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  2. Gandangara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gandangara

    The Gandangara people, also spelt Gundungara, Gandangarra, Gundungurra and other variations, are an Aboriginal Australian people in south-eastern New South Wales, Australia. Their traditional lands include present day Goulburn, Wollondilly Shire, The Blue Mountains and the Southern Highlands.

  3. Ngunnawal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ngunnawal

    In 1826 many Aboriginal people at Lake George protested an incident involving a shepherd and an Aboriginal woman, though the protesters moved away peacefully. [ 8 ] Historical records of Australia record the last " full-blooded " Ngunnawal person, Nellie Hamilton, dying in 1897, however, this is disputed by Indigenous and non-Indigenous ...

  4. List of Indigenous Australian historical figures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Indigenous...

    Dolly Gurinyi Batcho (c. 1905 - 1973) was a Larrakia woman who served on Aboriginal Women's Hygiene Squad, 69th, as a part of the Australian Women's Army Service. She was also a signatory of the 1972 Larrakia Petition; Beetaloo Jangari Bill (c1910 - 1983) a Gurindji and Warumungu Elder from Elliott, Northern Territory.

  5. List of Australian Aboriginal group names - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Australian...

    This name is one of the names used on the widely used Aboriginal Australia Map, David Horton (ed.), 1994 published in The Encyclopedia of Aboriginal Australia by AIATSIS. Early versions of the map also divided Australia into 18 regions (Southwest, Northwest, Desert, Kimberley, Fitzmaurice, North, Arnhem, Gulf, West Cape, Torres Strait, East ...

  6. Dharug - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dharug

    The Dharug language, now in a period of revitalization, is generally considered one of two dialects, inland and coastal, constituting a single language. [2] [3] The word myall, a pejorative word in Australian dialect denoting any Aboriginal person who kept up a traditional way of life, [4] originally came from the Dharug language term mayal, which denoted any person hailing from another tribe.

  7. Gulaga / Mount Dromedary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulaga_/_Mount_Dromedary

    Gulaga is the place of ancestral origin within the mythology of the Yuin people, the Aboriginal people of the area.Gulaga itself symbolises the mother and provides a basis for Aboriginal spiritual identity; the mountain as well as the surrounding area holds particular significance for Aboriginal women.

  8. Australian Aboriginal identity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_Aboriginal_identity

    Various factors affect Aboriginal people's self-identification as Aboriginal, including a growing pride in culture, solidarity in a shared history of dispossession (including the Stolen Generations), and, among those are fair-skinned, an increased willingness to acknowledge their ancestors, once considered shameful. Aboriginal identity can be ...

  9. Wiradjuri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiradjuri

    They once occupied a vast area in central New South Wales, on the plains running north and south to the west of the Blue Mountains. The area was known as "the land of the three rivers", [ 13 ] the Wambuul (Macquarie) , the Kalare later known as the Lachlan and the Murrumbidgee , or Murrumbidjeri .