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Bungandidj people

The Bungandidj people are an Aboriginal Australian people from the Mount Gambier region in south-eastern South Australia, and also in western Victoria. Their language is the Bungandidj language. Bungandidj was historically frequently rendered as Boandik, Buandig, or Booandik.

Bungandidj
Total population
unknown
Regions with significant populations
Languages
Bungandidj language, English
Religion
Australian Aboriginal mythology, Christianity
Related ethnic groups
Ngarrindjeri, Dhauwurd wurrung, Bindjali, and Jardwadjali
see List of Indigenous Australian group names

History edit

Prehistory edit

The territory of not only the Bunganndidj but also their neighbours the Meintangk, has been revealed, by archaeological explorations, to have been inhabited for some 30,000 years. Coastal occupation around the Robe and Cape Banks attests that habitation from, at a low estimate, 5,800 BP.[1]

Their name comes from Bung-an-ditj, meaning "people of the reeds", which indicates their connection to land and water.[2]

First contact edit

First contact between the Bungandidj and Europeans occurred in the early 1820s. Panchy from the Bungandidj recounted to Christina Smith the story of the first sighting of ships at Rivoli Bay in either 1822 or 1823, and his mother's abduction for three months before she was able to escape when the ship put in at Guichen Bay.[3]

When Governor George Grey led an expedition of surveyors, overland from Adelaide to Mt Gambier during April–May 1844, the diarist and painter George French Angas who accompanied them, noted that they found, from Woakwine Range onwards, numerous native tracks, and old encampments with abandoned wurlies, and heaps of banksia cones, which were used to make sweet drinks, mud weirs in swamps to catch fish, wicker-work traps to snare birds, and raised platform structures for spotting emus and kangaroos to hunt.[4]

Conflict and dispossession edit

In November 1834 Edward Henty settled near Portland, starting the movement of European settlers and their sheep, cattle, horses and bullocks across the Western plains of Victoria and the south east region of South Australia. Settlement occurred rapidly over the following two decades with significant frontier conflict taking place involving theft of sheep, spearings, massacres and mass poisoning of the natives.[5] Grey's expedition reported encountering very few indigenous people, no more than groups of two or three. The abundance of signs of previous native land use with the scarcity of sighted natives was explained as due to the smallpox, introduced by Europeans in the north, which has spread out, after devastating the Murray tribes and decimated Aboriginal people further south.[1]

There are a number of reports of poisoned flour or damper being given or left for natives in the settlement of Victoria and South Australia at the time.[6] According to the accounts given by Pendowen, Neenimin and Barakbouranu, and narrated to Christina Smith:

"We tasted the mutton, and found it very good; but we buried the damper, as we were afraid of being poisoned."[3]

In 1843 Henry Arthur joined his brother Charles in establishing a sheep run at Mount Schank. Trouble with Buandig people and dingoes, however, drove the Arthur brothers to sell up in 1844. The Hentys also had problems with their Mount Gambier sheep runs with theft of their sheep and shepherds speared to death in 1844. Such heavy losses occurred that the Hentys were forced to withdraw all their flocks from the Mount Gambier run.[citation needed]The Leake brothers on their Glencoe Station also reported problems losing 1,000 sheep from their 16,000 flock during 1845.[7] Hostilities are reported to have continued around the Glenelg River region for the next two years.

Mistreatment of Aboriginal people was at a level in 1845 where the commissioner of police drew attention to the atrocious treatment in the Rivoli Bay District:

"... damper poisoned with corrosive sublimate … [and] driving the Natives from the only watering places in the neighbourhood. The Native women appear likewise to have been sought after by the shepherds, whilst the men were driven from the stations with threats".[8][9]

In 1848, the Avenue Range Station massacre occurred in the Guichen Bay region of South Australia. At least 9 indigenous Bungandidj Wattatonga clan people were allegedly murdered by the station owner James Brown who was subsequently charged with the crime.[10][11] The case was dropped by the Crown for lack of European witnesses. Until that year, blacks were unable to testify under oath.[12] Christina Smith's source from the Wattatonga tribe refers to 11 people killed in this incident by two white men. The cause of the massacre was the theft of sheep for food.[13]

