fbpx
Wikipedia

Turrbal

The Turrbal are an Aboriginal Australian people from the region of Brisbane, Queensland. The name primarily refers to the dialect they speak, the tribe itself being alternatively called Mianjin/Meanjin. Mianjin is also the Turrbal word for the central Brisbane area.[1] The traditional homelands of the Turrbal stretch from the North Pine River, south to the Logan River, and inland as far as Moggill, a range which includes the city of Brisbane.[2]

Name Edit

The ethnonym Turrbal is an exonym which is thought to derive from the root turr/dhur (bora ring) and -bal, signifying "those who say turr or dhur for a bora ring", rather than using the other tribe's customary term bool. It was the toponym used in 1841 by native guides from Nundah who led the group of German Lutheran missionaries to the Ningy Ningy at what became Toorbul Point, in the area where they established the Zion Hill Mission.[3]

Language Edit

Turrbal is one of 4 dialects of the Durubalic branch of the Pama-Nyungan languages.[4] Turrbal was spoken from Gold Creek and Moggill, north as far as North Pine, and south to the Logan River.[5] Tom Petrie, son of one of the founding families of the Brisbane area settlements, grew up among the Turrbal, and mastered the language and the contiguous dialects from an early age.

Country Edit

The Turrbal people's traditional lands and hunting grounds extended over some 1,300 square miles (3,400 km2) and lay around the Brisbane River, stretching from the Cleveland shore area of Moreton Bay, and running inland as far as the Great Dividing Range about Gatton; north to near Esk.[6][5] The Turrbal mob itself was located specifically in what is now called the Brisbane CBD, the name for which was Mianjin.[7] Neighbouring Aboriginal nations include the Gubbi Gubbi and Wakka Wakka to the north, the Dalla to the northwest and the Ngugi of Moreton Island. Despite collective title to a stretch of land, the Turrbal like many tribes permitted private ownership of specific sections of land, down to recognizing personal possession of parts of a river or even of trees and shrubs. Petrie describes the situation in the following words:

Though the land belonged to the whole tribe, the head men often spoke of it as theirs. The tribe in general owned the animals and birds on the ground, also roots and nests, but certain men and women owned different fruit or flower-trees and shrubs. For instance, a man could own a bonyi (Araucaria bidwilli) tree, and a woman a minti (Banksia amula), dulandella (Persoonia Sp.), midyim (Myrtus tenuifolia), or dakkabin (Xanthorrhoea aborea) tree. Then a man sometimes owned a portion of the river which was a good fishing spot, and no one else could fish there without his permission.[2]

Mythology Edit

In Turrbal thought, the origins of the division of the sexes was attributed to two distinct birds. Menfolk all came from the billing (a small house bat). Women in turn had their descent from a wamankan (night-hawk). Given their mythic function, they could not be eaten, but capturing and killing them was permitted.[8][a]

History Edit

The explorer John Oxley, on first sighting the Turrbal in 1824, called them "about the strongest and best-made muscular men I have seen in any country".[9]

The Turrbal's tracks form the basis of many modern-day roads. Waterworks Road from Ashgrove is built on a Turrbal track that leads to Mount Coot-tha. Turrbal people would go to Mount Coot-tha to collect honey (ku-ta) from the bees there; it is the place of the honey-bee dreaming.[10] Similarly, Old Northern Road from Everton Hills is built on a Turrbal track that led to the site of a triennial Bunya feast in neighboring Wakka Wakka country.

Many suburbs and places in Brisbane have names derived from Turrbal words. Woolloongabba is derived from either woolloon-capemm meaning "whirling water",[11] or from woolloon-gabba meaning "fight talk place".[12] Toowong is derived from tuwong, the onomatopoeic name for the Pacific koel.[13] Bulimba means "place of the magpie-lark".[14] Indooroopilly is derived from either nyindurupilli meaning "gully of leeches", or from yindurupilly meaning "gully of running water".[15] Enoggera is a corruption of the words yauar-ngari meaning "song and dance".[16][17]

Hunting and gathering economy Edit

The Turrbal exploited a large range of local species of animals and insects as part of their daily cuisine. These may be divided into sea- and riverine food, mainland victuals, and vegetables.

