The Bilinarra, also spelt Bilingara and Bilinara, are an
Aboriginal Australian
Aboriginal Australians are the various indigenous peoples of the Australian mainland and many of its islands, excluding the ethnically distinct people of the Torres Strait Islands.
Humans first migrated to Australia 50,000 to 65,000 year ...
people of the
Northern Territory
The Northern Territory (abbreviated as NT; known formally as the Northern Territory of Australia and informally as the Territory) is an states and territories of Australia, Australian internal territory in the central and central-northern regi ...
.
Language
The
Bilinarra language
Bilingara, also known as the Bilinarra, is an Australian Aboriginal language spoken by the Bilinarra people of the Northern Territory.
It is classified as an eastern variety of one of the Pama-Nyungan Ngumpin languages. It is mutually intelli ...
is classified as an eastern variety of one of the
Pama-Nyungan Ngumbin languages
Ngumpin languages are a small language family of Australia, consisting of (from west to east):
*Walmajarri
* Djaru
* Gurindji (Gurindji proper, Bilinarra, Wanyjirra, Malngin, Ngarinyman)
*Mudburra
In 2004 it was demonstrated that Ngumpin is re ...
. It is mutually intelligible with
Gurindji
Gurindji may refer to:
* Gurindji, Northern Territory, a locality in Australia
*Gurindji people, an Australian Aboriginal people
**Gurindji language, the language of the Gurindji people
** Gurindji Kriol language, the main language now spoken by ...
and the dialect spoken by the neighbouring
Ngarinman
The Ngarinman or Ngarinyman people are an Aboriginal Australian people of the Northern Territory who spoke the Ngarinyman language.
Country
According to an estimate made by Norman Tindale, the Ngarinman held some of territory. Their central do ...
people. Bilinarra is considered a dialect of
Ngarinyman
The Ngarinman or Ngarinyman people are an Aboriginal Australian people of the Northern Territory who spoke the Ngarinyman language.
Country
According to an estimate made by Norman Tindale, the Ngarinman held some of territory. Their central do ...
, though it shares more vocabulary with
Gurindji
Gurindji may refer to:
* Gurindji, Northern Territory, a locality in Australia
*Gurindji people, an Australian Aboriginal people
**Gurindji language, the language of the Gurindji people
** Gurindji Kriol language, the main language now spoken by ...
. There are no structural features that are unique to Bilinarra and linguists would consider all three languages to be dialects of a single language, but speakers of these languages consider them to be different. Elements of their tongue were first recorded by a police constable
W. H. Willshire (who was later charged with murder) in 1896. By 2013, only one person was alive who spoke it as their primary language though it inflects the variety of
Kriol spoken by Bilinarra children. Bilinarra is native to the Victoria River District of the Northern Territory of Australia. The name of the language most likely refers to the surrounding country, as ''bili'' means 'rock' or 'hill', followed by an unknown suffix. Massacres by early colonists, poor treatment on the cattle stations, and mixing of languages at the cattle stations caused Bilinarra to lose prominence as more dominant languages took over, leading to the endangerment of Bilinarra.
Country
Norman Tindale
Norman Barnett Tindale AO (12 October 1900 – 19 November 1993) was an Australian anthropologist, archaeologist, entomologist and ethnologist. He is best remembered for his work mapping the various tribal groupings of Aboriginal Australians ...
estimated Bilinarra tribal land to cover some covering the areas of the Moray Range,
Delamere, and, in its southern extension, down to the
Victoria River Downs and
Pigeon Hole stations and the junction where the
Victoria
Victoria most commonly refers to:
* Queen Victoria (1819–1901), Queen of the United Kingdom and Empress of India
* Victoria (state), a state of Australia
* Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, a provincial capital
* Victoria, Seychelles, the capi ...
and Armstrong rivers join. Its eastern boundaries lay beyond
Killarney
Killarney ( ; , meaning 'church of sloes') is a town in County Kerry, southwestern Republic of Ireland, Ireland. The town is on the northeastern shore of Lough Leane, part of Killarney National Park, and is home to St Mary's Cathedral, Killar ...
. Numbers lived around the
Billiluna Station in the 1920s. Bilinarra territory was predominantly characterized by blacksoil plains, limestone gorges and sandstone outcrops. Their neighbours are the
Mudburra
The Mudburra, also spelt Mudbara and other variants, are an Aboriginal Australian people of the Northern Territory.
Language
Mudburra is one of the far eastern forms of the Pama-Nyungan Ngumbin languages.
Country
The Mudburra people live i ...
to the east, the Gurindji people to the southwest, and the Ngarinyman to the northwest. Most Bilinarra people now live at
Pigeon Hole (''Balarrgi'')
Cultural practices and beliefs
In order to manufacture a gum for use in fixing tufts of flax to the bodies of dancers in their
corroboree
A corroboree is a generic word for a meeting of Australian Aboriginal peoples. It may be a sacred ceremony, a festive celebration, or of a warlike character. A word coined by the first British settlers in the Sydney area from a word in the ...
s, the Bilingara used to call on one of the clan who would not be participating in the dance itself. Once handed a piece of string woven from human hair, the person who was to supply his blood used it as a ligature of his biceps, and then cut into an artery with a stone, jabbing away until an ample flow was secured, which was caught in a bark basin at his feet. What was not used for making gum was given to dingos to lap up.