A report by Mr Smith to Dr Moorhouse, the Protector of Aborigines, in April 1851 reveals that "the natives belonging to the Rivoli Bay Tribe (Buandig) are all quiet, and most of them usefully employed in one way or another by the settlers." The report also raises with concern that "infanticide has been and is still practised among the natives here.", and "relations existing between native woman and the Europeans are very discreditable."[14]

As late as 1854, settlers on Bungandidj land still expressed fears of being attacked. The Leake Brothers of Glencoe Station built what they called their 'Frontier House' in 1854 which is described as a 'large homestead with slits in the walls through which rifles could be used against any likely intruder,' according to local historian Les Hill.[15]

Gradually a certain accommodation was made with Buandig people working as station hands, shearers and domestic servants while remaining on their own land.

According to Bell and Marsden, Aboriginal people made wurley encampments on the edge of Kingston and even moved into cottages at Rosetown on Kingston's northern side in 1877. The people often moved camp seasonally gathering and using traditional foods and using the traditional local burial ground. They record that the Blackford Reserve on the Bordertown Road was another locality where Aboriginal people lived until the 1970s.[8] Kingston and Bordertown were the territorial border shared between the Buandig and the Ngarrindjeri.

Today edit

There are many people in the region who identify as Bungandidj today. Descendants of the Bungandidj and the Meintangk continue to nurture and protect their culture through the Kungari Aboriginal Cultural Association based in Kingston SE.[16]

In 2022 many of the landmarks around Mount Gambier, including the lakes of the dormant volcano known as Mount Gambier, have been dual-named with Bungadidj names. The town of Mount Gambier is as of October 2022 not yet dual-named, but is being signposted "Berrin / Mount Gambier", Berrin being the name by which the town is known to its present-day Indigenous inhabitants.[2] The names include:

Country edit

According to Christina Smith in her 1880 book on the Bungandidj – The Boandik Tribe of South Australian Aborigines: A Sketch of Their Habits, Customs, Legends, and Language -

"The aborigines of the South-East were divided into five tribes, each occupying its own territory, and using different dialects of the same language. Their names were Booandik, Pinejunga, Mootatunga, Wichintunga, and Polinjunga."[19]

The largest clan, according to Smith, was the Bungandidj who occupied country from the mouth of the Glenelg River to Rivoli Bay North (Beachport), extending inland for about 30 miles (48 km). Some controversy exists as to which tribe, the Bungandidj or Meintangk, occupied the stretch of land between Rivoli Bay and Cape Jaffa, and in particular which of the two was in possession of the Woakwine Range.[1] The other clans occupied country from between Lacepede Bay to Bordertown.[19] The Bungandidj shared tribal borders with the Ngarrindjeri people of the Coorong and Murray mouth to the west, the Bindjali and Jardwadjali to the north and the Gunditjmara people to the east.

Anthropologist Norman Tindale argued in 1940 and again in 1974 that at the time of European settlement the Bungandidj were under territorial pressure from the Jardwadjali people to the north forcing the Bungandidj territorial boundary south from Gariwerd towards present day Casterton.[20] However the historian Ian D. Clark has challenged Tindale's conclusions, arguing that the ethnohistoric and linguistic evidence does not support Tindale's claims regarding the boundaries between the Bungandidj and Jardwadjali.[a][21]

Social organisation edit

The Bungandidj were divided into two marriage classes: Kumite and Kroke, with children being assigned their mother's class. Within the Kumite class there were five major animal totems

  • boorte moola: fishhawk
  • boorte parangal: pelican
  • boorte wa: crow
  • boorte willer: black cockatoo
  • boorte karato: (harmless) snake

The Kroke class had four major totems:

  • boorte wirrmal: owl
  • boorte wsereoo: teatree scrub
  • boorte moorna: an edible root
  • boorte kara-al: white crestless cockatoo.[22][23]

