship as Gawler in 1838, and immediately set about learning and documenting the language.[12] In December 1839, they opened a school at Piltawodli (in the west Park Lands north of the River Torrens) where the children were taught to read and write in Kaurna. Schurmann and Teichelmann (and later Samuel Klose[13]) translated the Ten Commandments and a number of German hymns into Kaurna, with Schürmann attempting to 'Christianize' and 'civilize' the people.[14] Although they never achieved their goal of translating the entire Bible, their recorded vocabulary of over 2,000 words was the largest wordlist registered by that time, and pivotal in the modern revival of the language.[15]

Territory

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Approximate extent of Kaurna territory, based on the description by Amery (2000)

Kaurna territory extended from Cape Jervis at the bottom of the Fleurieu Peninsula to Port Wakefield on the eastern shore of Gulf St Vincent, and as far north as Crystal Brook in the Mid North. Tindale claimed clans were found living in the vicinity of Snowtown, Blyth, Hoyleton, Hamley Bridge, Clarendon, Gawler and Myponga. The stringy bark forests over the back of the Mount Lofty Ranges have been claimed as a traditional boundary between Kaurna and Peramangk people. Tunkalilla Beach (keinari), 20 kilometres (12 mi) east of Cape Jervis, is the traditional boundary with the Ramindjeri.[citation needed]

This is the most widely cited alignment of Kaurna territorial boundaries. However, according to Ronald and Catherine Berndt the neighbouring Ramindjeri tribe asserts a historical territory including the whole southern portion of the Fleurieu Peninsula and Kangaroo Island, extending as far north as Noarlunga[16][17] or even the River Torrens.[18] This overlaps with a significant portion of the territory claimed by both the Kaurna and the neighbouring Ngarrindjeri to the east. However, linguistic evidence suggests that the Aboriginal people encountered by Colonel Light at Rapid Bay in 1836 were Kaurna speakers.[19] The Berndts' ethnographic study, which was conducted in the 1930s, identified six Ngarrindjeri clans occupying the coast from Cape Jervis to a few kilometres south of Adelaide. The Berndts posited that the clans may have expanded along trade routes as the Kaurna were dispossessed by colonists.[17]

A main Kaurna presence was in Tarndanyangga ("red kangaroo place") near the River Torrens and the creeks that flowed into it, an area that became the site of the Adelaide city centre. Kaurna people also resided in the suburb of Burnside, and an early settler of the village of Beaumont described the local people thus:

At every creek and gully you would see their wurlies and their fires at night ... often as many as 500 to 600 would be camped in various places ... some behind the Botanic Gardens on the banks of the river; some toward the Ranges; some on the Waterfall Gully.[20]

Dispossession

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Although Governors Hindmarsh (1836–1838) and Gawler (1838–1841) had orders to extend the protection of British law to the people and their property, the colonists' interests came first; their policy of "civilising" and "protecting" the Indigenous people nonetheless assumed a peaceful transfer of land to the settlers. All land was offered up for sale and bought by settlers.[21]

The Lutheran missionaries Christian Teichelmann and Clamor Schurmann studied Kaurna language and culture, and were able to inform the authorities of their exclusive ownership of land inherited through the paternal line. Gawler reserved several areas for the Kaurna people, but the settlers protested and these areas were subsequently sold or leased. Within ten years, all of the Kaurna and Ramindjeri lands were occupied by Europeans. Wild fauna disappeared as European garden practices were introduced and grazing animals destroyed the bulbs, lilies and tubers that the Kaurna had tended for food. Elders no longer had authority; their entire way of life had been undermined.[21]

Population

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1790s–1860s

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The Kaurna may have numbered several thousand before European contact, but were down to about 700 by the time of the formal establishment of the colony in 1836.[22] Initially, contacts began with the arrival of sealers and whalers in the 1790s.[22] Sealers established themselves on Kangaroo Island as early as 1806, and raided the mainland for Kaurna women, both for the sexual opportunities and the workforce they could supply in skinning the sealers' prey.[9] Wary of Europeans from their experience with sealers, the Kaurna generally stayed aloof when the first colonists arrived.[23] The timing was important. Summer was a period when the Kaurna traditionally moved from the plains to the foothills, so that the initial settlement of the Adelaide area took place without any conflict.[24]

