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Wergaia

The Wergaia or Werrigia people are an Aboriginal Australian group in the Mallee and Wimmera regions of north-Western Victoria, made up of a number of clans.[1] The people were also known as the Maligundidj (in the Wotjobaluk language[2]) which means the people belonging to the mali (mallee) eucalypt bushland which covers much of their territory.[3]

Before European settlement in the nineteenth century, the Wergaia peoples occupied the area that included Lake Hindmarsh, Lake Albacutya, Pine Plains Lake, Lake Werringrin, Lake Coorong, Warracknabeal, Beulah, Hopetoun, Dimboola, Ouyen, Yanac, Hattah Lakes and the Wimmera River.

Language edit

The Wergaia language was a dialect of Wemba-Wemba, a member of the Kulinic branch of Pama–Nyungan.[4]

Ecology edit

Thomas Mitchell, exploring the territory over which the Wergaia dwelt, wrote in 1836:

Every day we passed over land which for natural fertility and beauty could scarcely be surpassed; over streams of unfailing abundance and plains covered with the richest pasturage. Stately trees and majestic mountains adorned the ever-varying scenery of this region, the most southern of all Australia and the best.[5]

It was he added, a "blank sheet" for future development. For the natives, it was rich in kumpung, the bulrush whose rhizomes formed the staple of their diet, as well as in lahoor, the yellow water lily, the dandelion yam and trefoil.[6] Rivers were trawled for freshwater mussels and crayfish. Bushland was carefully kept in order by selected firing. George Augustus Robinson, appointed by the Port Phillip Protectorate to be the first Protector of Aborigines noted fine-built thatched huts, raised on stone walls along the waterways, elaborate fishgarths,[7] one, south around Mount Duwil, extending over hectares to form a network interconnecting swamps, floodways and watercourses.[8]

Around February and March, a Festival of Laap attracted many tribes to congregate in order to socialize, settle disputes and enjoy a sweet potion, called laap. Laap was harvested over a period of 6 to eight weeks, any area could yield up to 40–50 pounds of the substance a day. It was confected from the sugary excretions of a species of psylla (Psylla eucalypti Dobson) deposited on the leaves of the walkerie mallee gumtree.[7][9]

History and culture edit

The Aboriginal people of this area go back at least 1,600 generations.[10] There is evidence of occupation in Gariwerd going back to 30–20,000 years ago, predating the end of the last ice age. As the earlier warm, rainy era of the Holocene changed, a slight increase in aridity led to a tenfold increase in habitation, according to the archaeological record dated to around 4000 years BP.[11]

Society edit

The Maligundidj people were divided into 20 clans each with their particular territory. The first question they would ask an outsider was:ngaia yauarin? (What is your flesh?) meaning what was your place within the system of moieties and totemic skin relations that governed Aboriginal identity.[12] They were a matrilineal society divided into two moieties: gabadj (var.gamutch)[12] (southern black cockatoo) and grugidj (var.krokitch)[12] (white cockatoo), with the moiety to which one belonged called a mir.[13] Intermarriage occurred often with the Jardwadjali and Dja Dja Wurrung clans, and meetings and ceremonies were attended with the Dadidadi, Wadiwadi, and Ladjiladji peoples to their north.[13]

Mythological and empirical thinking edit

According to information given by the Wudjubalug clan, the dreamtime creator, Bunjil the eaglehawk man, was assisted in fashioning the world by the BramBram Ngul brothers, dwellers in the Naracoorte caves,[14] who moulded men from a tree.[15]

One clan of the Wergaia, the Boorong near Lake Tyrrell, had accomplished star-gazers with a sophisticated knowledge of astronomy. When William Edward Stanbridge took up grazing lands in their territory in the mid 19th century, he learned of it from them. Stanbridge described part of their system in a lecture delivered before the Philosophical Institute of Victoria in September 1857. Stanbridge's exposition showed that the Wergaia connected the rising and setting of particular stars with seasonal events and dreamtime mythology.[16][17][18][19]

A reanalysis of Stanbridge's material has recently led to the hypothesis that some time after 1837, the Wergaia had registered the massive flaring or 'great eruption' of η Carinae, which they identified as Collowgullouric War — a female crow and wife of War — the crow, Canopus, and had incorporated the event into their ethnoastronomical system.[20]