Each of these divisions had many animals, plants, and inanimate elements correlated with it. These totemic items were treated as the friend of all members of a totemic clan, and restrictions were imposed on eating species associated with them, except under extreme circumstances when due sorrow and remorse was expressed.[24]

The southerly groups appeared to have a migratory cycle consisting of setting up camps for fishing in the south over the warmer seasons, and then, with the onset of winter, leaving the stormy coasts to hunt and fish inland. Later reports describe their housing arrangements, of mud-daubed wurlies more comfortable than the shepherds' huts later constructed by pastoralists.[25]

Language edit

The Bungandidj language is a Pama-Nyungan language, and is classified as belonging to the Bungandidj/Kuurn-Kopan-Noot subgroup of the Victorian Kulin languages.[26] Their own name for their language was Drualat-ngolonung (speech of man), or, alternatively, Booandik-ngolo (speech of the Bungandidj).[27] It consisted of 5 known dialects, Bungandidj, Pinejunga, Mootatunga, Wichintunga and Polinjunga.[26] It has recently been studied by Barry Blake.[28]

Related vocabulary in Bungandidj includes: drual (man); barite (girl); moorongal (boy); and ngat (mother)[29]

Some words edit

  • kooraa ((male) kangaroo)
  • kal/karl (tame dog)
  • kar na chum (wild dog)
  • marm (father)
  • ngate (mother)
  • koomamir (whiteman)[30]

Alternative names edit

Given the range of early interactions and encounters with the Bungandidj people, several demonyms and orthographies exist:[20]

  • Barconedeet, Bak-on-date
  • Booandik-ngolo
  • Buanditj, Boandik, Buandic, Booandik, Bangandidj, Buandik, Buandic, Boandiks
  • Bunganditjngolo (name for a language)(Borandikngolo is a misprint)
  • Bungandity, Bungandaitj, Bungandaetch, Bungandaetcha
  • Drualat-ngolonung
  • Nguro (Mt Gambier dialect, of eastern tribes)
  • Pungandaitj, Pungantitj, Pungandik
  • Smoky River tribe

In the arts edit

Bob Maza's play The Keepers was about the dispossession of the Buandig people. It was performed several times in 1988, including in Naracoorte by Mainstreet Theatre and at the Adelaide Fringe Festival by Troupe Theatre, both directed by Geoff Crowhurst,[31] and at Belvoir Street Theatre in Sydney,[32] starring Lillian Crombie and Danny Adcock, and directed by Maza.[33] Maza won the National Black Playwright Award for the production.[32]

Notes edit

  1. ^ 'These leave no doubt that Jardwadjali 'is spoken about Horsham, Murtoa, Kewell, Warracknabeal, southerly to Grampians, Balmoral, Cavendish and Coleraine'. Thus, Mathews has included a large portion of territory that Tindale delineated as Buandig.' (Smith 1880, p. 15)

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c Fort 2005, p. 4.
  2. ^ a b Evans, Jack D (21 February 2022). "Iconic Mount Gambier landmarks to be dual-named with their European and Bunganditj names". ABC News. Retrieved 14 October 2022.
  3. ^ a b Smith 1880, pp. 25–26.
  4. ^ Fort 2005, pp. 5–6.
  5. ^ Foster, Nettelbeck & Hosking 2001, pp. 47, 77, 82–83, 113.
  6. ^ Foster, Nettelbeck & Hosking 2001, pp. 82–83.
  7. ^ Macgillivray 1989, pp. 27–28.
  8. ^ a b Bell & Marsden 2008.
  9. ^ Jenkin 1979, p. 63.
  10. ^ Foster, Nettelbeck & Hosking 2001, pp. 74–93.
  11. ^ Foster & Nettelbeck 2012, p. 138.
  12. ^ Foster, Nettelbeck & Hosking 2001, p. 13.
  13. ^ Smith 1880, p. 62.
  14. ^ Smith 1880, pp. 36–37.
  15. ^ Hill 1972, pp. 26–29.
  16. ^ Robe.
  17. ^ a b c d e f "Dual names for sites of cultural significance". City of Mount Gambier. 16 February 2022. Retrieved 14 October 2022.
  18. ^ "WarWar is the word". SAWater. 30 May 2019. Retrieved 14 October 2022.
  19. ^ a b Smith 1880, p. ix.
  20. ^ a b Tindale 1974.
  21. ^ Clark 1998, pp. 15–16.
  22. ^ Smith 1880, pp. ix–x.
  23. ^ Stewart 1887, pp. 461–462.
  24. ^ Smith 1880, p. x.
  25. ^ Fort 2005, p. 6.
  26. ^ a b Dixon 2004, p. xxxv.
  27. ^ Smith 1880, p. 125.
  28. ^ Blake 2003.
  29. ^ Smith 1880, pp. 125–126.
  30. ^ Stewart 1887, p. 464.
  31. ^ AusStage: Troupe Theatre 1988.
  32. ^ a b Van Straten 2007.
  33. ^ AusStage: Belvoir 1988.