The population again severely declined upon the arrival of Anglo-European colonial settlers with South Australia Governor Captain John Hindmarsh as Commander-in-chief in December 1836 at Holdfast Bay (now Glenelg). According to an entry in the South Australian Register (30 January 1842), the Kaurna population numbered around 650.[25] They had suffered a serious drop in numbers in the early 1830s (and possibly again in 1889)[2] due to a smallpox epidemic which is thought to have originated in the eastern states and spread along the Murray River as Indigenous groups traded with each other.[26] This devastated their lives in every way.[2] An outbreak of typhoid, due to pollution by Europeans of the River Torrens, lead to many deaths and a rapid population decline, though accurate figures were not recorded.[26] Many contracted other diseases against which they lacked immunity, such as measles, whooping cough, typhus, dysentery and influenza. The groups lost their identities as they merged with others, and the Kaurna and Ramindjeri people were reduced to very few.[27] In the 1840s, Murray River people invaded, stealing women and children, while the government suppressed the Kaurna attempts at self-defence. Some Kaurna moved north to join other tribes.[28]

The Colonisation Commissioners had promised to protect the Aboriginal people and their property as well as making provision for their subsistence, education and advancement,[2] with the post of Protector of Aborigines set up with this aim. William Wyatt was followed by the first official appointment in the role, Matthew Moorhouse, who held the post from 1839 to 1856. He reported in 1840 that many Kaurna were friendly and helpful, and that by 1840, about 150 spoke at least some English. Many Kaurna men, such as Mullawirraburka ("King John") and Kadlitpinna ("Captain Jack") helped the police and new settlers, also sharing their language, culture and beliefs with the missionaries.[29] An early settler in Marryatville, George Brunskill, reported that the "local Blacks" were harmless, did not steal, and returned borrowed items promptly.[30] Much goodwill was shown on both sides, but as the settler numbers grew, their drunkenness, violence, exploitation and failure to practise the reciprocity expected in Aboriginal culture soured the relationships.[31]

After a few incidents involving the executions of Aboriginal men after the murders of settlers, sometimes on flimsy evidence, and a blind eye turned to violence against Indigenous people, the situation escalated. The Maria massacre of shipwrecked people on the Coorong led to further violent clashes and harsh penalties were imposed to protect the settlers. Missionaries Teichelmann and Schurmann, Protector Moorhouse and Sub-Protector Edward John Eyre questioned the use of a foreign legal code against the Indigenous peoples, and Moorhouse complained of police hostility towards Aboriginal people, but Governor George Grey stood firm, and martial law was applied even where there had been little previous contact with the settlers.[32]

Moorhouse and Grey gave up trying to settle the local Aboriginal people as farmers, and discouraged settlement at Pirltawardli. The 1847 Vagrancy Act restricted their free movement.[33] Teichelmann tried to establish an Aboriginal mission settlement at Happy Valley, about 20 kilometres (12 mi) south of Adelaide, but he lacked the means to develop the property or make farming a viable option for the Kaurna.[34] Many Kaurna people worked for the settlers and were well thought of, but the work was seasonal and the rewards inadequate, and their tribal obligations were not understood by their employers. Grey started the use of rations to maintain the peace and to persuade the people to send their children to school.[35]

According to Moorhouse, "almost whole tribes" had disappeared by 1846,[36] and by the 1850s, there were few remaining Kaurna in the Adelaide area. In 1850 the children (mostly from the Murray River area, but including a few Kaurna[37]) at the Native School (which had been on Kintore Avenue since 1846) were transferred to the Poonindie Native Training Institution near Port Lincoln, on the Eyre Peninsula, over 600 kilometres (370 mi) away.[38] Moorhouse resigned as Protector in 1856, and in 1857 the position was abolished.[39]

The Kaurna people had to accept colonial domination more quickly than in other regions, and they mostly chose to co-exist peacefully with the settlers. Most, however, resisted the "civilising" policies of the government and the Christian teachings of the missionaries. Being so small in number by the 1850s, some were absorbed into the neighbouring Narungga or Ngarrindjeri groups, and some married settlers.[27]

1860s–present

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By 1860 the Kaurna were vastly outnumbered by the colonists, who numbered 117,727. Adults were also relocated from the city to places such as Willunga, Point McLeay, and Point Pearce in the 1860s. In 1888 a German missionary reported that there was "scarcely one remaining".[27] Some of the Kaurna people settled at Point McLeay and Point Pearce married into local families, and full-blood Kaurna still lived at the missions and scattered in the settled districts in the late 19th century, despite the wide belief that the "Adelaide tribe" was extinct by the 1870s.[40]

Rations continued to be supplied in Adelaide and from ration depots in the country. Although the office of Protector was restored in 1861, the government did not play an active role in Aboriginal affairs, leaving their welfare to the missionaries. A Select Committee reported that the race was doomed to extinction. Some Aboriginal people (Kaurna and others) moved around and sometimes visited the city, camping in Botanic Park, then called the Police Paddocks. In 1874, 18 men and women were arrested and charged as "vagrants", and after a 14 days' imprisonment were sent back to Goolwa and Milang. Running battles between the police and similar groups continued for decades.[41]

