Everything about The Ngunnawal People totally explained
The
Ngunnawal people (alternatively
Ngunawal tribe) are the
Indigenous Australian inhabitants whose traditional lands encompass much of the area now occupied by the city of
Canberra,
Australia and the surrounding
Australian Capital Territory. They speak the
Ngunawal language.
When first encountered by European settlers in the 1820s, the Ngunawal people lived in an area roughly bounded by what is now the towns of
Queanbeyan,
Tumut,
Boorowa and
Goulburn. The Ngunawal people were neighbours of the
Yuin (on the coast),
Ngarigo (who lived south east of Canberra),
Wiradjuri (to the west) and
Gundungurra (to the north) peoples.
Some Indigenous people claim to be part of the
Ngamberri nation located inside the Ngunawal country border. However, the claim of the nation status is disputed by other Aboriginal Australians, who state that the Ngamberri are a just a small family clan of the Wiradjuri nation.
The earliest direct evidence for
Indigenous occupation in the area comes from a rock shelter near the area of Birrigai near
Tharwa, which has been dated to approximately 20,000 years ago. However, it's likely (based on older sites known from the surrounding regions) that human occupation of the region goes back considerably further. Whether the original occupants of these early sites were ancestral to the Ngunawal isn't directly known, however Ngunawal lore and tradition identify strongly with these sites and the surrounding lands, indicating a lengthy association.
They were gradually displaced from the Canberra area beginning in the 1820s when graziers began to occupy the land there. In 1826 a thousand Aborigines at Lake George protested an incident involving a shepherd and Aboriginal woman, though the protesters moved away peacefully. Some Ngunawal people worked at properties in the region.
Some histories of Australia record the last full-blooded Ngunawal person, Nellie Hamilton, dying in 1897. However, it has been regarded by some Indigenous Australians as a biased attempt to claim that they were wiped out when there are many Ngunawal people still around today.
The Ngunawal people had no part in the founding of the
Aboriginal Tent Embassy in 1972.
The opening speech by the chairman at the constitutional convention at Old Parliament House held on 2 February 1998 included
» We acknowledge that we're meeting today on country of which the people of the Ngunawal tribe have been custodians for many centuries and on which the members of that tribe performed age-old ceremonies of celebration, initiation and renewal.
In October 2002, some Aboriginal people pretending to be Ngunawal members wanted to evict the residents of the tent embassy who had "lost their way".
The ACT Planning and Land Authority's annual report in 2004 called for research into the Ngunawal language to name beaches at
Lake Tuggeranong and
Lake Ginninderra, and to agree to recognise traditional names of geographic features.
In 2007, Wiradjuri woman Matilda House became the first Indigenous person to welcome to country an Australian Prime Minister, at the request of new Prime Minister
Kevin Rudd.
Further Information
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