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Australian Aboriginal religion and mythology

Australian Aboriginal religion and mythology is the sacred spirituality represented in the stories performed by Aboriginal Australians within each of the language groups across Australia in their ceremonies. Aboriginal spirituality includes the Dreamtime (the Dreaming), songlines, and Aboriginal oral literature.

The Djabugay language group's mythical being, Damarri, transformed into a mountain range, is seen lying on his back above the Barron River Gorge, looking upwards to the skies, within north-east Australia's wet tropical forested landscape.

Aboriginal spirituality often conveys descriptions of each group's local cultural landscape, adding meaning to the whole country's topography from oral history told by ancestors from some of the earliest recorded history. Most of these spiritualities belong to specific groups, but some span the whole continent in one form or another.

Antiquity edit

An Australian linguist, R. M. W. Dixon, recording Aboriginal myths in their original languages, encountered coincidences between some of the landscape details being told about within various myths, and scientific discoveries being made about the same landscapes.[1] In the case of the Atherton Tableland, myths tell of the origins of Lake Eacham, Lake Barrine, and Lake Euramoo. Geological research dated the formative volcanic explosions described by Aboriginal myth tellers as having occurred more than 10,000 years ago. Pollen fossil sampling from the silt which had settled to the bottom of the craters confirmed the Aboriginal myth-tellers' story. When the craters were formed, eucalyptus forests dominated rather than the current wet tropical rainforests.[2][3][a]

Dixon observed from the evidence available that Aboriginal myths regarding the origin of the Crater Lakes might be dated as accurate back to 10,000 years ago.[2] Further investigation of the material by the Australian Heritage Commission led to the Crater Lakes myth being listed nationally on the Register of the National Estate,[4] and included within Australia's World Heritage nomination of the wet tropical forests, as an "unparalleled human record of events dating back to the Pleistocene era."[5]

Since then, Dixon has assembled a number of similar examples of Australian Aboriginal myths that accurately describe landscapes of an ancient past. He particularly noted the numerous myths telling of previous sea levels, including:[2]

  • the Port Phillip myth (recorded as told to Robert Russell in 1850), describing Port Phillip Bay as once dry land, and the course of the Yarra River being once different, following what was then Carrum Carrum swamp.
  • the Great Barrier Reef coastline myth (told to Dixon) in Yarrabah, just south of Cairns, telling of a past coastline (since flooded) which stood at the edge of the current Great Barrier Reef, and naming places now completely submerged after the forest types and trees that once grew there.
  • the Lake Eyre myths (recorded by J. W. Gregory in 1906), telling of the deserts of Central Australia as once having been fertile, well-watered plains, and the deserts around present Lake Eyre having been one continuous garden. This oral story matches geologists' understanding that there was a wet phase to the early Holocene when the lake would have had permanent water.

Other volcanic eruptions in Australia may also be recorded in Aboriginal myths, including Mount Gambier in South Australia,[6] and Kinrara in northern Queensland.[7]

Aboriginal mythology: whole of Australia edit

 
Map of Indigenous peoples' regions in Australia
 
Geological map of Australia

The stories enshrined in Aboriginal mythology variously "tell significant truths within each Aboriginal group's local landscape. They effectively layer the whole of the Australian continent's topography with cultural nuance and deeper meaning, and empower selected audiences with the accumulated wisdom and knowledge of Australian Aboriginal ancestors back to time immemorial".[8]

David Horton's Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia contains an article on Aboriginal mythology observing:[9]

A mythic map of Australia would show thousands of characters, varying in their importance, but all in some way connected with the land. Some emerged at their specific sites and stayed spiritually in that vicinity. Others came from somewhere else and went somewhere else. Many were shape changing, transformed from or into human beings or natural species, or into natural features such as rocks but all left something of their spiritual essence at the places noted in their stories.

Australian Aboriginal mythologies have been characterised as "at one and the same time fragments of a catechism, a liturgical manual, a history of civilization, a geography textbook, and to a much smaller extent a manual of cosmography."[10]

Diversity across a continent edit

There are 900 distinct Aboriginal groups across Australia,[11] each distinguished by unique names usually identifying particular languages, dialects, or distinctive speech mannerisms.[12] Each language was used for original myths, from which the distinctive words and names of individual myths derive.

With so many distinct Aboriginal groups, languages, beliefs and practices, scholars cannot attempt to characterise, under a single heading, the full range and diversity of all myths being variously and continuously told, developed, elaborated, performed, and experienced by group members across the entire continent. Attempts to represent the different groupings in maps have varied widely.[13][14]

The Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia nevertheless observes: "One intriguing feature [of Aboriginal Australian mythology] is the mixture of diversity and similarity in myths across the entire continent."[9]

Public education about Aboriginal perspectives edit

The Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation's booklet, Understanding Country, formally seeks to introduce non-Indigenous Australians to Aboriginal perspectives on the environment. It makes the following generalisation about Aboriginal myths and mythology:[15]

...they generally describe the journeys of ancestral beings, often giant animals or people, over what began as a featureless domain. Mountains, rivers, waterholes, animal and plant species, and other natural and cultural resources came into being as a result of events which took place during these Dreamtime journeys. Their existence in present-day landscapes is seen by many Indigenous peoples as confirmation of their creation beliefs...
The routes taken by the Creator Beings in their Dreamtime journeys across land and sea... link many sacred sites together in a web of Dreamtime tracks criss-crossing the country. Dreaming tracks can run for hundreds, even thousands of kilometres, from desert to the coast [and] may be shared by peoples in countries through which the tracks pass...

An anthropological generalisation edit

Australian anthropologists willing to generalise suggest Aboriginal myths still being performed across Australia by Aboriginal peoples serve an important social function amongst their intended audiences: justifying the received ordering of their daily lives;[16] helping shape peoples' ideas; and assisting to influence others' behaviour.[17] In addition, such performance often continuously incorporates and "mythologises" historical events in the service of these social purposes in an otherwise rapidly changing modern world.

It is always integral and common... that the Law (Aboriginal law) is something derived from ancestral peoples or Dreamings and is passed down the generations in a continuous line. While... entitlements of particular human beings may come and go, the underlying relationships between foundational Dreamings and certain landscapes are theoretically eternal ... the entitlements of people to places are usually regarded strongest when those people enjoy a relationship of identity with one or more Dreamings of that place. This is an identity of spirit, a consubstantiality, rather than a matter of mere belief...: the Dreaming pre-exists and persists, while its human incarnations are temporary.[18]

An Aboriginal generalisation edit

Aboriginal specialists willing to generalise believe all Aboriginal myths across Australia, in combination, represent a kind of unwritten (oral) library within which Aboriginal peoples learn about the world and perceive a peculiarly Aboriginal 'reality' dictated by concepts and values vastly different from those of western societies:[19]

Aboriginal people learned from their stories that a society must not be human-centred but rather land centred, otherwise they forget their source and purpose ... humans are prone to exploitative behaviour if not constantly reminded they are interconnected with the rest of creation, that they as individuals are only temporal in time, and past and future generations must be included in their perception of their purpose in life.[19]

People come and go but the Land, and stories about the Land, stay. This is a wisdom that takes lifetimes of listening, observing and experiencing ... There is a deep understanding of human nature and the environment... sites hold 'feelings' which cannot be described in physical terms... subtle feelings that resonate through the bodies of these people... It is only when talking and being with these people that these 'feelings' can truly be appreciated. This is... the intangible reality of these people...[19]

Sacred sites edit

Aboriginal people observe some places as sacred, owing to their central place in the mythology of the local people.[20]