History books about Adelaide have largely ignored the Aboriginal presence, and Womadelaide is held each year in Botanic Park without acknowledgement of the Aboriginal encampments 150 years ago on the same land. There is a tradition of performing corroborees and dances dating back to the 1840s, including the "Grand Corroboree" at the Adelaide Oval in 1885 and corroborees at the beaches of Glenelg and Henley Beach around the turn of the century. This huge omission in the history books has been described as "strategic forgetting" by anthropologist W. E. H. Stanner.[42]

The last surviving person of full Kaurna descent, a woman called Ivaritji (Amelia Taylor or Amelia Savage[43]) died in 1929.[44][a] Born in Port Adelaide in the late 1840s, her name means "gentle, misty rain" in the Kaurna language. Her father, Ityamai-itpina, known as "Rodney", was one of the leaders of the Kaurna and prominent in the early settlers' accounts.[43] She was responsible for identifying locations of cultural significance in the city, such as the lake in the Adelaide Botanic Garden and Victoria Square/Tarndanyangga, and Whitmore Square has been given her name in honour of the prior occupation of the land by the Kaurna people.[45]

Native title

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Unlike the rest of Australia, South Australia was not considered to be terra nullius. The enactment of the South Australia Act 1834 which enabled the province of South Australia to be established, acknowledged Aboriginal ownership and stated that no actions could be undertaken that would "affect the rights of any Aboriginal natives of the said province to the actual occupation and enjoyment in their own persons or in the persons of their descendants of any land therein now actually occupied or enjoyed by such natives". Although the Act guaranteed land rights under force of law for the Indigenous inhabitants, it was ignored by the South Australian Company authorities and squatters, who interpreted the Act to mean "permanently occupied".[46][47]

In 2000, a group called Kaurna Yerta Corporation[48] lodged a native title claim on behalf of the Kaurna people. The claim covers over 8,000 square kilometres (3,100 sq mi) of land stretching from Cape Jervis to Port Broughton, including the entire Adelaide metropolitan area.[49] The Ramindjeri people contested the southern portion of the original claim.[18] In March 2018 the determination was made and the Kaurna were officially recognised as the traditional owners of the land from "Myponga to Lower Light". An Indigenous land use agreement for the area was finalised on 19 November 2018.[50] The agreement was among the South Australian government, the federal government and the Kaurna people, with formal recognition coming after the Federal Court judgement, 18 years after lodgement. This was the first claim for a first land use agreement to be agreed to in any Australian capital city. The rights cover Adelaide's whole metropolitan area and includes "17 parcels of undeveloped land not under freehold". Some of the land is Crown land, some belongs to the state government and some is private land owned by corporations. Justice Debra Mortimer said it would be "the first time in Australia that there [had] been a positive outcome within the area of (native title) determination".[51][52]

In 2009, a group called Encompass Technology[53] wrote to the Governor of South Australia on behalf of the Kaurna people, asserting sovereignty over the Marble Hill ruins in the Adelaide Hills, and the Warriparinga Living Kaurna Cultural Centre in Marion, and claiming that they were owed nearly $50 million in rent.[53] The South Australian Government rejected the claim.[54]

Culture

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The Kaurna people were a hunter-gatherer society, who changed their dwellings according to climatic conditions: in summer they would camp near the coastal springs fishing for mulloway. With the onset of winter, they would retire to the woodlands, often using hollowed out fallen redgums along creeks, with bark extensions as shelters.[55] Sudden downpours could quench their fires, the maintaining of which was old women's work, with deadly consequences. At times they would have to impose themselves on otherwise despised tribes, such as the Ngaiawang and Nganguruku to trade goods like their cloaks, quartz flints and red ochre in order to obtain firesticks.[56]

Among their customs was the practice of fire-stick farming (deliberately lit bushfires for hunting purposes) in the Adelaide Hills, which the early European settlers spotted before the Kaurna were displaced. These fires were part of a scrub clearing process to encourage grass growth for emu and kangaroo.[57] This tradition led to conflict with the colonists as the fires tended to cause considerable damage to farmland. In an official report, Major Thomas O'Halloran claimed the Kaurna also used this as a weapon against the colonists by lighting fires to deliberately destroy fences, survey pegs and to scatter livestock. Due to this regular burning by the time the first Europeans arrived, the foothills' original stringybark forests had been largely replaced with grassland. Since the late 1960s, restrictions on foothills subdivision and development have allowed regeneration of native trees and bush to a "natural" condition that would not have existed at the time of European occupation.[58]

Artefacts

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Items of Kaurna material culture, such as traditional objects, spears, boomerangs and nets etc. are extremely rare. Interest in collecting and conserving Kaurna culture was not common until their display at the 1889 Paris Exhibition spurred an interest in Indigenous culture, by which time the Kaurna traditional culture was no longer practised. Many hundreds of objects were sent to the Paris exhibition and these were never returned to Australia.[citation needed]

The Kaurna collection held by the South Australian Museum contains only 48 items.[when?] In September 2002, a Living Kaurna Cultural Centre was opened at Warriparinga in the southern suburbs area of Adelaide.