A few examples illustrate the intimate correlation they established between the movements of celestial bodies and the cycles of natural phenomena in their native habitat. The northern rise of Marpeankuurk (Arcturus) signalled that it was time to harvest the larvae of the wood ant, a species of carpenter ant. When Neilloan (Vega) set just after duskfall, it indicated that malleefowl eggs were ready to be collected. The setting of Coonartoorung (the Beehive Cluster) in the constellation of Cancer marked the onset of autumn.[18]

One dreamtime story of the Wudjubalug people tells of how Gnowee, the sun, was created by Pupperimbul, one of the Nurrumbunguttia before these ancient spirits disappeared from the heavens before man himself was created, and the earth was in sheer darkness. Pupperimbul hurled an emu egg into the firmament, whereupon it burst and shed light over the sky. The celestial pattern of the near stars reflected kinship patterns: Gnowee's sister was Chargee Gnowee (Venus), the wife of Ginabongbearp (Jupiter).[21][22]

European contact and history edit

It is likely that first contact with Europeans was through smallpox epidemics which arrived with the First Fleet in 1788 and rapidly spread through the trading networks of Indigenous Australians and killed many people in two waves before the 1830s. It killed large numbers of people, and disfigured many more with pock-marked faces, and tribal elders said it came down the Murray River sent by malevolent sorcerers to the north. One Wudjubalug account called the disease thinba micka.[23]

The explorer Edward John Eyre was possibly the first European (called by the Wergaia ngamadjidj)[13] seen by the Maligundidj when he followed the Wimmera River to Lake Hindmarsh in 1838. His reports of the well-watered mallee country provided encouragement for the subsequent rush of settlers with their cattle and sheep eager to establish pastoral stations.[13] Strong resistance to this influx meant that Europeans could not travel unarmed in Wergaia territory during the first decade of settlement.[13] Horatio Cockburn Ellerman, an early settler who came to run the Antwerp station in 1846, had participated in several raids on Aboriginal camps,[24] and was notoriously hard on the Indigenous people early in his career. He had, according to the testimony of William Taylor, had taken part in a punitive raid in the southern Wimmera. His ruthlessness drew the enmity particularly of the Wudjubalug, who were rumoured to be intent on killing him. Ellerman obtained a warrant in 1844, and, enlisting the assistance of Border Police, tracked down the suspect, shooting him together with another Wudjubalug.[25] He was widely believed to have been involved in the murder of an Aboriginal woman at Banji bunag in 1846,[26] where he had fired at random at a Gur-balug group of Aboriginal people at their camp site on the Wimmera River.[27] Ellerman took her orphaned child in. Ellerman lost track of the boy while he consigned his wool to Melbourne in 1850, and Willie, who was picked up and befriended by schoolboys, was adopted by the Reverend Lloyd Chase and later taken to Britain to be educated as a missionary to his people. While in England, he found the climate and solitude unbearable and, contracting, a lung disease died on 10 March 1852.[27] Just before his death he asked to be baptised in the Christian faith, and was given the baptismal name William Wimmera. A sixteen-page account of his life, A Short memoir of William Wimmera, an Australian Boy, was published which focused on his religious redemption.[28]

 
Dick-a-Dick

Dick-a-Dick was a Wudjubalug tracker responsible for finding the three Duff children lost in the Australian bush for 9 days in 1864 which garnered national and even international attention. Dick-a-Dick was one of the Wudjubalug and Jardwadjali men who formed the basis for the Australian Aboriginal cricket team in England in 1868.

In 1981 or early 1982 the Aboriginal community met in Horsham and applied for registration as the Goolum Goolum Aboriginal Cooperative. According to Clark, Goolum goolum is a Wergaia word meaning 'stranger, especially a dangerous stranger, wild blackfellow.[27]

Ebenezer Mission edit

Two Moravian missionaries, Friedrich Hagenauer and F.W. Spieseke, who had been active at lake Boga for several years, established the Ebenezer Mission in 1859 in Wergaia country at a site called Banji bunag (variously spelled Bungo budnutt/Punyo Bunnutt),[29] close to where Willie's mother was killed, and a traditional meeting place and corroboree ground. The site was chosen with the assistance of Ellerman.[13]