Pan-Australian mythology edit

Rainbow Serpent edit

 
Australian carpet python, one of the forms the 'Rainbow Serpent' character may take in 'Rainbow Serpent' myths

In 1926 a British anthropologist specialising in Australian Aboriginal ethnology and ethnography, Professor Alfred Radcliffe-Brown, noted many Aboriginal groups widely distributed across the Australian continent all appeared to share variations of a single (common) myth telling of an unusually powerful, often creative, often dangerous snake or serpent of sometimes enormous size closely associated with the rainbows, rain, rivers, and deep waterholes.[21]

Radcliffe-Brown coined the term 'Rainbow Serpent' to describe what he identified to be a common, recurring myth. Working in the field in various places on the Australian continent, he noted the key character of this myth (the 'Rainbow Serpent') is variously named:[21] Kanmare (Boulia, Queensland); Tulloun: (Mount Isa); Andrenjinyi (Pennefather River, Queensland), Takkan (Maryborough, Queensland); Targan (Brisbane, Queensland); Kurreah (Broken Hill, New South Wales);Wawi (Riverina, New South Wales), Neitee & Yeutta (Wilcannia, New South Wales), Myndie (Melbourne, Victoria); Bunyip (Western Victoria); Arkaroo (Flinders Ranges, South Australia); Wogal (Perth, Western Australia); Wanamangura (Laverton, Western Australia); Kajura (Carnarvon, Western Australia); Numereji (Kakadu, Northern Territory).

This 'Rainbow Serpent' is generally and variously identified by those who tell 'Rainbow Serpent' myths, as a snake of some enormous size often living within the deepest waterholes of many of Australia's waterways; descended from that larger being visible as a dark streak in the Milky Way, it reveals itself to people in this world as a rainbow as it moves through water and rain, shaping landscapes, naming and singing of places, swallowing and sometimes drowning people; strengthening the knowledgeable with rainmaking and healing powers; blighting others with sores, weakness, illness, and death.[21]

Even Australia's 'Bunyip' was identified as a 'Rainbow Serpent' myth of the above kind.[22] The term coined by Radcliffe-Brown is now commonly used and familiar to broader Australian and international audiences, as it is increasingly used by government agencies, museums, art galleries, Aboriginal organisations and the media to refer to the pan-Australian Aboriginal myth specifically, and as a shorthand allusion to Australian Aboriginal mythology generally.[b]

Captain Cook edit

 
Statue of Captain James Cook at Admiralty Arch, London

A number of linguists, anthropologists and others have formally documented another common Aboriginal myth occurring across Australia. Predecessors of the myth tellers encounter a mythical, exotic (most often English) character who arrives from the sea, bringing western colonialism, either offering gifts to the performer's predecessors or bringing great harm upon the performer's predecessors.[23]

This key mythical character is most often named "Captain Cook", this being a mythical character shared with the broader Australian community, who also attribute James Cook with playing a key role in colonising Australia.[24] The Aboriginal Captain Cook is attributed with bringing British rule to Australia,[25] but his arrival is not celebrated. More often within the Aboriginal telling, he proves to be a villain.[24]

The many Aboriginal versions of this Captain Cook are rarely oral recollections of encounters with the Lieutenant James Cook who first navigated and mapped Australia's east coast on HM Bark Endeavour in 1770. Guugu Yimidhirr predecessors, along the Endeavour River, did encounter James Cook during a 7-week period beached at the site of the present town of Cooktown while the Endeavour was being repaired.[26] From this time the Guugu Yimidhirr did receive present-day names for places occurring in their local landscape; and the Guugu Yimmidhir may recollect this encounter.

The pan-Australian Captain Cook myth, however, tells of a generic, largely symbolic British character who arrives from across the oceans sometime after the Aboriginal world was formed and the original social order founded. This Captain Cook is a harbinger of dramatic transformations in the social order, bringing change and a different social order, into which present-day audiences have been born.[24] (see above regarding this social function played by Aboriginal myths)

In 1988 Australian anthropologist Kenneth Maddock assembled several versions of this Captain Cook myth as recorded from a number of Aboriginal groups around Australia.[27] Included in his assemblage are:

  • Batemans Bay, New South Wales: Percy Mumbulla told of Captain Cook's arriving on a large ship which anchored at Snapper Island, from which he disembarked to give the myth-teller's predecessors clothes (to wear) and hard biscuits (to eat). Then he returned to his ship and sailed away. Mumbulla told how his predecessors rejected Captain Cook's gifts, throwing them into the sea.[28]
  • Cardwell, Queensland: Chloe Grant and Rosie Runaway told of how Captain Cook and his group seemed to stand up out of the sea with the white skin of ancestral spirits, returning to their descendants. Captain Cook arrived first offering a pipe and tobacco to smoke (which was dismissed as a 'burning thing... stuck in his mouth'), then boiling a billy of tea (which was dismissed as scalding 'dirty water'), next baking flour on the coals (which was rejected as smelling 'stale' and thrown away untasted), finally boiling beef (which smelled well, and tasted okay, once the salty skin was wiped off). Captain Cook and group then left, sailing away to the north, leaving Chloe Grant and Rosie Runaway's predecessors beating the ground with their fists, fearfully sorry to see the spirits of their ancestors depart in this way.[2]
  • South-eastern side of the Gulf of Carpentaria, Queensland: Rolly Gilbert told of how Captain Cook and others sailed the oceans in a boat, and decided to come to see Australia. There he encountered a couple of Rolly's predecessors whom he first intended to shoot, but instead tricked them into revealing the local population's main camping area, after which they:[29]

set up the people [cattle industry] to go down the countryside and shoot people down, just like animal, they left them lying there for the hawks and crows... So a lot of old people and young people were struck by the head with the end of a gun and left there. They wanted to get the people wiped out because Europeans in Queensland had to run their stock: horses and cattle.

  • Victoria River: it is told in a Captain Cook saga that Captain Cook sailed from London to Sydney to acquire land. Admiring the country, he landed bullocks and men with firearms, following which local Aboriginal peoples in the Sydney area were massacred. Captain Cook made his way to Darwin, where he sent armed horsemen to hunt down the Aboriginal people in the Victoria River country, founding the city of Darwin and giving police plus cattle station managers orders on how to treat Aboriginal people.[30]
  • Kimberley: Numerous Aboriginal myth-tellers say that Captain Cook is a European culture hero who landed in Australia. Using gunpowder, he set a precedent for the treatment of Aboriginal peoples throughout Australia, including the Kimberley. On returning to his home, he claimed he had not seen any Aboriginal peoples, and advised that the country was a vast and empty land which settlers could come and claim for themselves. In this myth, Captain Cook introduced 'Cook's Law', upon which the settlers rely. The Aboriginal people note, however, that this is a recent, unjust and false law compared to Aboriginal law.[31]

Views on death edit

The response to death in Aboriginal religion may seem similar in some respects to that to be found in European traditions - notably in regard to the holding of a ceremony to mark the death of an individual and the observance of a period of mourning for that individual. Any such similarity, however, is, at best, only superficial (with ceremony and mourning of some kind being common to most, if not all, human cultures). In death - as in life - Aboriginal spirituality gives pre-eminence to the land and sees the deceased as linked indissolubly, by a web of subtle connections, to that greater whole: "For Aboriginal people when a person dies some form of the persons spirit and also their bones go back to the country they were born in".[32] "Aborigine people [sic] believe that they share their being with their country and all that is within it". "So when a person dies their country suffers, trees die and become scarred because it is believed that they came into being because of the deceased person".[32]