Tribal organisation

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The Kaurna people lived in family groups called bands, who lived in defined territories called pangkarra which were "passed" from father to son upon his initiation. Pangkarra always had access to the coastline and ran extensively inland. The coastline was essential for seafood hunting and the inland territories provided food, clothing and protection for the people during bad weather. The pangkarra were also grouped into larger areas of land called yerta.[b]

As all the members of a band were related, marriage between a man and a woman within the same band was forbidden. Bands were patrilineal and patrilocal: a woman always lived with her husband's band following her marriage. Each band was also composed of two exogamous moieties, the Karuru and Mattari, which traced their descent matrilineally to an ancestral totemic being. All the children of a marriage would take their mother's moiety as children were considered to have "inherited" their "flesh and blood" from their mothers alone. Marriage within the same moiety was forbidden.[59] Girls became marriageable at puberty, usually around 12 years of age. Conversely, men were only allowed to marry after the age of 25.[60]

Sexual relations were relatively free and uninhibited, regardless of marital status. Kaurna ownership of property was communal; the reproductive organs were seen no differently from any other form of property, and thus adultery was practically ubiquitous. The visitation of men from distant tribes was seen as a good opportunity to enhance the gene pool. The practice of milla mangkondi or wife stealing was also common, for the same reason.[c] Although this custom was hated by some victims, as arranged marriages were the norm, some women saw it as an opportunity to choose their own partners and actively encouraged a preferred suitor; all Kaurna bands are said to have engaged in the practice regularly.[61]

Rites and mythology

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Very little is known of Kaurna rites and mythology as colonial written records are fragmentary and rare. Physically, the Kaurna practised chest scarification and performed circumcision as an initiatory rite and were the southernmost Indigenous language group to do so. Waterfall Gully has been linked to initiation rites.[62]

Historical accounts of Kaurna burial rites are unreliable as any gathering of Kaurna was thought to be for a funeral. As soon as a person died the body was wrapped in the clothes they had worn in life. The body was then placed on a wiralli (crossed sticks that form the radii of a circle) and an inquest was held to determine cause of death. The body was then buried. Children under four years were not buried for some months, but were wrapped and carried by their mothers during the day with the bundle being used as a pillow at night.[63] Burial by bodies of water was common with the use of sandy beaches, sand dunes and banks of rivers. A large number of graves have been found on Glenelg beach and at Port Noarlunga.[64] Similarly, an unusually complex burial at Kongaratti was found. The grave was rectangular and lined with slate, the base was also lined with slate which had been covered with a bed of grass. An elderly woman was lying on her side, draped in a fishing net and wrapped in a Kangaroo skin cloak. The grave was topped with a layer of grass covered by marine sponges.[64]

Similar to a Peramangk dreamtime legend, the Kaurna regard the 35 miles from the Mount Lofty Ranges to Nuriootpa as the body of a giant called Nganno (often pronounced Nunoo) who was killed there after attacking their tribe. The peaks of the Mount Lofty Ranges and Mount Bonython are jureidla (conserved in the toponym Uraidla), namely his "two ears".[65] There are other traditional stories connected to the two peaks Mt Lofty and Mt Bonython, one story concerning two men and another referring to the two moiety groups of the Kaurna.[66] The general theme of these stories surrounding the two peaks is the importance of community and the notion of unselfishness as a practice which supports community.

A legend recounted variously by Unaipon and Milerum concerns a culture hero called Tjilbruke[67] has topographical features that locate it in Kaurna territory. In Tindale's version Tjilbruke is associated with the glossy ibis; the name actually refers to the blue crane.[68] The "Tjilbruke Dreaming Tracks" have been mapped from the Bedford Park area (Warriparinga), down the Fleurieu Peninsula, and efforts have been made to preserve and commemorate it where possible.[69]

Munaitjerlo is an ancestral being who created the Moon and stars before himself becoming the Sun. The word Munaitjerlo was believed by Teichelmann to also refer to the Kaurna Dreamtime itself. The mythology of the Mura-Muras, ancestral beings who created landscape features and introduced laws and initiation, can be found in southwest Queensland, the Northern Territory and in the Flinders Ranges through to Eyre Peninsula in South Australia. As it is known that the Kaurna shared a common Dreaming with these peoples it is likely they shared the Mura-Muras as well. By way of contrast, the travels of Tjilbruke are well known from Norman Tindale's research.[64]