In 1902 the State Government of Victoria decided to close the Ebenezer Mission due to low numbers. The mission closed in 1904, and most of the land reverted to the Victorian Lands Department as crown land, and was opened up for selection. In the following twenty years many Wergaia people were forcibly moved to Lake Tyers Mission in Gippsland under police escort, along with closure of all rations to Ebenezer Mission and seizure of children.[30]

Native Title recognition edit

The Indigenous peoples of the Wimmera won native title recognition on 13 December 2005 after a ten-year legal process. It was the first successful native title claim in south-eastern Australia and in Victoria, determined by Justice Ron Merkel involving Wudjubalug, Jaadwa, Jadawadjali, Wergaia and Jupagalk people.[31] In his reasons for judgement Justice Merkel made special mention of Wudjubalug elder Uncle Jack Kennedy and explained the significance of his orders:

The orders I propose to make are of special significance as they constitute the first recognition and protection of native title resulting in the ongoing enjoyment of native title in the State of Victoria and, it would appear, on the South-Eastern seaboard of Australia. These are areas in which the Aboriginal peoples suffered severe and extensive dispossession, degradation and devastation as a consequence of the establishment of British sovereignty over their lands and waters during the 19th century.[32]

Prominent speakers of Wergaia edit

See also edit

Notes edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Brown, Avery & Goulding 2004, p. 147.
  2. ^ "Cultural Awareness Training". Wimmera Primary Care Partnership. 20 August 2019. Retrieved 8 July 2020.
  3. ^ Clark 1995, pp. 177–183.
  4. ^ Dixon 1980, p. 507.
  5. ^ Lydon 2009, p. 48.
  6. ^ Lydon 2009, p. 49.
  7. ^ a b Rae-Ellis 1996, p. 242.
  8. ^ Broome 2005, p. xx.
  9. ^ Donkin 2013, p. 109.
  10. ^ Broome 2005, p. xviii.
  11. ^ Lydon 2009, p. 52.
  12. ^ a b c Lydon 2009, p. 39.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Clark 1995, p. 177.
  14. ^ Lydon 2009, p. 45.
  15. ^ Broome 2005, p. xvii.
  16. ^ Stanbridge 1858, pp. 137–140.
  17. ^ Hamacher & Frew 2010, p. 1.
  18. ^ a b Hamacher 2011.
  19. ^ Christies & Bush 2008, pp. 1–12.
  20. ^ Hamacher & Frew 2010, pp. 8–13.
  21. ^ Haynes 2012, p. 57.
  22. ^ Stanbridge 1861, p. 301.
  23. ^ Broome 2005, p. 9.
  24. ^ Clark 1995, pp. 180–182.
  25. ^ Kenny 2007, p. 140.
  26. ^ Jensz 2010, p. 116.
  27. ^ a b c Clark 1995, p. 180.
  28. ^ Kenny 2007, pp. 21, 120.
  29. ^ Clark 1995, p. 181.
  30. ^ Clark 1995, p. 179.
  31. ^ Shiel 2005.
  32. ^ AustLII 2005.

