enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Dharug - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dharug

    The Darug speak one of two dialects of the Dharug language related to their coastal or inland groups. There was armed conflict between the Dharug and the English settlers in the first half of the 19th century. Controversy over land rights, deference to culture and official return of Dharug artifacts, such as the skull of the warrior Pemulwuy.

  3. Bungarribee Homestead Site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bungarribee_Homestead_Site

    The farm remained unaltered from its natural state, save for an overseer's hut and scattered huts for convict shepherds and labourers, as well as stockyards and fences to enclose grazing areas, until 1810 when the-then Governor Lachlan Macquarie subdivided the farms into smaller parcels of land for free settlers. [5]

  4. Murnong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murnong

    The Dharug people saw the corn on their land as a replacement carbohydrate of the yams and when the corn ripened, they carried it away. Settlers fired shots on the Dharug people to drive them away, and a series of raids by Aboriginal people was followed by settlers killing seven or eight of them.

  5. Battle of Richmond Hill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Richmond_Hill

    The Battle of Richmond Hill, also known as the Battle of the Hawkesbury and the Richmond Hill Massacre, was a battle of the Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars, which were fought between the Indigenous Darug people and the New South Wales Corps (also including several armed settlers).

  6. Dharug National Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dharug_National_Park

    The Dharug National Park is a protected national park that is located in the Central Coast region of New South Wales, in eastern Australia. The 14,850-hectare (36,700-acre) national park is situated approximately 81 kilometres (50 mi) north of the Sydney and 25 kilometres (16 mi) west of Gosford .

  7. Bidjigal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bidjigal

    The Bidjigal clan, like many of the Dharug people, utilised their access to water for fishing, with fish being their main source of food. [25] [12] This includes Georges rivers, Cooks River, Salt Pan Creek, Wolli Creek and parts of the Hawkesbury River. This has resulted in different sea animals, including the whales and eels, being totemic, or ...

  8. Flow of aid to Gaza could take time, warns International ...

    www.aol.com/news/flow-aid-gaza-could-time...

    The flow of aid into Gaza could take time to ramp up, chief of the International Rescue Committee David Miliband said on Monday, as relief trucks conducted a second day of deliveries following the ...

  9. Gandangara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gandangara

    Though this was on traditional Darawal lands, these fatal incidents, like a further one at Bringelly in June, were attributed to the Gandangara coming over from the west. The Gandangara joined forces with the Thurrawal/Darawal, who had linked up with remnants of the Dharug, in order to participate in the frontier war, also raiding cornfields ...