Seasons

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The Kaurna seasonal calendar is divided into four seasons, roughly equivalent to summer, autumn, winter and spring:[70]

  • Warltati, the hot season, from January to March (warlta = hot, heat and warmth)
  • Parnati, the windy season, from April to June (waitpi = windy)
  • Kudlila, the wet season, from July to September (kudlinthi = to wash the earth)
  • Wirltutu, the mild warm season, October to December (indicated by the position of wirltu, the eagle's foot constellation, or Southern Cross, in the sky)

Cultural revival

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From the 1970s onwards, a number of elders and community leaders led a cultural revival, and were responsible for introducing Kaurna perspectives into the SA education curriculum, establishing the Tjilbruke Dreaming Track and other initiatives. These people included Lewis O'Brien, Gladys Elphick, Alitya (Alice) Rigney, and Georgina Williams of the South Australian Museum. Much of its Aboriginal Studies curriculum is based on The Kaurna People (1989).[71] Many Kaurna people grew up in Bukkiyana (Point Pearce mission) and Raukkan (Macleay mission) and experienced some aspects of Narungga and Ngarrindjeri culture, and gradually started reclaiming Kaurna skills and Dreaming stories.[72]

Organisations

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The Kaurna Aboriginal Community and Heritage Association (KACHA) is recognised as the representative body for all Kaurna people. Starting life as the Tjilbruke Track Committee based at the South Australian Museum, it was renamed as the Kaurna Heritage Committee before growing into KACHA, which encompasses broader issues than cultural heritage concerns, including rebuilding the language and culture.[72]

The Kaurna Yerta Aboriginal Corporation represents Kaurna people, and was involved in the creation of the Wangayarta memorial park and burial site in 2021.[73]

Dance

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There are at least two groups of Kaurna traditional dancers in South Australia:

Kaurna place names

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The name of the Onkaparinga River (pictured) is derived from the Kaurna language.

Many places around Adelaide and the Fleurieu Peninsula have names either directly or partially derived from Kaurna place names, such as Cowandilla, Aldinga, Morialta and Munno Para. Some were the names of the Kaurna bands who lived there. There are also a few Kaurna names hybridised with European words.[81]

The Adelaide City Council began the process of dual naming all of the city squares, each of the parks making up the parklands which surround the Adelaide city centre and North Adelaide, and other sites of significance to the Kaurna people in 1997.[82] The naming process, which assigned an extra name in the Kaurna language to each place, was mostly completed in 2003,[83] and the renaming of 39 sites finalised and endorsed by the council in 2012.[84]

Alternative names

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  • "Adelaide tribe"
  • Coorna
  • Jaitjawar:a ("our own language")
  • Koornawarra
  • Kurumidlanta (Pangkala term, lit. "evil spirits")
  • Medaindi (horde living near Glenelg), Medaindie
  • Meljurna. ("quarrelsome men", likewise used of northern Kaurna hordes)
  • Merelde (Ramindjeri term applied most frequently to the Peramangk but also to the Kaurna)[25]
  • Merildekald (Tanganekald term also loosely given to Peramangk)
  • Meyu (meju = man)
  • Midlanta (Pangkala exonym for the Kaurna)
  • Milipitingara
  • Nantuwara ("Kangaroo speakers", applied to northerly hordes)
  • Nantuwaru
  • Nganawara
  • Padnaindi (horde name), Padnayndie
  • Wakanuwan (Jarildekald term for Kaurna and also other tribes such as the Ngaiawang)
  • Warra (means "speech", a name for language), Warrah, Karnuwarra ("hills language", a northern dialect, presumably that of Port Wakefield)
  • Widninga (Ngadjuri term applied to Kaurna of Port Wakefield and Buckland Park)
  • Winaini (horde north of Gawler)
  • Winnaynie

Repatriation of remains

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On 1 August 2019, the remains of 11 Kaurna people were laid to rest at a ceremony led by elder Jeffrey Newchurch at Kingston Park Coastal Reserve, south of Adelaide. John Carty, Head of Humanities at the South Australian Museum, said that the museum was "passionate" about working with the Kaurna people to repatriate their ancestors, and would also be helping to educate the community about what it means to Aboriginal people. The Museum continues to receive further remains of Aboriginal people from overseas museums, in addition to the large amount of remains it already has. While many of these ancestral remains may be returned to Country by their families, who many of these people were is unknown. Due to the large number of remains which continues to grow and that many are unknown, a way to return these ancestors to Country, such as a memorial park, needed to be found.[85]