Vegetables and fruit Edit

Meats Edit

They often sought out goanna (magil) eggs, which could be found near ant nests in soft soil. The Turrbal would occasionally hunt marine animals, such as dugongs (yangon), porpoises (talobilla), tailor fish (punba), and mullet (andakal).[31]

Alternative names Edit

Turubul, Turrubul, Turrubal, Terabul, Torbul, Turibul (Tindale 1974, p. 169)

Ngundari may have been a clan group of Turrbal people.[32]

Notable people Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Among the natives of Burnett, Mary and Dawson rivers, the common bat, deering, was the friend of all the men, while a small owl or night hawk, boorookapkap, was the friend of the women. T. Petrie reports that the blacks of Brisbane river believe that the bat, there called billing, made all their menfolk, and that the wamankan, or night hawk, made the women. In 1834, Rev L. E. Threlkeld reported that the tribe at Lake Macquarie, New South Wales, had a belief that a certain small bird was the first maker of women, and that the bat was venerated on the same grounds by the men. J. Dawson in 1881, describing the customs and beliefs of the Aborigines of western Victoria, states that the common bat belongs to the men, and the fern owl to the women.' (Mathews 1910, p. 47)
  2. ^ the word lies behind the Queensland toponym, Caboolture, "place of many carpet snakes" (Petrie & Petrie 1904, p. 80)
  3. ^ Tortoises were associated with an area of Brisbane, now called New Farm and formerly called binkinba (place of the land tortoise) (Petrie & Petrie 1904, p. 82)

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Turrbal Aboriginal Nation.
  2. ^ a b Petrie & Petrie 1904, p. 117.
  3. ^ Steele 2015, p. 165.
  4. ^ Dixon 2002, p. xxxiv.
  5. ^ a b Petrie & Petrie 1904, pp. 4–5.
  6. ^ Tindale 1974, p. 169.
  7. ^ Connors 2015, p. 21.
  8. ^ Petrie & Petrie 1904, p. 62.
  9. ^ Evans 1992, p. 12.
  10. ^ Turrbal Association 1998.
  11. ^ QPN44358.
  12. ^ ourbrisbane.com.
  13. ^ QPN47847.
  14. ^ QPN42567.
  15. ^ QPN16663.
  16. ^ QPN41374.
  17. ^ Watson 1944.
  18. ^ a b Petrie & Petrie 1904, p. 93.
  19. ^ Petrie & Petrie 1904, p. 92.
  20. ^ Petrie & Petrie 1904, pp. 92–93.
  21. ^ Maiden 1889.
  22. ^ Petrie & Petrie 1904, pp. 93–94.
  23. ^ Petrie & Petrie 1904, p. 94.
  24. ^ a b Petrie & Petrie 1904, p. 81.
  25. ^ Petrie & Petrie 1904, pp. 82–83.
  26. ^ Petrie & Petrie 1904, p. 85.
  27. ^ Petrie & Petrie 1904, p. 86.
  28. ^ Petrie & Petrie 1904, p. 88.
  29. ^ Petrie & Petrie 1904, pp. 88–89.
  30. ^ Petrie & Petrie 1904, pp. 90–92.
  31. ^ Petrie & Petrie 1904, pp. 65–90.
  32. ^ Budde, Paul (1 August 2020). "The Turrbal People". Paul Budde History, Philosophy, Culture. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
  33. ^ Turrbal: ceremony.