Sources edit

bungandidj, people, aboriginal, australian, people, from, mount, gambier, region, south, eastern, south, australia, also, western, victoria, their, language, bungandidj, language, bungandidj, historically, frequently, rendered, boandik, buandig, booandik, bung. The Bungandidj people are an Aboriginal Australian people from the Mount Gambier region in south eastern South Australia and also in western Victoria Their language is the Bungandidj language Bungandidj was historically frequently rendered as Boandik Buandig or Booandik BungandidjTotal populationunknownRegions with significant populationsLanguagesBungandidj language EnglishReligionAustralian Aboriginal mythology ChristianityRelated ethnic groupsNgarrindjeri Dhauwurd wurrung Bindjali and Jardwadjali see List of Indigenous Australian group names Contents 1 History 1 1 Prehistory 1 2 First contact 1 3 Conflict and dispossession 2 Today 3 Country 4 Social organisation 5 Language 5 1 Some words 6 Alternative names 7 In the arts 8 Notes 8 1 Citations 9 SourcesHistory editPrehistory edit The territory of not only the Bunganndidj but also their neighbours the Meintangk has been revealed by archaeological explorations to have been inhabited for some 30 000 years Coastal occupation around the Robe and Cape Banks attests that habitation from at a low estimate 5 800 BP 1 Their name comes from Bung an ditj meaning people of the reeds which indicates their connection to land and water 2 First contact edit First contact between the Bungandidj and Europeans occurred in the early 1820s Panchy from the Bungandidj recounted to Christina Smith the story of the first sighting of ships at Rivoli Bay in either 1822 or 1823 and his mother s abduction for three months before she was able to escape when the ship put in at Guichen Bay 3 When Governor George Grey led an expedition of surveyors overland from Adelaide to Mt Gambier during April May 1844 the diarist and painter George French Angas who accompanied them noted that they found from Woakwine Range onwards numerous native tracks and old encampments with abandoned wurlies and heaps of banksia cones which were used to make sweet drinks mud weirs in swamps to catch fish wicker work traps to snare birds and raised platform structures for spotting emus and kangaroos to hunt 4 Conflict and dispossession edit Further information Australian frontier wars In November 1834 Edward Henty settled near Portland starting the movement of European settlers and their sheep cattle horses and bullocks across the Western plains of Victoria and the south east region of South Australia Settlement occurred rapidly over the following two decades with significant frontier conflict taking place involving theft of sheep spearings massacres and mass poisoning of the natives 5 Grey s expedition reported encountering very few indigenous people no more than groups of two or three The abundance of signs of previous native land use with the scarcity of sighted natives was explained as due to the smallpox introduced by Europeans in the north which has spread out after devastating the Murray tribes and decimated Aboriginal people further south 1 There are a number of reports of poisoned flour or damper being given or left for natives in the settlement of Victoria and South Australia at the time 6 According to the accounts given by Pendowen Neenimin and Barakbouranu and narrated to Christina Smith We tasted the mutton and found it very good but we buried the damper as we were afraid of being poisoned 3 In 1843 Henry Arthur joined his brother Charles in establishing a sheep run at Mount Schank Trouble with Buandig people and dingoes however drove the Arthur brothers to sell up in 1844 The Hentys also had problems with their Mount Gambier sheep runs with theft of their sheep and shepherds speared to death in 1844 Such heavy losses occurred that the Hentys were forced to withdraw all their flocks from the Mount Gambier run citation needed The Leake brothers on their Glencoe Station also reported problems losing 1 000 sheep from their 