When an Aboriginal person dies the families have death ceremonies called the "Sorry Business". During this time the person is mourned for days by the family and whole community, crying together and sharing their grief. Often the deceased person's family stay in one room and mourn together.[33]

Naming a person after their death is often taboo, as it is thought that it could disturb their spirit. Photos of the deceased are often not allowed, for the same reason. A smoking ceremony may be conducted, using smoke on the belongings and in the home of the deceased, which is believed to aid in releasing the spirit. The cause of death, often of a spiritual nature, may be determined by Aboriginal elders.[33]

Ceremonies and mourning periods can last days, weeks and even sometimes months depending upon the social status of the deceased person. It is culturally inappropriate for a non-Aboriginal person to contact and inform the next of kin of a person's passing. When someone passes away, the family of the deceased move out of their house and another family then moves in. Some families will move to "sorry camps", which are usually further away. Mourning includes the recital of symbolic chants, the singing of songs, dance, body paint, and cuts on the bodies of the mourners. In some Aboriginal cultures, the body is placed on a raised platform for several months, covered in native plants, or in a cave or tree. When only the bones remain, family and friends scatter them in various ways, or place them in a special place.[33]

Many Aboriginal people believe in a place called the "Land of the Dead". This place was also commonly known as the "sky-world", which is really just the sky. As long as certain rituals were carried out during their life and at the time of their death, the deceased is allowed to enter The Land of the Dead in the "Sky World". The spirit of the dead is also a part of different lands and sites and then those areas become sacred sites. This explains why the Aboriginal people are very protective of sites they call sacred.

The rituals that are performed enable an Aboriginal person to return to the womb of all time, which is "Dreamtime". It allows the spirit to be connected once more to all nature, to all their ancestors, and to their own personal meaning and place within the scheme of things. "The Dreamtime is a return to the real existence for the aborigine". "Life in time is simply a passing phase – a gap in eternity". It has a beginning and it has an end. "The experience of Dreamtime, whether through ritual or from dreams, flowed through into the life in time in practical ways". "The individual who enters the Dreamtime feels no separation between themselves and their ancestors". "The strengths and resources of the timeless enter into what is needed in the life of the present". "The future is less uncertain because the individual feels their life as a continuum linking past and future in unbroken connection". Through Dreamtime the limitations of time and space are overcome.[34] For the Aboriginal people, dead relatives are very much a part of continuing life. It is believed that in dreams dead relatives communicate their presence." At times they may bring healing if the dreamer is in pain". "Death is seen as part of a cycle of life in which one emerges from Dreamtime through birth, and eventually returns to the timeless, only to emerge again. It is also a common belief that a person leaves their body during sleep, and temporarily enters the Dreamtime".[34]

Link to astronomy edit

There are many songlines which include reference to the stars, planets and the Moon, although the complex systems which go to make up Australian Aboriginal astronomy also serve practical purposes, such as navigation.

Group-specific mythology edit

Yolngu edit

Murrinh-Patha people edit

 
 

Murrinh-Patha people's country[35]

The Murrinh-Patha people (whose country is the saltwater country immediately inland from the town of Wadeye[35]) describe a Dreamtime in their myths which anthropologists believe is a religious belief equivalent to, though wholly different from, most of the world's other significant religious beliefs.[36]

In particular, scholars suggest the Murrinh-Patha have a oneness of thought, belief, and expression unequalled within Christianity, as they see all aspects of their lives, thoughts and culture as under the continuing influence of their Dreaming.[36] Within this Aboriginal religion, no distinction is drawn between things spiritual/ideal/mental and things material; nor is any distinction drawn between things sacred and things profane: rather all life is 'sacred', all conduct has 'moral' implication, and all life's meaning arises out of this eternal, everpresent Dreaming.[36]

In fact, the isomorphic fit between the natural and supernatural means that all nature is coded and charged by the sacred, while the sacred is everywhere within the physical landscape. Myths and mythic tracks cross over.. thousands of miles, and every particular form and feature of the terrain has a well-developed 'story' behind it.[37]

Animating and sustaining this Murrinh-patha mythology is an underlying philosophy of life that has been characterised by Stanner as a belief that life is "... a joyous thing with maggots at its centre."[36] Life is good and benevolent, but throughout life's journey, there are numerous painful sufferings that each individual must come to understand and endure as he grows. This is the underlying message repeatedly being told within the Murrinh-patha myths. It is this philosophy that gives Murrinh-patha people motive and meaning in life.[36]

The following Murrinh-patha myth, for instance, is performed in Murrinh-patha ceremonies to initiate young men into adulthood.

"A woman, Mutjinga (the 'Old Woman'), was in charge of young children, but instead of watching out for them during their parents' absence, she swallowed them and tried to escape as a giant snake. The people followed her, spearing her and removing the undigested children from the body."[38]

Within the myth and in its performance, young, unadorned children must first be swallowed by an ancestral being (who transforms into a giant snake), then regurgitated before being accepted as young adults with all the rights and privileges of young adults.[39]

Pintupi people edit

 
 

Pintupi people's country

Scholars of the Pintupi peoples (from within Australia's Gibson Desert region) believe they have a predominantly 'mythic' form of consciousness,[40] within which events occur and are explained by the preordained social structures and orders told of, sung about, and performed within their superhuman mythology, rather than by reference to the possible accumulated political actions, decisions and influences of local individuals (i.e. this understanding effectively 'erases' history).[41]

The Dreaming.. provides a moral authority lying outside the individual will and outside human creation.. although the Dreaming as an ordering of the cosmos is presumably a product of historical events, such an origin is denied.

These human creations are objectified – thrust out – into principles or precedents for the immediate world.. Consequently, current action is not understood as the result of human alliances, creations, and choices, but is seen as imposed by an embracing, cosmic order.

Within this Pintupi world view, three long geographical tracks of named places dominate, being interrelated strings of significant places named and created by mythic characters on their routes through the Pintupi desert region during the Dreaming. It is a complex mythology of narratives, songs and ceremonies known to the Pintupi as Tingarri. It is most completely told and performed by Pintupi peoples at larger gatherings within Pintupi country.[42]

Newer belief systems edit

In principle, census information could identify the extent of traditional Aboriginal beliefs compared to other belief systems such as Christianity; however the official census in Australia does not include traditional Aboriginal beliefs as a religion, and includes Torres Strait Islanders, a separate group of Indigenous Australians, in most of the counts.[43]

In the 1991 census, almost 74 percent of Aboriginal respondents identified with Christianity, up from 67 percent in the 1986 census. The wording of the question changed for the 1991 census; as the religion question is optional, the number of respondents reduced.[44] The 1996 census reported that almost 72 percent of Aboriginal people practised some form of Christianity, and that 16 percent listed no religion. The 2001 census contained no comparable updated data.[45]