Sources Edit

  • Connors, Libby (2015). Warrior: A legendary leader's dramatic life and violent death on the colonial frontier. Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-760-11048-2.
  • Dixon, Robert M. W. (2002). Australian Languages: Their Nature and Development. Vol. 1. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-47378-1.
  • Evans, Raymond (1992). "The mogwi take mi-an-jin: Race relations and the Moreton Bay penal settlement 1824-42". In Fisher, Rod (ed.). Brisbane: The Aboriginal presence, 1824-1860. The Brisbane History Group Papers. pp. 7–30.
  • . Turrbal Aboriginal Nation, Traditional Owners of Meanjin (Brisbane). Archived from the original on 14 February 2020. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  • . ourbrisbane.com. Archived from the original on 7 June 2011. Retrieved 7 August 2014.
  • Maiden, J. H. (1889). The useful native plants of Australia: Including Tasmania. Sydney: Turner and Henderson.
  • Mathews, R. H. (1910). "Die Bundandaba-Zeremonie in Queensland' (The Bundandaba Ceremony of Initiation in Queensland)". Mitteilungen der Anthropologischen Gesellschaft in Wien. 40: 44–47 – via press-files.anu.edu.au.
  • Petrie, Tom; Petrie, Constance Campbell (1904). Tom Petrie's Reminiscences of Early Queensland (PDF). Brisbane: Watson, Ferguson & Co – via Internet Archive.
  • "Place name details: Bulimba (entry 42567)". Queensland Place Names. Queensland Government. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  • "Place name details: Enoggera (entry 41374)". Queensland Place Names. Queensland Government. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  • "Place name details: Indooroopilly (entry 16663)". Queensland Place Names. Queensland Government. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  • "Place name details: Toowong (entry 47847)". Queensland Place Names. Queensland Government. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  • "Place name details: Woolloongabba (entry 44358)". Queensland Place Names. Queensland Government. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  • Steele, John Gladstone (2015) [First published 1984]. Aboriginal Pathways: in Southeast Queensland and the Richmond River. University of Queensland Press. ISBN 978-0-702-25742-1.
  • Tindale, Norman (1974). Aboriginal Tribes of Australia, Jagara (QLD). Australian National University Press.
  • Turrbal Association (1998). An Indigenous History of Waterworks Road, Brisbane. Ann Wallin & Associates.
  • Watson, Frederick James (1944). Vocabularies of Four Representative Tribes of South Eastern Queensland. Brisbane: Royal Geographical Society of Australasia.
  • "Welcome to Country Ceremony". Turrbal Tribe. Retrieved 28 November 2020.

