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The flag was designed by Robert Ingpen, a prominent artist originally from Drysdale, Victoria. Ingpen used a number of designs suggested by the public as a basis for his final design. [1] The Northern Territory and Australian flags at the war memorial at ANZAC Hill, Alice Springs
Name Image Adopted Territorial Flag: Flag of the Northern Territory: Flag of the Northern Territory: 1 July 1978 Territorial Coat of arms: Coat of arms of the Northern Territory: Coat of arms of the Northern Territory: 1 July 1978 Territorial Animal Emblem Red kangaroo Macropus rufus: Red kangaroo: 1975 Territorial Bird Emblem Wedge-tailed ...
United Kingdom (overseas territory) 1999 – Flag of the Cayman Islands: United Kingdom (overseas territory) 1984 – Flag of Curaçao: Netherlands (constituent country) 1989 – Flag of Greenland: Denmark (autonomous territory) 1794 – Flag of Guadeloupe: France (overseas region and department) 2023 – Flag of Martinique: France (overseas ...
The Northern Territory has one university which opened in 1989 under the name of the Northern Territory University. [82] Now renamed as the Charles Darwin University, it had about 19,000 students enrolled: about 5,500 higher education students and about 13,500 students on vocational education and training (VET) courses.
Flag of Acre; Flag of Agin-Buryat Okrug; Ainu flag; Flag of Åland; Flag of the Altai Republic; Flag of Amazonas (Colombian department) Flag of American Samoa; Aramean-Syriac flag; Flag of the Aromanians; Arrano beltza; Flag of the Republic of Artsakh; Assyrian flag; Flag of Asturias; Australian Aboriginal flag; Flag of the Autonomous Region in ...
The name was gazetted in 1865 applying to the portion South of 16°S of what is now the Northern Territory. [9] For some time, Northern Territory including Arnhem Land referred only to the region north of that line. [10] [11] [12] In 1863, the Northern Territory was annexed by South Australia by letters patent.
The name "Denendeh", though now confined to the NWT, could conceivably be employed as a supra-national name for all the Northern Athabaskan traditional territories as a whole, in a similar way that "Anishinaabewaki" transcends modern political boundaries. See also Tłı̨chǫ Ndè (Dogrib country).
Today, Aboriginal people of the region have rights to country surrounding the town, claimed and recognised under the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act 1976. The original land claim was lodged in 1978, for a decade the Warumungu fought for the return of their traditional lands.