Sources edit

wergaia, werrigia, people, aboriginal, australian, group, mallee, wimmera, regions, north, western, victoria, made, number, clans, people, were, also, known, maligundidj, wotjobaluk, language, which, means, people, belonging, mali, mallee, eucalypt, bushland, . The Wergaia or Werrigia people are an Aboriginal Australian group in the Mallee and Wimmera regions of north Western Victoria made up of a number of clans 1 The people were also known as the Maligundidj in the Wotjobaluk language 2 which means the people belonging to the mali mallee eucalypt bushland which covers much of their territory 3 Before European settlement in the nineteenth century the Wergaia peoples occupied the area that included Lake Hindmarsh Lake Albacutya Pine Plains Lake Lake Werringrin Lake Coorong Warracknabeal Beulah Hopetoun Dimboola Ouyen Yanac Hattah Lakes and the Wimmera River Contents 1 Language 2 Ecology 3 History and culture 3 1 Society 3 2 Mythological and empirical thinking 3 3 European contact and history 3 4 Ebenezer Mission 4 Native Title recognition 5 Prominent speakers of Wergaia 6 See also 7 Notes 7 1 Citations 8 SourcesLanguage editMain article Wergaia language The Wergaia language was a dialect of Wemba Wemba a member of the Kulinic branch of Pama Nyungan 4 Ecology editThomas Mitchell exploring the territory over which the Wergaia dwelt wrote in 1836 Every day we passed over land which for natural fertility and beauty could scarcely be surpassed over streams of unfailing abundance and plains covered with the richest pasturage Stately trees and majestic mountains adorned the ever varying scenery of this region the most southern of all Australia and the best 5 It was he added a blank sheet for future development For the natives it was rich in kumpung the bulrush whose rhizomes formed the staple of their diet as well as in lahoor the yellow water lily the dandelion yam and trefoil 6 Rivers were trawled for freshwater mussels and crayfish Bushland was carefully kept in order by selected firing George Augustus Robinson appointed by the Port Phillip Protectorate to be the first Protector of Aborigines noted fine built thatched huts raised on stone walls along the waterways elaborate fishgarths 7 one south around Mount Duwil extending over hectares to form a network interconnecting swamps floodways and watercourses 8 Around February and March a Festival of Laap attracted many tribes to congregate in order to socialize settle disputes and enjoy a sweet potion called laap Laap was harvested over a period of 6 to eight weeks any area could yield up to 40 50 pounds of the substance a day It was confected from the sugary excretions of a species of psylla Psylla eucalypti Dobson deposited on the leaves of the walkerie mallee gumtree 7 9 History and culture editThe Aboriginal people of this area go back at least 1 600 generations 10 There is evidence of occupation in Gariwerd going back to 30 20 000 years ago predating the end of the last ice age As the earlier warm rainy era of the Holocene changed a slight increase in aridity led to a tenfold increase in habitation according to the archaeological record dated to around 4000 years BP 11 Society edit The Maligundidj people were divided into 20 clans each with their particular territory The first question they would ask an outsider was ngaia yauarin What is your flesh meaning what was your place within the system of moieties and totemic skin relations that governed Aboriginal identity 12 They were a matrilineal society divided into two moieties gabadj var gamutch 12 southern black cockatoo and grugidj var krokitch 12 white cockatoo with the moiety to which one belonged called a mir 13 Intermarriage occurred often with the Jardwadjali and Dja Dja Wurrung clans and meetings and ceremonies were attended with the Dadidadi Wadiwadi and Ladjiladji peoples to their north 13 Mythological and empirical thinking edit According to information given by the Wudjubalug clan the dreamtime creator Bunjil the eaglehawk man was assisted in fashioning the world by the BramBram Ngul brothers dwellers in the Naracoorte caves 14 who moulded men from a tree 15 One clan of the Wergaia the Boorong near Lake Tyrrell had accomplished star gazers with a sophisticated knowledge of astronomy When William Edward Stanbridge took up grazing lands in their territory in the mid 19th century he learned of it from them Stanbridge described part of their system in a lecture delivered before the Philosophical Institute of Victoria in September 1857 Stanbridge s exposition showed that the Wergaia connected the rising and setting of particular stars with seasonal events and dreamtime mythology 16 17 18 19 A reanalysis of Stanbridge s material has recently led to the hypothesis that some time after 1837 the Wergaia had registered the massive flaring or great eruption of h Carinae which they identified as Collowgullouric War a female crow and wife of War the crow Canopus and had incorporated the event into their