The Aboriginal population also includes a small number of followers of other mainstream religions.[46][47]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ See Lake Euramoo for an excerpt of the original myth, translated.
  2. ^ See Rainbow Serpent#External links.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Dixon 1972, p. 29.
  2. ^ a b c d Dixon 1996.
  3. ^ NASO.
  4. ^ AHD105689.
  5. ^ Pannell 2006, p. 11.
  6. ^ Nunn 2017.
  7. ^ Cohen et al. 2017, pp. 79–91.
  8. ^ Morris 1995.
  9. ^ a b Berndt 1994.
  10. ^ Van Gennep 1906.
  11. ^ Horton, David(1994) Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia
  12. ^ Donaldson 1994.
  13. ^ Indymedia map.
  14. ^ Tindale map.
  15. ^ Smyth 1994, pp. 3, 6.
  16. ^ Beckett 1994, pp. 97–115.
  17. ^ Watson 1994.
  18. ^ Sutton 2003, pp. 113, 117.
  19. ^ a b c Morris 1995, p. 71.
  20. ^ Aboriginal Areas Protection Authority.
  21. ^ a b c Radcliffe-Brown 1926, pp. 19–25.
  22. ^ Radcliffe-Brown 1926, p. 22.
  23. ^ Maddock 1988, p. 20.
  24. ^ a b c Maddock 1988, p. 27.
  25. ^ Dixon 1996, pp. 1–3.
  26. ^ Hough 1994, pp. 150–155.
  27. ^ Maddock 1988, pp. 13–19.
  28. ^ Robinson 1970, pp. 29–30.
  29. ^ Maddock 1988, p. 17.
  30. ^ Rose 1984, pp. 24–39.
  31. ^ Kolig 1980, pp. 23–27.
  32. ^ a b Bird Rose 2003, pp. 163–168.
  33. ^ a b c Korff 2019.
  34. ^ a b Dream Beliefs.
  35. ^ a b de Brabander 1994.
  36. ^ a b c d e Yengoyan 1979.
  37. ^ Yengoyan 1979, p. 406.
  38. ^ Stanner 1966, pp. 40–43, as summarised and cited by Koepping 1981, p. 378
  39. ^ Koepping 1981, pp. 377–378.
  40. ^ Rumsey 1994, pp. 116–128.
  41. ^ Myers 1986.
  42. ^ De Brabander 1984.
  43. ^ Household Census form 2001.
  44. ^ ABoS 4102.0 1994.
  45. ^ ABoS 2901.0 1996.
  46. ^ Mercer 2003.
  47. ^ Marks 2003.

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  • Nunn, Patrick D. (22 August 2017). "When the Bullin shrieked: Aboriginal memories of volcanic eruptions thousands of years ago". The Conversation. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  • Pannell, Sandra (2006). . Research Report No. 48. Cairns: Cooperative Research Centre for Tropical Rainforest Ecology and Management. p. 11. ISBN 0-86443-766-8. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016.
  • Parker, K. Langloh (1896). Australian Legendary Tales  (1st ed.). Melbourne: Melville, Mullen and Slade.
  • Pohlner, Peter (1986). gangarru. Milton, Queensland: Hopevale Mission Board. ISBN 1-86252-311-8.
  • "Queensland's wet tropical forests (Place ID 105689)". Australian Heritage Database. Australian Government.
  • Radcliffe-Brown, A. R. (1926). "The Rainbow-Serpent Myth of Australia". The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 56: 19–25. doi:10.2307/2843596. JSTOR 2843596.
  • Robinson, Roland (1970). Alteringa and Other Aboriginal Poems. Sydney: A. H. and A. W. Reed. pp. 29–30.
  • Rose, Deborah (1984). "The Saga of Captain Cook: Morality in Aboriginal and European Law". Australian Aboriginal Studies. 2: 24–39.
  • Roth, W. E. (1984) [First published 1897]. The Queensland Aborigines (Facsimile ed.). Victoria Park, W. A.: Hesperian Press. ISBN 0-85905-054-8.
  • Rumsey, Allen (1994). "The Dreaming, human agency and inscriptive practice". Oceania. 65 (2): 116–128. doi:10.1002/j.1834-4461.1994.tb02494.x.
  • "Sacred sites". Aboriginal Areas Protection Authority. Northern Territory Government. 2 July 2014. Retrieved 12 February 2020.
  • Smith, W. Ramsay (2003). Myths and legends of the Australian aborigines. Mineola, NY: Dover Publications. ISBN 0-486-42709-9. OCLC 51800252.
  • Smyth, Dermot (1994). Understanding Country: The Importance of Land and Sea in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Societies. Key Issue Paper 1. Canberra: Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation. pp. 3, 6.
  • Stanner, W. E. H. (1966). On aboriginal religion. Oceania Monograph No. 11. Sydney: Oceania Publications.
  • Sutton, Peter (1988). "Myth as History, History as Myth". In Keen, I (ed.). Being Black: Aboriginal Cultures in 'Settled' Australia. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press. pp. 251–268. ISBN 978-0855751852.
  • Sutton, Peter (2003). Native Title in Australia: An Ethnographic Perspective. Cambridge University Press. pp. 113, 117. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511481635. ISBN 0-521-81258-5.
  • Tindale, Norman. . Government of South Australia. Archived from the original on 16 March 2008.
  • Van Gennep, A (1906). Mythes et Legendes d'Australie (in French). Paris.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Watson, M. (1994). "Storytelling". In Horton, David (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Aboriginal Australia: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander History, Society, and Culture. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press.
  • Yengoyan, Aram A. (1979). "Economy, Society, and Myth in Aboriginal Australia". Annual Review of Anthropology. 8: 393–415. doi:10.1146/annurev.an.08.100179.002141. JSTOR 2155626.

Further reading edit

  • Waterman, Patricia Panyity (1987). A Tale-type Index of Australian Aboriginal Oral Narratives. Folklore Fellows’ Communications. Vol. 238. Academia scientiarum Fennica. ISBN 9789514105319.
  • "Dreamtime Stories and The Dreaming in Aboriginal Art". ARTARK. Retrieved 28 August 2023.|

External links edit

  • "Dust Echoes". ABC Education. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 16 May 2017. a series of twelve beautifully animated Dreamtime stories from Central Arnhem Land... − 12 Episodes, each with accompanying Study Guide: Whirlpool, Mermaid, Brolga, Morning Star, Namorrodor, Curse, Moon Man, Be, Spear, Wawalag (or Wagalak) sisters, Bat and the Butterfly, and Mimis. Yolngu mythology.
  • Ngadjonji History of the Rainforest People