turrbal, this, article, about, indigenous, australian, group, their, language, language, aboriginal, australian, people, from, region, brisbane, queensland, name, primarily, refers, dialect, they, speak, tribe, itself, being, alternatively, called, mianjin, me. This article is about the Indigenous Australian group For their language see Turrbal language The Turrbal are an Aboriginal Australian people from the region of Brisbane Queensland The name primarily refers to the dialect they speak the tribe itself being alternatively called Mianjin Meanjin Mianjin is also the Turrbal word for the central Brisbane area 1 The traditional homelands of the Turrbal stretch from the North Pine River south to the Logan River and inland as far as Moggill a range which includes the city of Brisbane 2 Contents 1 Name 2 Language 3 Country 4 Mythology 5 History 6 Hunting and gathering economy 6 1 Vegetables and fruit 6 2 Meats 7 Alternative names 8 Notable people 9 Notes 9 1 Citations 10 SourcesName EditThe ethnonym Turrbal is an exonym which is thought to derive from the root turr dhur bora ring and bal signifying those who say turr or dhur for a bora ring rather than using the other tribe s customary term bool It was the toponym used in 1841 by native guides from Nundah who led the group of German Lutheran missionaries to the Ningy Ningy at what became Toorbul Point in the area where they established the Zion Hill Mission 3 Language EditTurrbal is one of 4 dialects of the Durubalic branch of the Pama Nyungan languages 4 Turrbal was spoken from Gold Creek and Moggill north as far as North Pine and south to the Logan River 5 Tom Petrie son of one of the founding families of the Brisbane area settlements grew up among the Turrbal and mastered the language and the contiguous dialects from an early age Country EditThe Turrbal people s traditional lands and hunting grounds extended over some 1 300 square miles 3 400 km2 and lay around the Brisbane River stretching from the Cleveland shore area of Moreton Bay and running inland as far as the Great Dividing Range about Gatton north to near Esk 6 5 The Turrbal mob itself was located specifically in what is now called the Brisbane CBD the name for which was Mianjin 7 Neighbouring Aboriginal nations include the Gubbi Gubbi and Wakka Wakka to the north the Dalla to the northwest and the Ngugi of Moreton Island Despite collective title to a stretch of land the Turrbal like many tribes permitted private ownership of specific sections of land down to recognizing personal possession of parts of a river or even of trees and shrubs Petrie describes the situation in the following words Though the land belonged to the whole tribe the head men often spoke of it as theirs The tribe in general owned the animals and birds on the ground also roots and nests but certain men and women owned different fruit or flower trees and shrubs For instance a man could own a bonyi Araucaria bidwilli tree and a woman a minti Banksia amula dulandella Persoonia Sp midyim Myrtus tenuifolia or dakkabin Xanthorrhoea aborea tree Then a man sometimes owned a portion of the river which was a good fishing spot and no one else could fish there without his permission 2 Mythology EditIn Turrbal thought the origins of the division of the sexes was attributed to two distinct birds Menfolk all came from the billing a small house bat Women in turn had their descent from a wamankan night hawk Given their mythic function they could not be eaten but capturing and killing them was permitted 8 a History EditThe explorer John Oxley on first sighting the Turrbal in 1824 called them about the strongest and best made muscular men I have seen in any country 9 The Turrbal s tracks form the basis of many modern day roads Waterworks Road from Ashgrove is built on a Turrbal track that leads to Mount Coot tha Turrbal people would go to Mount Coot tha to collect honey ku ta from the bees there it is the place of the honey bee dreaming 10 Similarly Old Northern Road from Everton Hills is built on a Turrbal track that led to the site of a triennial Bunya feast in neighboring Wakka Wakka country Many suburbs and places in Brisbane have names derived from Turrbal words Woolloongabba is derived from either woolloon capemm meaning whirling water 11 or from woolloon gabba meaning fight talk place 12 Toowong is derived from tuwong the onomatopoeic name for the Pacific koel 13 Bulimba means place of the magpie lark 14 Indooroopilly is derived from either nyindurupilli meaning gully of leeches or from yindurupilly meaning gully of running water 15 Enoggera is a corruption of the words yauar ngari meaning song and dance 16 17 Hunting and gathering economy EditThe Turrbal exploited a large range of local species of animals and insects as part of their daily cuisine These may be divided into sea and riverine food mainland victuals and vegetables Vegetables and fruit Edit The Turrbal gathered the pencil yam tarm from scrub borders where it was often found almost a metre underground 18 Shoots from the crowns of both the cabbage tree palm binkar and the king palm pikki served as vegetables 18 A Blechnum species a swamp fern called bangwal was a delicacy found in abundance and generally consumed as a bread like sidedish with fish or meat a freshwater rush called yimbun was also harvested and once prepared tasted like arrowroot 19 The Moreton Bay chesnut mai a root called bundal in Turrbal but more widely known as cunjevoi Canavalia Obtusifolia beans yugam and zamia nuts though poisonous were rendered edible by long soaking after the nuts were cracked They were then roasted Mai was pounded into a cake as were yugam beans and bundal and the word was later used to denote European bread 20 The 1889 book The Useful Native Plants of Australia records that The seeds are eaten after cooking as they are poisonous in the raw state Some shipwrecked sailors in Northwest Australia were poisoned by them 21 geebung dulandella was relished and eaten raw as were two varieties of wild fig called respectively ngoa nga and nyuta white myrtle berries midyim located on sandy islands like the dubbul berry were much sought after as a sweet dogwood gum denna was also highly prized 22 The breadfruit