ethnoastronomical system 20 A few examples illustrate the intimate correlation they established between the movements of celestial bodies and the cycles of natural phenomena in their native habitat The northern rise of Marpeankuurk Arcturus signalled that it was time to harvest the larvae of the wood ant a species of carpenter ant When Neilloan Vega set just after duskfall it indicated that malleefowl eggs were ready to be collected The setting of Coonartoorung the Beehive Cluster in the constellation of Cancer marked the onset of autumn 18 One dreamtime story of the Wudjubalug people tells of how Gnowee the sun was created by Pupperimbul one of the Nurrumbunguttia before these ancient spirits disappeared from the heavens before man himself was created and the earth was in sheer darkness Pupperimbul hurled an emu egg into the firmament whereupon it burst and shed light over the sky The celestial pattern of the near stars reflected kinship patterns Gnowee s sister was Chargee Gnowee Venus the wife of Ginabongbearp Jupiter 21 22 European contact and history edit It is likely that first contact with Europeans was through smallpox epidemics which arrived with the First Fleet in 1788 and rapidly spread through the trading networks of Indigenous Australians and killed many people in two waves before the 1830s It killed large numbers of people and disfigured many more with pock marked faces and tribal elders said it came down the Murray River sent by malevolent sorcerers to the north One Wudjubalug account called the disease thinba micka 23 The explorer Edward John Eyre was possibly the first European called by the Wergaia ngamadjidj 13 seen by the Maligundidj when he followed the Wimmera River to Lake Hindmarsh in 1838 His reports of the well watered mallee country provided encouragement for the subsequent rush of settlers with their cattle and sheep eager to establish pastoral stations 13 Strong resistance to this influx meant that Europeans could not travel unarmed in Wergaia territory during the first decade of settlement 13 Horatio Cockburn Ellerman an early settler who came to run the Antwerp station in 1846 had participated in several raids on Aboriginal camps 24 and was notoriously hard on the Indigenous people early in his career He had according to the testimony of William Taylor had taken part in a punitive raid in the southern Wimmera His ruthlessness drew the enmity particularly of the Wudjubalug who were rumoured to be intent on killing him Ellerman obtained a warrant in 1844 and enlisting the assistance of Border Police tracked down the suspect shooting him together with another Wudjubalug 25 He was widely believed to have been involved in the murder of an Aboriginal woman at Banji bunag in 1846 26 where he had fired at random at a Gur balug group of Aboriginal people at their camp site on the Wimmera River 27 Ellerman took her orphaned child in Ellerman lost track of the boy while he consigned his wool to Melbourne in 1850 and Willie who was picked up and befriended by schoolboys was adopted by the Reverend Lloyd Chase and later taken to Britain to be educated as a missionary to his people While in England he found the climate and solitude unbearable and contracting a lung disease died on 10 March 1852 27 Just before his death he asked to be baptised in the Christian faith and was given the baptismal name William Wimmera A sixteen page account of his life A Short memoir of William Wimmera an Australian Boy was published which focused on his religious redemption 28 nbsp Dick a Dick Dick a Dick was a Wudjubalug tracker responsible for finding the three Duff children lost in the Australian bush for 9 days in 1864 which garnered national and even international attention Dick a Dick was one of the Wudjubalug and Jardwadjali men who formed the basis for the Australian Aboriginal cricket team in England in 1868 In 1981 or early 1982 the Aboriginal community met in Horsham and applied for registration as the Goolum Goolum Aboriginal Cooperative According to Clark Goolum goolum is a Wergaia word meaning stranger especially a dangerous stranger wild blackfellow 27 Ebenezer Mission edit Main article Ebenezer Mission Two Moravian missionaries Friedrich Hagenauer and F W Spieseke who had been active at lake Boga for several years established the Ebenezer Mission in 1859 in Wergaia country at a site called Banji bunag variously spelled Bungo budnutt Punyo Bunnutt 29 close to where Willie s mother was killed and a traditional meeting place and corroboree ground The site was chosen with the assistance of Ellerman 13 In 1902 the State Government of Victoria decided to close the Ebenezer Mission due to low numbers The mission closed in 1904 and most of the land reverted to the Victorian Lands Department as crown land and was opened up for selection In the following twenty years many Wergaia people were forcibly moved to Lake Tyers Mission in Gippsland under police escort along with closure of all rations to Ebenezer