In 2021, a new 2 ha (4.9-acre) burial site was built in the cemetery to accommodate the repatriated remains of Kaurna people, called Wangayarta, in Evanston South. It was designed by a group that included elders Uncle Jeffrey Newchurch, Aunty Heather Agius, Uncle Major "Moogy" Sumner, and many others, and was supported by the Kaurna Yerta Aboriginal Corporation.[86] The memorial site is in the shape of the Kaurna shield, to protect the ancestors now buried there.[87]

In November 2021, the South Australian Museum apologised to the Kaurna people for having held 4,600 Aboriginal remains over the past 165 years, and buried the first 100 remains of their ancestors at the site.[87] A second round of burials took place in June 2022.[88]

Notable people

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Jack Buckskin

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Jack Kanya Kudnuitya Buckskin (born c. 1986[74]), a Kaurna/Narungga man[89] also known as Vincent Buckskin, who was Young South Australian of the Year in 2011, is a teacher of Kaurna language and culture.[80]

The impetus for his work stems from when he was just 19, and having become the second in his family to have finished Year 12, and started at university, received the news that his sister Mary, who had moved to Darwin, had committed suicide. Uncle Stevie Goldsmith (see below) invited him to join the Taikurtinna dance group to lift his spirits, and he first danced in public at Festival Plaza, featuring in a Bollywood film called Love Story 2050.[74] He has since established his own traditional dance group, Kuma Karro ("One Blood") in 2008, which has performed nationally and internationally,[79] and has taught dance at Kaurna Plains School.[80] Kuma Kaaru has since evolved into a hub for many local Aboriginal cultural services,[90] employing 12 people who aim to teach both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people about the language, culture diversity of Aboriginal peoples. They work with schools, the South Australian Music Awards, Sydney Swans, and many others.[91]

Buckskin has taught Kaurna language at Warriparinga through the School of Languages; at Salisbury High School; Kaurna Plains School, Le Fevre High School; and at Adelaide High School. He works with Rob Amery on language revival at the University of Adelaide[79]

A documentary directed by Dylan River and Glynn McDonald, portraying Buckskin's engagement with his language and culture, titled Buckskin, was released in 2013[92][93] and is available on SBS on Demand.[94] In 2018, the City of Port Adelaide Enfield honoured him with an award.[79]

In 2020, he delivered the Kaurna Welcome to Country for the online theatre series, Decameron 2.0, during the COVID-19 pandemic, and acted in a single-actor play by Alexis West in the series.[95][96][97][98]

As of 2023 Buckskin works at Tauondi Aboriginal College in Port Adelaide as a cultural adviser and mentor,[89] and is frequently called upon to perform Welcomes to Country. He and his partner Khesanh, whom he met while both were attending Salisbury High School, have three children, who have learnt to speak Kaurna at home.[74]

Uncle Stevie Goldsmith

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Stephen "Gadlabarti" Goldsmith (died July 2017), known as Uncle Stevie, a Kaurna, Narungga, and Ngarrindjeri man,[99] was a respected cultural adviser. He worked at the Kaurna language revival centre at the University of Adelaide, Kaurna Warra Pintyanthi (KWP), and advised the South Australian Museum and the Art Gallery of South Australia.

Uncle Stevie established and danced with the Taikurtinna (meaning "family") group, and was an accomplished player of the yidaki. He was frequently called upon to deliver Welcomes to Country, including at WOMADelaide and other WOMAD festivals overseas.[75] He also acted on television and stage, including the Adelaide Festival production of The Secret River, and appeared in many advertisements.[77]

After his death, Rob Amery, head of KWP, wrote on his staff web page: "This has been a great loss to the team who relied on Steve for so much - role model, mentor, Kurraka in the Pirltawardli Puppet Show, performer, editorm camera operator, cultural advisor, etc.".[100]

Goldsmith was honoured at the 2017 Lord Mayor of Adelaide's NAIDOC Awards, and awarded Male Elder of the Year. He was a fan of the Adelaide Crows AFL team, and after his death, the team wore black armbands at the Showdown game.[75] In 2018, an award was created in his honour as part of the Ruby Awards – the Stevie Gadlabarti Goldsmith Memorial Award[101][102] Major Moogy Sumner won the inaugural award.[103] "Uncle Stevie's Classroom" continues in KidZone at WOMADelaide.[99] "The Portrait of Stephen Goldsmith" is a mural Wright Street, Adelaide city centre, by Jimmy C (James Cochran) with Eizabeth Close, painted in 2018. Uncle Stevie's son Jamie is a well-known yidaki player and dancer with the Taikurtinna group, who has also been honoured by a mural painted by Jimmy C, in Frank's Lane.[77][78]

Other notable Kaurna people

[edit]

Uncle Major "Moogy" Sumner AM is a widely respected Ngarrindjeri and Kaurna elder,[104] who mostly works to further Ngarrindjeri culture.[105]

Other notable Kaurna people include:

See also

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ Tindale incorrectly gives her date of death as 1931 (Tindale 1974, pp. 133, 213), an error that has been propagated in other sources.
  2. ^ yerta means ("earth, ground, soil, country"), and was regarded by Taplin as equivalent to the word ruwe in Ngarrindjeri. The other Kaurna word pangkarra definitely implies land ownership (Amery 2016, p. 116).
  3. ^ Milla mangkondi. Milla: a noun denoting violence or force. Mangkondi: a verb meaning to touch or grab hold of a woman, more specifically a young woman.