winnam was chewed and sucked 23 Meats Edit A variety of snakes were eaten the carpet snake kabul b the black snake tumgu brown snake kuralbang and death adder mulunkun 24 Aside from lizards two varieties of goanna were hunted the larger one being called giwar while the smaller variety was named barra 24 The echidna kagarr tortoises binkin turtle bowaiya c also formed part of their diet 25 Two varieties of kangaroo and possum were hunted the groman or old man kangaroo and the murri 26 and the forest possum kupi and scrub possum kappolla 27 Koalas dumbripi were also highly prized 28 The large black flying squirrel panko the small grey squirrel chibur the Quoll mibur were eaten as was the flying fox gramman while the dingo mirri was not part of their diet the pups being taken in order to be domesticated 29 citation needed Among the hunted avian species were the scrub turkey wargun the emu ngurrun the black swan marutchi native ducks ngau u quail duwir parrots pillin and cockatoos kaiyar the latter highly valued for the yellow topknots billa billa employed by men as a ceremonial adornment 30 They often sought out goanna magil eggs which could be found near ant nests in soft soil The Turrbal would occasionally hunt marine animals such as dugongs yangon porpoises talobilla tailor fish punba and mullet andakal 31 Alternative names EditTurubul Turrubul Turrubal Terabul Torbul Turibul Tindale 1974 p 169 Ngundari may have been a clan group of Turrbal people 32 Notable people EditMaroochy Barambah is one of the elders of the Turrbal people and is an acclaimed performing artist 33 Notes Edit Among the natives of Burnett Mary and Dawson rivers the common bat deering was the friend of all the men while a small owl or night hawk boorookapkap was the friend of the women T Petrie reports that the blacks of Brisbane river believe that the bat there called billing made all their menfolk and that the wamankan or night hawk made the women In 1834 Rev L E Threlkeld reported that the tribe at Lake Macquarie New South Wales had a belief that a certain small bird was the first maker of women and that the bat was venerated on the same grounds by the men J Dawson in 1881 describing the customs and beliefs of the Aborigines of western Victoria states that the common bat belongs to the men and the fern owl to the women Mathews 1910 p 47 the word lies behind the Queensland toponym Caboolture place of many carpet snakes Petrie amp Petrie 1904 p 80 Tortoises were associated with an area of Brisbane now called New Farm and formerly called binkinba place of the land tortoise Petrie amp Petrie 1904 p 82 Citations Edit Turrbal Aboriginal Nation a b Petrie amp Petrie 1904 p 117 Steele 2015 p 165 Dixon 2002 p xxxiv a b Petrie amp Petrie 1904 pp 4 5 Tindale 1974 p 169 Connors 2015 p 21 Petrie amp Petrie 1904 p 62 Evans 1992 p 12 Turrbal Association 1998 QPN44358 sfn error no target CITEREFQPN44358 help ourbrisbane com QPN47847 sfn error no target CITEREFQPN47847 help QPN42567 sfn error no target CITEREFQPN42567 help QPN16663 sfn error no target CITEREFQPN16663 help QPN41374 sfn error no target CITEREFQPN41374 help Watson 1944 a b Petrie amp Petrie 1904 p 93 Petrie amp Petrie 1904 p 92 Petrie amp Petrie 1904 pp 92 93 Maiden 1889 Petrie amp Petrie 1904 pp 93 94 Petrie amp Petrie 1904 p 94 a b Petrie amp Petrie 1904 p 81 Petrie amp Petrie 1904 pp 82 83 Petrie amp Petrie 1904 p 85 Petrie amp Petrie 1904 p 86 Petrie amp Petrie 1904 p 88 Petrie amp Petrie 1904 pp 88 89 Petrie amp Petrie 1904 pp 90 92 Petrie amp Petrie 1904 pp 65 90 Budde Paul 1 August 2020 The Turrbal People Paul Budde History Philosophy Culture Retrieved 11 March 2022 Turrbal ceremony Sources EditConnors Libby 2015 Warrior A legendary leader s dramatic life and violent death on the colonial frontier Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 1 760 11048 2 Dixon Robert M W 2002 Australian Languages Their Nature and Development Vol 1 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 47378 1 Evans Raymond 1992 The mogwi take mi an jin Race relations and the Moreton Bay penal settlement 1824 42 In Fisher Rod ed Brisbane The Aboriginal presence 1824 1860 The Brisbane History Group Papers pp 7 30 History Turrbal Aboriginal Nation Traditional Owners of Meanjin Brisbane Archived from the original on 14 February 2020 Retrieved 10 January 2020 History of Woolloongabba ourbrisbane com Archived from the original on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 7 August 2014 Maiden J H 1889 The useful native plants of Australia Including Tasmania Sydney Turner and Henderson Mathews R H 1910 Die Bundandaba Zeremonie in Queensland The Bundandaba Ceremony of Initiation in Queensland Mitteilungen der Anthropologischen Gesellschaft in Wien 40 44 47 via press files anu edu au Petrie Tom Petrie Constance Campbell 1904 Tom Petrie s Reminiscences of Early Queensland PDF Brisbane Watson Ferguson amp Co via Internet Archive Place name details Bulimba entry 42567 Queensland Place Names Queensland Government Retrieved 13 September 2015 Place name details Enoggera entry 41374 Queensland Place Names Queensland Government Retrieved 13 September 2015 Place name details Indooroopilly entry 16663 Queensland Place Names Queensland Government Retrieved 13 September 2015 Place name details Toowong entry 47847 Queensland Place Names Queensland Government Retrieved 13 September 2015 Place name details Woolloongabba entry 44358 Queensland Place Names Queensland Government Retrieved 13 September 2015 Steele John Gladstone 2015 First published 1984 Aboriginal Pathways in Southeast Queensland and the Richmond River University of Queensland Press ISBN 978 0 702 25742 1 Tindale Norman 1974 Aboriginal Tribes of Australia Jagara QLD Australian National University Press Turrbal Association 1998 An Indigenous History of Waterworks Road Brisbane Ann Wallin amp Associates Watson Frederick James 1944 Vocabularies of Four Representative Tribes of South Eastern Queensland Brisbane Royal Geographical Society of Australasia Welcome to Country Ceremony Turrbal Tribe Retrieved 28 November 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Turrbal amp oldid 1165583446, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.