australian, aboriginal, religion, mythology, also, australian, aboriginal, culture, sacred, spirituality, represented, stories, performed, aboriginal, australians, within, each, language, groups, across, australia, their, ceremonies, aboriginal, spirituality, . See also Australian Aboriginal culture Australian Aboriginal religion and mythology is the sacred spirituality represented in the stories performed by Aboriginal Australians within each of the language groups across Australia in their ceremonies Aboriginal spirituality includes the Dreamtime the Dreaming songlines and Aboriginal oral literature The Djabugay language group s mythical being Damarri transformed into a mountain range is seen lying on his back above the Barron River Gorge looking upwards to the skies within north east Australia s wet tropical forested landscape Aboriginal spirituality often conveys descriptions of each group s local cultural landscape adding meaning to the whole country s topography from oral history told by ancestors from some of the earliest recorded history Most of these spiritualities belong to specific groups but some span the whole continent in one form or another Contents 1 Antiquity 2 Aboriginal mythology whole of Australia 2 1 Diversity across a continent 2 2 Public education about Aboriginal perspectives 2 3 An anthropological generalisation 2 4 An Aboriginal generalisation 2 5 Sacred sites 3 Pan Australian mythology 3 1 Rainbow Serpent 3 2 Captain Cook 3 3 Views on death 3 4 Link to astronomy 4 Group specific mythology 4 1 Yolngu 4 2 Murrinh Patha people 4 3 Pintupi people 5 Newer belief systems 6 See also 7 Notes 7 1 Citations 8 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksAntiquity editAn Australian linguist R M W Dixon recording Aboriginal myths in their original languages encountered coincidences between some of the landscape details being told about within various myths and scientific discoveries being made about the same landscapes 1 In the case of the Atherton Tableland myths tell of the origins of Lake Eacham Lake Barrine and Lake Euramoo Geological research dated the formative volcanic explosions described by Aboriginal myth tellers as having occurred more than 10 000 years ago Pollen fossil sampling from the silt which had settled to the bottom of the craters confirmed the Aboriginal myth tellers story When the craters were formed eucalyptus forests dominated rather than the current wet tropical rainforests 2 3 a Dixon observed from the evidence available that Aboriginal myths regarding the origin of the Crater Lakes might be dated as accurate back to 10 000 years ago 2 Further investigation of the material by the Australian Heritage Commission led to the Crater Lakes myth being listed nationally on the Register of the National Estate 4 and included within Australia s World Heritage nomination of the wet tropical forests as an unparalleled human record of events dating back to the Pleistocene era 5 Since then Dixon has assembled a number of similar examples of Australian Aboriginal myths that accurately describe landscapes of an ancient past He particularly noted the numerous myths telling of previous sea levels including 2 the Port Phillip myth recorded as told to Robert Russell in 1850 describing Port Phillip Bay as once dry land and the course of the Yarra River being once different following what was then Carrum Carrum swamp the Great Barrier Reef coastline myth told to Dixon in Yarrabah just south of Cairns telling of a past coastline since flooded which stood at the edge of the current Great Barrier Reef and naming places now completely submerged after the forest types and trees that once grew there the Lake Eyre myths recorded by J W Gregory in 1906 telling of the deserts of Central Australia as once having been fertile well watered plains and the deserts around present Lake Eyre having been one continuous garden This oral story matches geologists understanding that there was a wet phase to the early Holocene when the lake would have had permanent water Other volcanic eruptions in Australia may also be recorded in Aboriginal myths including Mount Gambier in South Australia 6 and Kinrara in northern Queensland 7 Aboriginal mythology whole of Australia edit nbsp Map of Indigenous peoples regions in Australia nbsp Geological map of AustraliaThe stories enshrined in Aboriginal mythology variously tell significant truths within each Aboriginal group s local landscape They effectively layer the whole of the Australian continent s topography with cultural nuance and deeper meaning and empower selected audiences with the accumulated wisdom and knowledge of Australian Aboriginal ancestors back to time immemorial 8 David Horton s Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia contains an article on Aboriginal mythology observing 9 A mythic map of Australia would show thousands of characters varying in their importance but all in some way connected with the land Some emerged at their specific sites and stayed spiritually in that vicinity Others came from somewhere else and went somewhere else Many were shape changing transformed from or into human beings or natural species or into natural features such as rocks but all left something of their spiritual essence at the places noted in their stories Australian Aboriginal mythologies have been characterised as at one and the same time fragments of a catechism a liturgical manual a history of civilization a geography textbook and to a much smaller extent a manual of cosmography 10 Diversity across a continent edit There are 900 distinct Aboriginal groups across Australia 11 each distinguished by unique names usually identifying particular languages dialects or distinctive speech mannerisms 12 Each language was used for original myths from which the distinctive words and names of individual myths derive With so many distinct Aboriginal groups languages beliefs and practices scholars cannot attempt to characterise under a single heading the full range and diversity of all myths being variously and continuously told developed elaborated performed and experienced by group members across the entire continent Attempts to represent the different groupings in maps have varied widely 13 14 The Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia nevertheless observes One intriguing feature of Aboriginal Australian mythology is the mixture of diversity and similarity in myths across the entire continent 9 Public education about Aboriginal perspectives editThe Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation s booklet Understanding Country formally seeks to introduce non Indigenous Australians to Aboriginal perspectives on the environment It makes the following generalisation about Aboriginal myths and mythology 15 they generally describe the journeys of ancestral beings often giant animals or people over what began as a featureless domain Mountains rivers waterholes animal and plant species and other natural and cultural resources came into being as a result of events which took place during these Dreamtime journeys Their existence in present day landscapes is seen by many Indigenous peoples as confirmation of their creation beliefs The routes taken by the Creator Beings in their Dreamtime journeys across land and sea link many sacred sites together in a web of Dreamtime tracks criss crossing the country Dreaming tracks can run for hundreds even thousands of kilometres from desert to the coast and may be shared by peoples in countries through which the tracks pass An anthropological generalisation editAustralian anthropologists willing to generalise suggest Aboriginal myths still being performed across Australia by Aboriginal peoples serve an important social function amongst their intended audiences justifying the received ordering of their daily lives 16 helping shape peoples ideas and assisting to influence others behaviour 17 In addition such performance often continuously incorporates and mythologises historical events in the service of these social purposes in an otherwise rapidly changing modern world It is always integral and common that the Law Aboriginal law is something derived from ancestral peoples or Dreamings and is passed down the generations in a continuous line While entitlements of particular human beings may come and go the underlying relationships between foundational Dreamings and certain landscapes are theoretically eternal the entitlements of people to places are usually regarded strongest when those people enjoy a relationship of identity with one or more Dreamings of that place This is an identity of spirit a consubstantiality rather than a matter of mere belief the Dreaming pre exists and persists while its human incarnations are temporary 18 An Aboriginal generalisation edit Aboriginal specialists willing to generalise believe all Aboriginal myths across Australia in combination represent a kind of unwritten oral library within which Aboriginal peoples learn about the world and perceive a peculiarly Aboriginal reality dictated by concepts and values vastly different from those of western societies 19 Aboriginal people learned from their stories that a society must not be human centred but rather land centred otherwise they forget their source and purpose humans are prone to exploitative behaviour if not constantly reminded they are