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  2. Eastern Suburbs Memorial Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_Suburbs_Memorial_Park

    Land was dedicated as a cemetery site in 1888, with the first interment recorded at Botany Cemetery on 21 August 1893. The Bunnerong Cemetery (opened in 1888), and the Eastern Suburbs Crematorium (opened 1938) were merged with Botany Cemetery in 1972. There are more than 65,000 people buried there.

  3. Mordialloc Aboriginal Reserve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mordialloc_Aboriginal_Reserve

    Nancy and Jimmy Dunbar died in 1877, the last Bunurong people from the Mordialloc camp. [ 26 ] In 1878 the Minister of Lands, in deciding on the application by George Langridge for 4.0 hectares (10 acres) at Mordialloc "believed to have been reserved for an aboriginal reserve", denied that the Lands department had ever allocated it to such purpose.

  4. Boonwurrung - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boonwurrung

    The new borderline runs across the city from west to east, with the CBD, Richmond and Hawthorn included in Wurundjeri land, and Albert Park, St Kilda and Caulfield on Bunurong land. It was agreed that Mount Cottrell , the site of a massacre in 1836 with at least 10 Wathaurong victims, would be jointly managed above the 160 m (520 ft) line. [ 9 ]

  5. Wurundjeri Woi Wurrung Cultural Heritage Aboriginal Corporation

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wurundjeri_Woi_Wurrung...

    The new borderline runs across the city from west to east, with the CBD, Richmond and Hawthorn included in Wurundjeri land, and Albert Park, St Kilda and Caulfield on Bunurong land. It was agreed that Mount Cottrell , the site of a massacre in 1836 with at least 10 Wathaurong victims, would be jointly managed above the 160 m (520 ft) line.

  6. Coranderrk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coranderrk

    William Barak's grave and headstone at Coranderrk cemetery. Coranderrk was an Aboriginal reserve run by the Victorian government between 1863 and 1924, located around 50 kilometres (31 mi) north-east of Melbourne. The residents were mainly of the Woiwurrung, Bunurong and Taungurung peoples, and the first inhabitants chose the site of the reserve.

  7. Derrimut (Indigenous Australian) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Derrimut_(Indigenous...

    [citation needed] Derrimut's gravestone in Melbourne General Cemetery. Derrimut (also spelt Derremart or Terrimoot) (c. 1810 – 20 April 1864), was a headman or arweet of the Boonwurrung (Bunurong) people from the Melbourne area of Australia. [1] Derrimut was born around 1810, before European settlement of the colony of Victoria. [2]

  8. Point Nepean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_Nepean

    Evidence of Australian Aboriginal settlement of the area dates back 40,000 years. Bunurong women often bore their children at the point. [3] Their name for the point was Boona-djalang, which means 'kangaroo-hide', descriptive of the angular shape of the point akin to a stretched hide. [4]

  9. History of the City of Monash - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_City_of_Monash

    The most famous Bunurong was the elder Derrimut, to whom the first colonists constructed a monument in the Melbourne Cemetery. By the 1840s and 1850s, reduction of ...