16 000 flock during 1845 7 Hostilities are reported to have continued around the Glenelg River region for the next two years Mistreatment of Aboriginal people was at a level in 1845 where the commissioner of police drew attention to the atrocious treatment in the Rivoli Bay District damper poisoned with corrosive sublimate and driving the Natives from the only watering places in the neighbourhood The Native women appear likewise to have been sought after by the shepherds whilst the men were driven from the stations with threats 8 9 In 1848 the Avenue Range Station massacre occurred in the Guichen Bay region of South Australia At least 9 indigenous Bungandidj Wattatonga clan people were allegedly murdered by the station owner James Brown who was subsequently charged with the crime 10 11 The case was dropped by the Crown for lack of European witnesses Until that year blacks were unable to testify under oath 12 Christina Smith s source from the Wattatonga tribe refers to 11 people killed in this incident by two white men The cause of the massacre was the theft of sheep for food 13 A report by Mr Smith to Dr Moorhouse the Protector of Aborigines in April 1851 reveals that the natives belonging to the Rivoli Bay Tribe Buandig are all quiet and most of them usefully employed in one way or another by the settlers The report also raises with concern that infanticide has been and is still practised among the natives here and relations existing between native woman and the Europeans are very discreditable 14 As late as 1854 settlers on Bungandidj land still expressed fears of being attacked The Leake Brothers of Glencoe Station built what they called their Frontier House in 1854 which is described as a large homestead with slits in the walls through which rifles could be used against any likely intruder according to local historian Les Hill 15 Gradually a certain accommodation was made with Buandig people working as station hands shearers and domestic servants while remaining on their own land According to Bell and Marsden Aboriginal people made wurley encampments on the edge of Kingston and even moved into cottages at Rosetown on Kingston s northern side in 1877 The people often moved camp seasonally gathering and using traditional foods and using the traditional local burial ground They record that the Blackford Reserve on the Bordertown Road was another locality where Aboriginal people lived until the 1970s 8 Kingston and Bordertown were the territorial border shared between the Buandig and the Ngarrindjeri Today editThere are many people in the region who identify as Bungandidj today Descendants of the Bungandidj and the Meintangk continue to nurture and protect their culture through the Kungari Aboriginal Cultural Association based in Kingston SE 16 In 2022 many of the landmarks around Mount Gambier including the lakes of the dormant volcano known as Mount Gambier have been dual named with Bungadidj names The town of Mount Gambier is as of October 2022 update not yet dual named but is being signposted Berrin Mount Gambier Berrin being the name by which the town is known to its present day Indigenous inhabitants 2 The names include Blue Lake Warwar meaning crow country 17 or the sound of many crows 18 Leg of Mutton Lake Yatton Loo unknown meaning 17 Brownes Lake Kroweratwari meaning emus or their tracks 17 Valley Lake Ketla Malpi meaning sacred talking tree 17 Umpherston Sinkhole Balumbul meaning buttercup flower 17 Cave Garden Thugi meaning bullfrogs 17 Country editAccording to Christina Smith in her 1880 book on the Bungandidj The Boandik Tribe of South Australian Aborigines A Sketch of Their Habits Customs Legends and Language The aborigines of the South East were divided into five tribes each occupying its own territory and using different dialects of the same language Their names were Booandik Pinejunga Mootatunga Wichintunga and Polinjunga 19 The largest clan according to Smith was the Bungandidj who occupied country from the mouth of the Glenelg River to Rivoli Bay North Beachport extending