References

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ Ross 1984, p. 5.
  2. ^ a b c d Lockwood 2017, p. 65.
  3. ^ a b Amery 2016, p. 3.
  4. ^ Telfer & Malone 2012.
  5. ^ Charles Stuart: Kaurna.
  6. ^ City of Adelaide 2020.
  7. ^ Tindale 1974, p. 133.
  8. ^ Clendon 2015, p. 2.
  9. ^ a b Amery 2016, p. 57.
  10. ^ Amery 2016, pp. 61, 93.
  11. ^ Amery 2016, pp. 64–65.
  12. ^ Amery 2016, p. 65.
  13. ^ Harris 2014.
  14. ^ Amery 2016, pp. 66–68, 86.
  15. ^ Amery 2016, p. 86.
  16. ^ Amery 2016, p. 4.
  17. ^ a b Berndt, Berndt & Stanton 1993, p. 312.
  18. ^ a b Wheatley 2009.
  19. ^ Amery 2016, p. 5.
  20. ^ Warburton 1981, p. xv.
  21. ^ a b Lockwood 2017, p. 67.
  22. ^ a b Lockwood 2017, p. 66.
  23. ^ Amery 2016, p. 59.
  24. ^ Jenkin 1979, p. 32.
  25. ^ a b Tindale 1974.
  26. ^ a b Amery 2016, p. 74.
  27. ^ a b c Lockwood 2017, pp. 65, 66.
  28. ^ Lockwood 2017, p. 68.
  29. ^ Lockwood 2017, pp. 68–69.
  30. ^ Brown 1989, pp. 24–28.
  31. ^ Lockwood 2017, p. 69.
  32. ^ Lockwood 2017, pp. 70–71.
  33. ^ Lockwood 2017, p. 71.
  34. ^ Lockwood 2017, p. 73.
  35. ^ Lockwood 2017, pp. 74–5.
  36. ^ Lockwood 2017, p. 81.
  37. ^ Lockwood 2017, p. 77.
  38. ^ O'Brien & Paul 2013.
  39. ^ Gara 2017, p. 86.
  40. ^ Gara 2017, pp. 86–87.
  41. ^ Gara 2017, pp. pp=86–87.
  42. ^ Gara 2017, pp. 104–105.
  43. ^ a b Gara 1990, p. 64.
  44. ^ Amery 2016, p. 1.
  45. ^ Whitmore.
  46. ^ Ngadjuri Walpa Juri Lands and Heritage Association n.d.
  47. ^ Parliament of South Australia 2006.
  48. ^ Holdfast Bay 2003.
  49. ^ NNTT 2000.
  50. ^ NNTT 2018.
  51. ^ Richards 2018.
  52. ^ Richards 2020.
  53. ^ a b newsmaker.com.au 2009.
  54. ^ ABC News 2009.
  55. ^ Tindale 1974, p. 71.
  56. ^ Tindale 1974, p. 73.
  57. ^ Archived copy.
  58. ^ Smith, Pate & Martin 2006.
  59. ^ Ross 1984, pp. 3–5.
  60. ^ "Marriage in Traditional Aboriginal Societies". ALRC. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  61. ^ Monger, George. Marriage Customs of the World: From Henna to Honeymoons. p. 3.
  62. ^ Ross 1984, p. 3.
  63. ^ Aboriginal and Historic Places around Metropolitan Adelaide and the South Coast p. 8 (Tindale 1936)
  64. ^ a b c Aboriginal and Historic Places around Metropolitan Adelaide and the South Coast p. 7
  65. ^ Tindale 1974, p. 64.
  66. ^ "Peramangk A Social History of the Aboriginal People of the Southern Mount Lofty Ranges (2011)" (PDF). Phasai at Deviantart. Retrieved 29 March 2022.
  67. ^ Tindale 1987, pp. 5–13.
  68. ^ Amery 2016, p. 115.
  69. ^ kaurnaculture.
  70. ^ "Kaurna calendar". Indigenous Weather Knowledge. Bureau of Meteorology. Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  71. ^ ED.oSA 1989.
  72. ^ a b Amery 2016, pp. 12–14.
  73. ^ Skujins, Angela; Von Einem, Johnny (13 December 2021). "The weight of Wangayarta". CityMag. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
  74. ^ a b c d e Willis, Belinda (14 November 2023). "Buckskin grapples with unwelcome words in his country". InDaily. Retrieved 19 November 2023.
  75. ^ a b c "Passing Of Stevie Goldsmith". SA Native Title. 30 August 2017. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
  76. ^ "Kaurna Welcome". WOMADelaide 2022. 13 March 2023. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
  77. ^ a b c "Stevie Goldsmith's work as a cultural educator remembered in mural by Jimmy C, Elizabeth Close in Adelaide city". Adelaide AZ. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
  78. ^ a b "The Seasons // Bowerbird Collective". Chamber Music Adelaide. 26 September 2023. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
  79. ^ a b c d "Re-Awakening Kaurna, the language of the Adelaide Plains". Alumni and Giving. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