Mission and seizure of children 30 Native Title recognition editMain article Wotjobaluk Jaadwa Jadawadjali Wergaia and Jupagulk Peoples v Victoria The Indigenous peoples of the Wimmera won native title recognition on 13 December 2005 after a ten year legal process It was the first successful native title claim in south eastern Australia and in Victoria determined by Justice Ron Merkel involving Wudjubalug Jaadwa Jadawadjali Wergaia and Jupagalk people 31 In his reasons for judgement Justice Merkel made special mention of Wudjubalug elder Uncle Jack Kennedy and explained the significance of his orders The orders I propose to make are of special significance as they constitute the first recognition and protection of native title resulting in the ongoing enjoyment of native title in the State of Victoria and it would appear on the South Eastern seaboard of Australia These are areas in which the Aboriginal peoples suffered severe and extensive dispossession degradation and devastation as a consequence of the establishment of British sovereignty over their lands and waters during the 19th century 32 Prominent speakers of Wergaia editWilliam John Kennedy Dick a DickSee also editAlfred William HowittNotes editCitations edit Brown Avery amp Goulding 2004 p 147 Cultural Awareness Training Wimmera Primary Care Partnership 20 August 2019 Retrieved 8 July 2020 Clark 1995 pp 177 183 Dixon 1980 p 507 Lydon 2009 p 48 Lydon 2009 p 49 a b Rae Ellis 1996 p 242 Broome 2005 p xx Donkin 2013 p 109 Broome 2005 p xviii Lydon 2009 p 52 a b c Lydon 2009 p 39 a b c d e f Clark 1995 p 177 Lydon 2009 p 45 Broome 2005 p xvii Stanbridge 1858 pp 137 140 Hamacher amp Frew 2010 p 1 a b Hamacher 2011 Christies amp Bush 2008 pp 1 12 Hamacher amp Frew 2010 pp 8 13 Haynes 2012 p 57 Stanbridge 1861 p 301 Broome 2005 p 9 Clark 1995 pp 180 182 Kenny 2007 p 140 Jensz 2010 p 116 a b c Clark 1995 p 180 Kenny 2007 pp 21 120 Clark 1995 p 181 Clark 1995 p 179 Shiel 2005 AustLII 2005 Sources editBroome Richard 2005 Aboriginal Victorians A History Since 1800 Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 1 741 14569 4 Brown Steve Avery Steven Goulding Megan 2004 Recent Investigations at the Ebenezer Mission Cemetery In Harrison Rodney Williamson Christine eds After Captain Cook The Archaeology of the Recent Indigenous Past in Australia Rowman Altamira pp 147 169 ISBN 978 0 759 10657 4 Christies Patricia Bush Martin 2008 First published 2005 Stories in the Stars the night sky of the Boorong people PDF Museum Victoria pp 1 12 Clark Ian 1990 Aboriginal Languages and Clans An Historical Atlas of Western and Central Victoria 1800 1900 Monash publications in geography No 37 ISBN 978 0 909 68541 6 Clark Ian 1995 Scars in the Landscape A Register of Massacre Sites in Western Victoria 1803 1859 Aboriginal Studies Press ISBN 978 0 855 75595 9 Dixon Robert M W 1980 The Languages of Australia Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 29450 8 Dixon Robert M W 2002 Australian Languages Their Nature and Development Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 47378 1 Donkin R A 2013 Manna An Historical Geography Springer ISBN 978 9 401 76117 8 Hamacher Duane Willis 28 June 2011 A Wergaia Planisphere An Educational Tool Hamacher Duane Willis Frew David J 2010 An Aboriginal Australian Record of the Great Eruption of Eta Carinae Journal of Astronomical History amp Heritage 13 3 1 23 arXiv 1010 4610 Bibcode 2010JAHH 13 220H Haynes Roslynn D 2012 Astronomy and the Dreaming The Astronomy of the Aboriginal Australians In Selin Helaine ed Astronomy Across Cultures The History of Non Western Astronomy Springer pp 53 89 ISBN 978 9 401 14179 6 Jensz Felicity 2010 German Moravian Missionaries in the British Colony of Victoria Australia 1848 1908 Influential Strangers BRILL ISBN 978 9 004 17921 9 Kenny Robert 2007 The Lamb Enters the Dreaming Nathaniel Pepper and the Ruptured World Scribe Publications ISBN 978 1 921 21516 2 Lydon Jane 2009 Fantastic Dreaming The Archaeology of an Aboriginal Mission Rowman Altamira ISBN 978 0 759 11804 1 Rae Ellis Vivienne 1996 Black Robinson Protector of Aborigines Melbourne University Press ISBN 978 0 522 84744 4 Shiel Fergus 14 December 2005 Past gives us strength Aborigines say The Age Stanbridge William Edward 1858 On the Astronomy and Mythology of the Aborigines of Victoria PDF Transactions Philosophical Institute Victoria 2 137 140 Bibcode 1857PPIVT 2 137S Stanbridge William Edward 1861 Some particulars of the general characteristics astronomy and mythology of tribes in the central part of Victoria southern Australia Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London 1 286 303 doi 10 2307 3014201 JSTOR 3014201 Wotjobaluk Jaadwa Jadawadjali Wergaia and Jupagulk Peoples v Victoria 2005 FCA 1795 13 December 2005 Federal Court Australia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wergaia amp oldid 1153599835, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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