interconnected with the rest of creation that they as individuals are only temporal in time and past and future generations must be included in their perception of their purpose in life 19 People come and go but the Land and stories about the Land stay This is a wisdom that takes lifetimes of listening observing and experiencing There is a deep understanding of human nature and the environment sites hold feelings which cannot be described in physical terms subtle feelings that resonate through the bodies of these people It is only when talking and being with these people that these feelings can truly be appreciated This is the intangible reality of these people 19 Sacred sites edit Main article Australian Aboriginal sacred sites Aboriginal people observe some places as sacred owing to their central place in the mythology of the local people 20 Pan Australian mythology editRainbow Serpent edit Main article Rainbow Serpent nbsp Australian carpet python one of the forms the Rainbow Serpent character may take in Rainbow Serpent mythsIn 1926 a British anthropologist specialising in Australian Aboriginal ethnology and ethnography Professor Alfred Radcliffe Brown noted many Aboriginal groups widely distributed across the Australian continent all appeared to share variations of a single common myth telling of an unusually powerful often creative often dangerous snake or serpent of sometimes enormous size closely associated with the rainbows rain rivers and deep waterholes 21 Radcliffe Brown coined the term Rainbow Serpent to describe what he identified to be a common recurring myth Working in the field in various places on the Australian continent he noted the key character of this myth the Rainbow Serpent is variously named 21 Kanmare Boulia Queensland Tulloun Mount Isa Andrenjinyi Pennefather River Queensland Takkan Maryborough Queensland Targan Brisbane Queensland Kurreah Broken Hill New South Wales Wawi Riverina New South Wales Neitee amp Yeutta Wilcannia New South Wales Myndie Melbourne Victoria Bunyip Western Victoria Arkaroo Flinders Ranges South Australia Wogal Perth Western Australia Wanamangura Laverton Western Australia Kajura Carnarvon Western Australia Numereji Kakadu Northern Territory This Rainbow Serpent is generally and variously identified by those who tell Rainbow Serpent myths as a snake of some enormous size often living within the deepest waterholes of many of Australia s waterways descended from that larger being visible as a dark streak in the Milky Way it reveals itself to people in this world as a rainbow as it moves through water and rain shaping landscapes naming and singing of places swallowing and sometimes drowning people strengthening the knowledgeable with rainmaking and healing powers blighting others with sores weakness illness and death 21 Even Australia s Bunyip was identified as a Rainbow Serpent myth of the above kind 22 The term coined by Radcliffe Brown is now commonly used and familiar to broader Australian and international audiences as it is increasingly used by government agencies museums art galleries Aboriginal organisations and the media to refer to the pan Australian Aboriginal myth specifically and as a shorthand allusion to Australian Aboriginal mythology generally b Captain Cook edit See also James Cook nbsp Statue of Captain James Cook at Admiralty Arch LondonA number of linguists anthropologists and others have formally documented another common Aboriginal myth occurring across Australia Predecessors of the myth tellers encounter a mythical exotic most often English character who arrives from the sea bringing western colonialism either offering gifts to the performer s predecessors or bringing great harm upon the performer s predecessors 23 This key mythical character is most often named Captain Cook this being a mythical character shared with the broader Australian community who also attribute James Cook with playing a key role in colonising Australia 24 The Aboriginal Captain Cook is attributed with bringing British rule to Australia 25 but his arrival is not celebrated More often within the Aboriginal telling he proves to be a villain 24 The many Aboriginal versions of this Captain Cook are rarely oral recollections of encounters with the Lieutenant James Cook who first navigated and mapped Australia s east coast on HM Bark Endeavour in 1770 Guugu Yimidhirr predecessors along the Endeavour River did encounter James Cook during a 7 week period beached at the site of the present town of Cooktown while the Endeavour was being repaired 26 From this time the Guugu Yimidhirr did receive present day names for places occurring in their local landscape and the Guugu Yimmidhir may recollect this encounter The pan Australian Captain Cook myth however tells of a generic largely symbolic British character who arrives from across the oceans sometime after the Aboriginal world was formed and the original social order founded This Captain Cook is a harbinger of dramatic transformations in the social order bringing change and a different social order into which present day audiences have been born 24 see above regarding this social function played by Aboriginal myths In 1988 Australian anthropologist Kenneth Maddock assembled several versions of this Captain Cook myth as recorded from a number of Aboriginal groups around Australia 27 Included in his assemblage are Batemans Bay New South Wales Percy Mumbulla told of Captain Cook s arriving on a large ship which anchored at Snapper Island from which he disembarked to give the myth teller s predecessors clothes to wear and hard biscuits to eat Then he returned to his ship and sailed away Mumbulla told how his predecessors rejected Captain Cook s gifts throwing them into the sea 28 Cardwell Queensland Chloe Grant and Rosie Runaway told of how Captain Cook and his group seemed to stand up out of the sea with the white skin of ancestral spirits returning to their descendants Captain Cook arrived first offering a pipe and tobacco to smoke which was dismissed as a burning thing stuck in his mouth then boiling a billy of tea which was dismissed as scalding dirty water next baking flour on the coals which was rejected as smelling stale and thrown away untasted finally boiling beef which smelled well and tasted okay once the salty skin was wiped off Captain Cook and group then left sailing away to the north leaving Chloe Grant and Rosie Runaway s predecessors beating the ground with their fists fearfully sorry to see the spirits of their ancestors depart in this way 2 South eastern side of the Gulf of Carpentaria Queensland Rolly Gilbert told of how Captain Cook and others sailed the oceans in a boat and decided to come to see Australia There he encountered a couple of Rolly s predecessors whom he first intended to shoot but instead tricked them into revealing the local population s main camping area after which they 29 set up the people cattle industry to go down the countryside and shoot people down just like animal they left them lying there for the hawks and crows So a lot of old people and young people were struck by the head with the end of a gun and left there They wanted to get the people wiped out because Europeans in Queensland had to run their stock horses and cattle Victoria River it is told in a Captain Cook saga that Captain Cook sailed from London to Sydney to acquire land Admiring the country he landed bullocks and men with firearms following which local Aboriginal peoples in the Sydney area were massacred Captain Cook made his way to Darwin where he sent armed horsemen to hunt down the Aboriginal people in the Victoria River country founding the city of Darwin and giving police plus cattle station managers orders on how to treat Aboriginal people 30 Kimberley Numerous Aboriginal myth tellers say that Captain Cook is a European culture hero who landed in Australia Using gunpowder he set a precedent for the treatment of Aboriginal peoples throughout Australia including the Kimberley On returning to his home he claimed he had not seen any Aboriginal peoples and advised that the country was a vast and empty land which settlers could come and claim for themselves In this myth Captain Cook introduced Cook s Law upon which the settlers rely The Aboriginal people note however that this is a recent unjust and false law compared to Aboriginal law 31 Views on death edit The response to death in Aboriginal religion may seem similar in some respects to that to be found in European traditions notably in regard to the holding of a ceremony to mark the death of an individual and the observance of a period of mourning for that individual Any such similarity however is at best only superficial with ceremony and mourning of some kind being common to most if not all human cultures In death as in life Aboriginal spirituality gives pre eminence to the land and sees the deceased as linked indissolubly by a web of subtle connections to that greater whole For Aboriginal people when a person dies some form of the persons spirit and also their bones go back to the country they were born in 32 Aborigine people sic believe that they share their being with their country and all that is within it So when a person dies their country suffers trees die and become scarred because it is believed that they came into being because of the deceased person 32 When an Aboriginal person dies