  80. ^ a b c "Vincent Buckskin". Australian of the Year. 2011. Retrieved 19 November 2023.
  81. ^ Amery & Buckskin 2009.
  82. ^ Placenaming initiatives.
  83. ^ Placename meanings.
  84. ^ Kaurna place naming.
  85. ^ Sutton 2019.
  86. ^ Skujins, Angela; Von Einem, Johnny (13 December 2021). "The weight of Wangayarta". CityMag. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
  87. ^ a b Mullins, Sarah (7 December 2021). "SA Museum apologises for holding 4,600 Aboriginal remains as first repatriations laid to rest on Country". Australia: ABC News. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  88. ^ Von Einem, Johnny (30 June 2022). "'It never gets easier, brother': Wangayarta reburials continue". CityMag. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
  89. ^ a b "Jack Kanya Kudnuitya Buckskin". Adelaide Symphony Orchestra.
  90. ^ "About Us". Kuma Kaaru. 15 February 2023. Retrieved 19 November 2023.
  91. ^ "Our Team". Kuma Kaaru. 15 February 2023. Retrieved 19 November 2023.
  92. ^ "Buckskin". National Film and Sound Archive of Australia. Retrieved 23 August 2024.
  93. ^ "Buckskin". Screen Australia. Retrieved 23 August 2024.
  94. ^ "Buckskin". SBS On Demand. 2 July 2021. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
  95. ^ "Decameron 2.0". State Theatre Company of South Australia. 26 May 2022. Retrieved 24 July 2023.
  96. ^ Grbec, Monique (20 August 2020). "Decameron 2.0: Legacies of sacrifice". Witness Performance – Performance.Discussion.Community. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
  97. ^ "Decameron 2.0 (Episode One: Those Who Make Sacrifices)". Stage Whispers. 10 July 2020. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
  98. ^ Harris, Samela. "Decameron 2.0 Part 2". The Barefoot Review. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
  99. ^ a b "Welcome to Country". WOMADelaide. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
  100. ^ "Associate Professor Rob Amery". University of Adelaide Staff Directory. Retrieved 14 December 2023.
  101. ^ Peddie, Clare (3 November 2018). "Introducing the Stevie "Gadlabarti" Goldsmith Memorial Award, new to the Ruby Awards 2018". The Advertiser (Adelaide). Retrieved 8 November 2023.
  102. ^ "The Ruby Awards". Department of the Premier and Cabinet. 8 November 2023. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
  103. ^ "Ruby Awards 2018". Department of the Premier and Cabinet. 26 June 2019. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
  104. ^ "Adelaide Film Festival 2023 throws spotlight on SA made films". SAFC. 20 October 2023. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
  105. ^ "Major 'Moogy Sumner AM". SA Environment Awards. 1 August 2018. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
  106. ^ "A mark of respect for Georgina Williams". Onkaparinga Now. 28 April 2021. Retrieved 20 November 2023. The important ceremony also acknowledged 50 years of work and activism that Senior Kaurna Meyunna Woman Georgina Williams has dedicated to her people, her culture and the broader Onkaparinga community.
  107. ^ "Georgina Williams". City of Port Adelaide Enfield. 11 April 2023. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
  108. ^ Malone, Gavin (10 May 2007). "Ways of Belonging: Reconciliation and Adelaide's Public Space Indigenous Cultural Markers". Geographical Research. 45 (2). Wiley: 158–166. doi:10.1111/j.1745-5871.2007.00445.x. ISSN 1745-5863.
  109. ^ Strathearn, Peri (6 July 2021). "Ngarrindjeri elder Major 'Moogy' Sumner wins NAIDOC Week award". Murray Bridge News. Retrieved 20 October 2022.

Sources

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Further reading

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