inland for about 30 miles 48 km Some controversy exists as to which tribe the Bungandidj or Meintangk occupied the stretch of land between Rivoli Bay and Cape Jaffa and in particular which of the two was in possession of the Woakwine Range 1 The other clans occupied country from between Lacepede Bay to Bordertown 19 The Bungandidj shared tribal borders with the Ngarrindjeri people of the Coorong and Murray mouth to the west the Bindjali and Jardwadjali to the north and the Gunditjmara people to the east Anthropologist Norman Tindale argued in 1940 and again in 1974 that at the time of European settlement the Bungandidj were under territorial pressure from the Jardwadjali people to the north forcing the Bungandidj territorial boundary south from Gariwerd towards present day Casterton 20 However the historian Ian D Clark has challenged Tindale s conclusions arguing that the ethnohistoric and linguistic evidence does not support Tindale s claims regarding the boundaries between the Bungandidj and Jardwadjali a 21 Social organisation editThe Bungandidj were divided into two marriage classes Kumite and Kroke with children being assigned their mother s class Within the Kumite class there were five major animal totems boorte moola fishhawk boorte parangal pelican boorte wa crow boorte willer black cockatoo boorte karato harmless snakeThe Kroke class had four major totems boorte wirrmal owl boorte wsereoo teatree scrub boorte moorna an edible root boorte kara al white crestless cockatoo 22 23 Each of these divisions had many animals plants and inanimate elements correlated with it These totemic items were treated as the friend of all members of a totemic clan and restrictions were imposed on eating species associated with them except under extreme circumstances when due sorrow and remorse was expressed 24 The southerly groups appeared to have a migratory cycle consisting of setting up camps for fishing in the south over the warmer seasons and then with the onset of winter leaving the stormy coasts to hunt and fish inland Later reports describe their housing arrangements of mud daubed wurlies more comfortable than the shepherds huts later constructed by pastoralists 25 Language editThe Bungandidj language is a Pama Nyungan language and is classified as belonging to the Bungandidj Kuurn Kopan Noot subgroup of the Victorian Kulin languages 26 Their own name for their language was Drualat ngolonung speech of man or alternatively Booandik ngolo speech of the Bungandidj 27 It consisted of 5 known dialects Bungandidj Pinejunga Mootatunga Wichintunga and Polinjunga 26 It has recently been studied by Barry Blake 28 Related vocabulary in Bungandidj includes drual man barite girl moorongal boy and ngat mother 29 Some words edit kooraa male kangaroo kal karl tame dog kar na chum wild dog marm father ngate mother koomamir whiteman 30 Alternative names editGiven the range of early interactions and encounters with the Bungandidj people several demonyms and orthographies exist 20 Barconedeet Bak on date Booandik ngolo Buanditj Boandik Buandic Booandik Bangandidj Buandik Buandic Boandiks Bunganditjngolo name for a language Borandikngolo is a misprint Bungandity Bungandaitj Bungandaetch Bungandaetcha Drualat ngolonung Nguro Mt Gambier dialect of eastern tribes Pungandaitj Pungantitj Pungandik Smoky River tribeIn the arts editBob Maza s play The Keepers was about the dispossession of the Buandig people It was performed several times in 1988 including in Naracoorte by Mainstreet Theatre and at the Adelaide Fringe Festival by Troupe Theatre both directed by Geoff Crowhurst 31 and at Belvoir Street Theatre in Sydney 32 starring Lillian Crombie and Danny Adcock and directed by Maza 33 Maza won the National Black Playwright Award for the production 32 Notes edit These leave no doubt that Jardwadjali is spoken about Horsham Murtoa Kewell Warracknabeal southerly to Grampians Balmoral Cavendish and Coleraine Thus Mathews has included a large portion of territory that Tindale delineated as Buandig Smith 1880 p 15 Citations edit a