the families have death ceremonies called the Sorry Business During this time the person is mourned for days by the family and whole community crying together and sharing their grief Often the deceased person s family stay in one room and mourn together 33 Naming a person after their death is often taboo as it is thought that it could disturb their spirit Photos of the deceased are often not allowed for the same reason A smoking ceremony may be conducted using smoke on the belongings and in the home of the deceased which is believed to aid in releasing the spirit The cause of death often of a spiritual nature may be determined by Aboriginal elders 33 Ceremonies and mourning periods can last days weeks and even sometimes months depending upon the social status of the deceased person It is culturally inappropriate for a non Aboriginal person to contact and inform the next of kin of a person s passing When someone passes away the family of the deceased move out of their house and another family then moves in Some families will move to sorry camps which are usually further away Mourning includes the recital of symbolic chants the singing of songs dance body paint and cuts on the bodies of the mourners In some Aboriginal cultures the body is placed on a raised platform for several months covered in native plants or in a cave or tree When only the bones remain family and friends scatter them in various ways or place them in a special place 33 Many Aboriginal people believe in a place called the Land of the Dead This place was also commonly known as the sky world which is really just the sky As long as certain rituals were carried out during their life and at the time of their death the deceased is allowed to enter The Land of the Dead in the Sky World The spirit of the dead is also a part of different lands and sites and then those areas become sacred sites This explains why the Aboriginal people are very protective of sites they call sacred The rituals that are performed enable an Aboriginal person to return to the womb of all time which is Dreamtime It allows the spirit to be connected once more to all nature to all their ancestors and to their own personal meaning and place within the scheme of things The Dreamtime is a return to the real existence for the aborigine Life in time is simply a passing phase a gap in eternity It has a beginning and it has an end The experience of Dreamtime whether through ritual or from dreams flowed through into the life in time in practical ways The individual who enters the Dreamtime feels no separation between themselves and their ancestors The strengths and resources of the timeless enter into what is needed in the life of the present The future is less uncertain because the individual feels their life as a continuum linking past and future in unbroken connection Through Dreamtime the limitations of time and space are overcome 34 For the Aboriginal people dead relatives are very much a part of continuing life It is believed that in dreams dead relatives communicate their presence At times they may bring healing if the dreamer is in pain Death is seen as part of a cycle of life in which one emerges from Dreamtime through birth and eventually returns to the timeless only to emerge again It is also a common belief that a person leaves their body during sleep and temporarily enters the Dreamtime 34 Link to astronomy edit Further information Australian Aboriginal astronomy There are many songlines which include reference to the stars planets and the Moon although the complex systems which go to make up Australian Aboriginal astronomy also serve practical purposes such as navigation Group specific mythology editYolngu edit Further information Yolngu Yolŋu culture law and mythology Murrinh Patha people edit nbsp nbsp Murrinh Patha people s country 35 The Murrinh Patha people whose country is the saltwater country immediately inland from the town of Wadeye 35 describe a Dreamtime in their myths which anthropologists believe is a religious belief equivalent to though wholly different from most of the world s other significant religious beliefs 36 In particular scholars suggest the Murrinh Patha have a oneness of thought belief and expression unequalled within Christianity as they see all aspects of their lives thoughts and culture as under the continuing influence of their Dreaming 36 Within this Aboriginal religion no distinction is drawn between things spiritual ideal mental and things material nor is any distinction drawn between things sacred and things profane rather all life is sacred all conduct has moral implication and all life s meaning arises out of this eternal everpresent Dreaming 36 In fact the isomorphic fit between the natural and supernatural means that all nature is coded and charged by the sacred while the sacred is everywhere within the physical landscape Myths and mythic tracks cross over thousands of miles and every particular form and feature of the terrain has a well developed story behind it 37 Animating and sustaining this Murrinh patha mythology is an underlying philosophy of life that has been characterised by Stanner as a belief that life is a joyous thing with maggots at its centre 36 Life is good and benevolent but throughout life s journey there are numerous painful sufferings that each individual must come to understand and endure as he grows This is the underlying message repeatedly being told within the Murrinh patha myths It is this philosophy that gives Murrinh patha people motive and meaning in life 36 The following Murrinh patha myth for instance is performed in Murrinh patha ceremonies to initiate young men into adulthood A woman Mutjinga the Old Woman was in charge of young children but instead of watching out for them during their parents absence she swallowed them and tried to escape as a giant snake The people followed her spearing her and removing the undigested children from the body 38 Within the myth and in its performance young unadorned children must first be swallowed by an ancestral being who transforms into a giant snake then regurgitated before being accepted as young adults with all the rights and privileges of young adults 39 Pintupi people edit nbsp nbsp Pintupi people s countryScholars of the Pintupi peoples from within Australia s Gibson Desert region believe they have a predominantly mythic form of consciousness 40 within which events occur and are explained by the preordained social structures and orders told of sung about and performed within their superhuman mythology rather than by reference to the possible accumulated political actions decisions and influences of local individuals i e this understanding effectively erases history 41 The Dreaming provides a moral authority lying outside the individual will and outside human creation although the Dreaming as an ordering of the cosmos is presumably a product of historical events such an origin is denied These human creations are objectified thrust out into principles or precedents for the immediate world Consequently current action is not understood as the result of human alliances creations and choices but is seen as imposed by an embracing cosmic order Within this Pintupi world view three long geographical tracks of named places dominate being interrelated strings of significant places named and created by mythic characters on their routes through the Pintupi desert region during the Dreaming It is a complex mythology of narratives songs and ceremonies known to the Pintupi as Tingarri It is most completely told and performed by Pintupi peoples at larger gatherings within Pintupi country 42 Newer belief systems editIn principle census information could identify the extent of traditional Aboriginal beliefs compared to other belief systems such as Christianity however the official census in Australia does not include traditional Aboriginal beliefs as a religion and includes Torres Strait Islanders a separate group of Indigenous Australians in most of the counts 43 In the 1991 census almost 74 percent of Aboriginal respondents identified with Christianity up from 67 percent in the 1986 census The wording of the question changed for the 1991 census as the religion question is optional the number of respondents reduced 44 The 1996 census reported that almost 72 percent of Aboriginal people practised some form of Christianity and that 16 percent listed no religion The 2001 census contained no comparable updated data 45 The Aboriginal population also includes a small number of followers of other mainstream religions 46 47 See also editAustralian Aboriginal culture Bush medicine Cultural landscape Indigenous Australians Belief systems Indigenous Australian literature Quinkan rock artNotes edit See Lake Euramoo for an excerpt of the original myth translated See Rainbow Serpent External links Citations edit Dixon 1972 p 29 a b c d Dixon 1996 NASO AHD105689 Pannell 2006 p 11 Nunn 2017 Cohen et al 2017 pp 79 91 Morris 1995 a b Berndt 1994 Van Gennep 1906 Horton David 1994 Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia Donaldson 1994 Indymedia map Tindale map Smyth 1994 pp 3 6 Beckett 1994 pp 97 115 Watson 1994 Sutton 2003 pp 113 117 a b c Morris 1995 p 71 Aboriginal Areas Protection Authority a b c Radcliffe Brown 1926 pp 19 25 Radcliffe Brown 1926 p 22 Maddock 1988 p 20 a b c Maddock 1988 p 27 Dixon 1996 pp 1 3 Hough 1994 pp 150 155 Maddock 1988 pp 13 19 Robinson 1970 pp 29 30 Maddock 1988 p 17 Rose 1984 pp 24 39 Kolig 1980 pp 23 27 a b Bird Rose 2003 pp 163 168 a b c Korff 2019 a b Dream Beliefs a b de Brabander 1994 a b c d e Yengoyan 1979 Yengoyan 1979 p 406 Stanner 1966 pp 40 43 as summarised and cited by Koepping 1981 p 378 Koepping 1981 pp 377 378 Rumsey 1994 pp 116 128 Myers 1986 De Brabander 1984 Household Census form 2001 ABoS 4102 0 1994 ABoS 2901 0 1996 Mercer 2003 Marks 2003 Bibliography edit 2001 Census of Population and Housing 2001 Census Household Form PDF Australian Bureau of Statistics 2001 Archived from the original PDF on 16 January 2020 Retrieved 16 January 2020 2901 0 Census Dictionary Australian Bureau of Statistics 1996 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people 4102 0 Australian Social Trends 1994 Australian Bureau of Statistics 27 May 1994 Retrieved 2 November 2006 Beckett J 1994 Aboriginal Histories Aboriginal Myths an Introduction Oceania 65 2 97 115 doi 10 1002 j 1834 4461 1994 tb02493 x JSTOR 40331425 Berndt C 1994 Mythology In Horton David ed Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia Canberra Aboriginal Studies Press ISBN 0 85575 234 3 Berndt R M Berndt C H 1989 The Speaking Land Myth and Story in Aboriginal Australia Melbourne Penguin ISBN 978 0892815180 Bird Rose Deborah 2003 Experiences of Place Religions of the World Harvard University Press pp 163 168 ISBN 978 0945454380 de Brabander Dallas 1994 Murrinh patha In Horton David ed Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia Canberra Aboriginal Studies Press ISBN 0 85575 234 3 Cohen Benjamin E Mark Darren F Fallon Stewart J Stephenson P Jon 1 April 2017 Holocene Neogene volcanism in northeastern Australia Chronology and eruption history PDF Quaternary Geochronology 39 79 91 Bibcode 2017QuGeo 39 79C doi 10 1016 j quageo 2017 01 003 ISSN 1871 1014 Cowan James 1994 Myths of the dreaming interpreting Aboriginal legends Roseville N S W Unity Press ISBN 978 1853270857 Crisp Tony Australian Aborigine Dream Beliefs dreamhawk com Retrieved 4 May 2017 De Brabander Dallas 1984 Pintupi In Horton David ed Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia Canberra Aboriginal Studies Press ISBN 0 85575 234 3 Dixon R M W 1972 The Dyirbal Language of North Queensland Cambridge University Press p 29 Dixon R M W 1996 Origin legends and linguistic relationships Oceania 67 2 127 140 doi 10 1002 j 1834 4461 1996 tb02587 x JSTOR 40331537 Donaldson T J 1994 Tribal Names In Horton David ed Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia Canberra Aboriginal Studies Press ISBN 0 85575 234 3 Elkin A P 1938 Studies in Australian Totemism Monograph No 2 Oceania Haviland John B Hart Roger 1998 Old Man Fog and the Last Aborigines of Barrow Point Bathurst Crawford House Publishing ISBN 1 86333 169 7 Hiatt L 1975 Australian Aboriginal Mythology Essays in Honour of W E H Stanner Canberra Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies Horton David ed 1994 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander History Society and Culture Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia Canberra Aboriginal Studies Press ISBN 0 85575 234 3 Hough Richard 1994 Captain James Cook a biography London Hodder and Stoughton pp 150 155 ISBN 0 340 58598 6 Indymedia map indymedia org Archived from the original on 24 October 2009 Isaacs J 1980 Australian Dreaming 40 000 Years of Aboriginal History Sydney Lansdowne Press ISBN 0 7018 1330 X Koepping Klaus Peter 1981 Religion in Aboriginal Australia Religion Vol 11 pp 367 391 Kolig Erich 1980 Captain Cook in the Kimberley s In Berndt R M Berndt C H eds Aborigines of the West Their Past and Their Present St Lucia University of Western Australia Press pp 23 27 Korff Jens 2 October 2019 Mourning an Aboriginal death Creative Spirits Retrieved 4 May 2017 Maddock K 1988 Myth History and a Sense of Oneself In Beckett J R ed Past and Present The Construction of Aboriginality Canberra Aboriginal Studies Press pp 11 30 ISBN 0 85575 190 8 Marks Kathy 28 February 2003 Militant Aborigines embrace Islam to seek empowerment The Independent London Archived from the original on 12 January 2008 Retrieved 12 December 2007 Mercer Phil 31 March 2003 Aborigines turn to Islam BBC News Retrieved 12 December 2007 Morphy H 1992 Ancestral Connections Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226538662 Morris C 1994 Oral Literature In Horton David ed Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia Canberra Aboriginal Studies Press ISBN 0 85575 234 3 Morris C 1995 An Approach to Ensure Continuity and Transmission of the Rainforest Peoples Oral Tradition In Fourmile Henrietta Schnierer Stephan Smith Arthur eds An Identification of Problems and Potential for Future Rainforest Aboriginal Cultural Survival and Self Determination in the Wet Tropics Cairns Centre for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Participation Research and Development James Cook University via Trove Mountford C P 1985 The Dreamtime Book Australian Aboriginal Myths Louis Braille Productions Myers Fred R 1986 Pintupi Country Pintubi Self Sentiment Place and Politics among Western Desert Aborigines Canberra amp Washington Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies amp Smithsonian Institution ISBN 978 0520074118 Ngadjonjii Antiquity and Social Organisation Archived from the original on 2 February 2008 Retrieved 25 December 2007 Nunn Patrick D 22 August 2017 When the Bullin shrieked Aboriginal memories of volcanic eruptions thousands of years ago The Conversation Retrieved 15 June 2018 Pannell Sandra 2006 Reconciling Nature and Culture in a Global Context Lessons form the World Heritage List Research Report No 48 Cairns Cooperative Research Centre for Tropical Rainforest Ecology and Management p 11 ISBN 0 86443 766 8 Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Parker K Langloh 1896 Australian Legendary Tales 1st ed Melbourne Melville Mullen and Slade Pohlner Peter 1986 gangarru Milton Queensland Hopevale Mission Board ISBN 1 86252 311 8 Queensland s wet tropical forests Place ID 105689 Australian Heritage Database Australian Government Radcliffe Brown A R 1926 The Rainbow Serpent Myth of Australia The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 56 19 25 doi 10 2307 2843596 JSTOR 2843596 Robinson Roland 1970 Alteringa and Other Aboriginal Poems Sydney A H and A W Reed pp 29 30 Rose Deborah 1984 The Saga of Captain Cook Morality in Aboriginal and European Law Australian Aboriginal Studies 2 24 39 Roth W E 1984 First published 1897 The Queensland Aborigines Facsimile ed Victoria Park W A Hesperian Press ISBN 0 85905 054 8 Rumsey Allen 1994 The Dreaming human agency and inscriptive practice Oceania 65 2 116 128 doi 10 1002 j 1834 4461 1994 tb02494 x Sacred sites Aboriginal Areas Protection Authority Northern Territory Government 2 July 2014 Retrieved 12 February 2020 Smith W Ramsay 2003 Myths and legends of the Australian aborigines Mineola NY Dover Publications ISBN 0 486 42709 9 OCLC 51800252 Smyth Dermot 1994 Understanding Country The Importance of Land and Sea in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Societies Key Issue Paper 1 Canberra Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation pp 3 6 Stanner W E H 1966 On aboriginal religion Oceania Monograph No 11 Sydney Oceania Publications Sutton Peter 1988 Myth as History History as Myth In Keen I ed Being Black Aboriginal Cultures in Settled Australia Canberra Aboriginal Studies Press pp 251 268 ISBN 978 0855751852 Sutton Peter 2003 Native Title in Australia An Ethnographic Perspective Cambridge University Press pp 113 117 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511481635 ISBN 0 521 81258 5 Tindale Norman Earlier map Government of South Australia Archived from the original on 16 March 2008 Van Gennep A 1906 Mythes et Legendes d Australie in French Paris a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Watson M 1994 Storytelling In Horton David ed The Encyclopedia of Aboriginal Australia Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander History Society and Culture Canberra Aboriginal Studies Press Yengoyan Aram A 1979 Economy Society and Myth in Aboriginal Australia Annual Review of Anthropology 8 393 415 doi 10 1146 annurev an 08 100179 002141 JSTOR 2155626 Further reading editWaterman Patricia Panyity 1987 A Tale type Index of Australian Aboriginal Oral Narratives Folklore Fellows Communications Vol 238 Academia scientiarum Fennica ISBN 9789514105319 Dreamtime Stories and The Dreaming in Aboriginal Art ARTARK Retrieved 28 August 2023 External links edit Dust Echoes ABC Education Australian Broadcasting Corporation 16 May 2017 a series of twelve beautifully animated Dreamtime stories from Central Arnhem Land 12 Episodes each with accompanying Study Guide Whirlpool Mermaid Brolga Morning Star Namorrodor Curse Moon Man Be Spear Wawalag or Wagalak sisters Bat and the Butterfly and Mimis Yolngu mythology Australian Government portal on Aboriginal Dreamings and associated mythology Ngadjonji Antiquity and Social Organisation Ngadjonji History of the Rainforest People Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Australian Aboriginal religion and mythology amp oldid 1179226740, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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