b c Fort 2005 p 4 a b Evans Jack D 21 February 2022 Iconic Mount Gambier landmarks to be dual named with their European and Bunganditj names ABC News Retrieved 14 October 2022 a b Smith 1880 pp 25 26 Fort 2005 pp 5 6 Foster Nettelbeck amp Hosking 2001 pp 47 77 82 83 113 Foster Nettelbeck amp Hosking 2001 pp 82 83 Macgillivray 1989 pp 27 28 a b Bell amp Marsden 2008 Jenkin 1979 p 63 Foster Nettelbeck amp Hosking 2001 pp 74 93 Foster amp Nettelbeck 2012 p 138 Foster Nettelbeck amp Hosking 2001 p 13 Smith 1880 p 62 Smith 1880 pp 36 37 Hill 1972 pp 26 29 Robe a b c d e f Dual names for sites of cultural significance City of Mount Gambier 16 February 2022 Retrieved 14 October 2022 WarWar is the word SAWater 30 May 2019 Retrieved 14 October 2022 a b Smith 1880 p ix a b Tindale 1974 Clark 1998 pp 15 16 Smith 1880 pp ix x Stewart 1887 pp 461 462 Smith 1880 p x Fort 2005 p 6 a b Dixon 2004 p xxxv Smith 1880 p 125 Blake 2003 Smith 1880 pp 125 126 Stewart 1887 p 464 AusStage Troupe Theatre 1988 a b Van Straten 2007 AusStage Belvoir 1988 Sources editAboriginal History City Council of Robe Angas George French 1847 Savage life and scenes in Australia and New Zealand being an artist s impressions of countries and people at the Antipodes PDF Vol 1 2 London Smith Elder amp Co via Internet Archive Bell Peter Marsden Susan 2008 Kingston SE An Overview Kingston District Council Blake Barry 2003 The Bunganditj Buwandik Language of the Mount Gambier Region Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies Australian National University ISBN 978 0 858 83495 8 Clark Ian D 1995 Scars in the Landscape a register of massacre sites in western Victoria 1803 1859 PDF AIATSIS pp 169 175 ISBN 0 85575 281 5 Clark Ian D November 1998 Understanding the Enemy Ngamadjid or Foreign Invader Aboriginal perception of Europeans in Nineteenth Century Western Victoria Faculty of Business and Economics Working Paper 73 98 pp 1 25 permanent dead link Dixon Robert M W 2004 First published 2002 Australian Languages Their Nature and Development Vol 1 Cambridge University Press pp 169 175 ISBN 978 0 521 47378 1 Fort Carol 2005 Doing history and Understanding Cultural Landscapes Cutting Through South Australia s Woakwine Range PDF pp 1 17 Foster Robert Nettelbeck Amanda 2012 Out of the Silence The History and Memory of South Australia s Frontier Wars Wakefield Press ISBN 978 1 743 05172 6 Foster Robert Nettelbeck Amanda Hosking Rick 2001 Fatal Collisions The South Australian Frontier and the Violence of Memory Wakefield Press ISBN 978 1 862 54533 5 Hill Les R 1972 Mount Gambier The City around a Cave A regional History Adelaide Openbook Publishers Jenkin Graham 1979 Conquest of the Ngarrindjeri Rigby ISBN 978 0 727 01112 1 The Keepers Belvoir Street Theatre Surry Hills NSW 25 May 1988 The Australian Live Performance Database 1988 Retrieved 17 December 2021 The Keepers Troupe Theatre Unley SA Adelaide Fringe 1988 The Australian Live Performance Database 1988 Retrieved 17 December 2021 Macgillivray Leith 1989 We Have Found Our Paradise the South East squattocracy 1840 1870 DOC Journal of the Historical Society of South Australia 17 25 38 Smith Mrs James 1880 The Booandik Tribe of South Australian Aborigines A Sketch of Their Habits Customs Legends and Language Adelaide E Spiller Government Printer via Internet Archive Stewart D 1887 Mount Gambier PDF In Curr Edward Micklethwaite ed The Australian race its origin languages customs place of landing in Australia and the routes by which it spread itself over the continent Vol 3 Melbourne J Ferres pp 460 465 via Internet Archive Tindale Norman Barnett 1974 Bunganditj SA Aboriginal Tribes of Australia Their Terrain Environmental Controls Distribution Limits and Proper Names Australian National University Press ISBN 978 0 708 10741 6 Van Straten Frank 2007 Bob Maza AM 1939 2000 Live Performance Australia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bungandidj people amp oldid 1211132975, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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