Their native
pharmacopeia
A pharmacopoeia, pharmacopeia, or pharmacopoea (or the typographically obsolete rendering, ''pharmacopœia''), meaning "drug-making", in its modern technical sense, is a reference work containing directions for the identification of compound med ...
drew on things like
lemon grass (''gubuwubu'') and
Dodonaea polyzyga (''yirrigaji'') for preparing a medicinal drink or lotion, mixed with a slurry of
termite mound earth (''mardumardu'') to treat congestion, for example.
With regard to conception, the Bilinarra consider that children pre-exist their actual births, in the form of spirits that linger around an outcrop of rocks at a site called ''Gurdurdularni'' ('the place of women's children). Even the spirits of the dead (''yirrmarug'') may reincarnate themselves by shifting into the foetus of a pregnant woman. Numerous foods were taboo for such women, the bans being related to beliefs that such meats might damage the unborn child. Turtle (''gurwarlambara'') meat for example was forbidden because it was thought that, were it consumed, the child would grow up walking with a turtle-like waddle.
History of contact
The first non-Aboriginal (''gardiya''), that is, European, to venture into the Victoria Downs area was
John Lort Stokes
Admiral John Lort Stokes (1 August 1811 – 11 June 1885) was a Royal Navy officer who served onboard for almost eighteen years.Although 1812 is frequently given as Stokes's year of birth, it has been argued by author Marsden Hordern that Stok ...
in 1839. The first major exploratory expedition followed in 1855-1856 when the area was surveyed by
Francis Gregory and his brother Henry, and they reported favourably on its prospects for pastoral development. In 1883
Charles Fisher and Maurice Lyons set up the
Victoria River Downs Station
Victoria River Downs Station, also known as Victoria Downs and in the past sometimes referred to as The Big Run, is a pastoral lease that operates as a cattle station in the Northern Territory of Australia, established in 1883.
It is south of ...
on an area that extended over Bilingara and
Karrangpurru
The Karrangpurru are an Aboriginal Australian people of the Northern Territory. They suffered severe population loss very early on in the period of colonial expropriations of their land.
Language and ethnonym
Karrangpurru is believed to have be ...
lands.
The Bilinarra suffered from massacres during the period of their dispossession as their land was taken over for pastoral development, and even thereafter, on the stations where they sought employment, were treated harshly. Like other tribes in the area, they suffered from the standard three successive waves of colonial devastation: introduced disease, land-clearing massacres, and
forced labour
Forced labour, or unfree labour, is any work relation, especially in modern or early modern history, in which people are employed against their will with the threat of destitution, detention, or violence, including death or other forms of ...
on the new pastoral leases. Meakins and Nordlinger state that with the establishment in 1894 of a police station run by Willshire "massacres became the officially sanctioned method of population control." Their numbers rapidly declined.
In Bilinarra
oral history
Oral history is the collection and study of historical information from
people, families, important events, or everyday life using audiotapes, videotapes, or transcriptions of planned interviews. These interviews are conducted with people who pa ...
accounts, two massacres in particular are recorded for this early period. One group of tribesmen were rounded up and brought into the Gordon Creek police station, where they were tethered and then shot, with their bodies then burnt and dumped into a rubbish tip for cattle bones. In a further incident, a cook prepared a stew for some Bilinarra, lacing it with
strychnine
Strychnine (, , American English, US chiefly ) is a highly toxicity, toxic, colorless, bitter, crystalline alkaloid used as a pesticide, particularly for killing small vertebrates such as birds and rodents. Strychnine, when inhaled, swallowed, ...
. Thereafter the site was named Poison Creek. Survivors eventually made their way into
Ngarinman
The Ngarinman or Ngarinyman people are an Aboriginal Australian people of the Northern Territory who spoke the Ngarinyman language.
Country
According to an estimate made by Norman Tindale, the Ngarinman held some of territory. Their central do ...
territory, where many were killed as intruders, while women were taken as wives. Those women returned to Bilinarra lands on the demise of their husbands.
Some time around 1922 a Bilinarra youth nicknamed "Banjo" killed the Billiluna station manager Condon and his white stockman, Sullivan, after the latter had abducted his woman for sexual purposes. Banjo remonstrated with the usurper, but to no effect, other than being dressed down. When the time came for the annual calf-branding, Banjo snuck into the station and, seizing a rifle on a table, shot Sullivan in the thigh, and he died of the wound soon after. He then aimed at Condon, who asked him not to shoot, and killed him. The other blacks thought of spearing him, but he had the upper hand with a rifle, and ordered some of them to report the murder to the manager of another station, while he slipped off to the
Kimberley
Kimberly or Kimberley may refer to:
Places and historical events
Australia
Queensland
* Kimberley, Queensland, a coastal locality in the Shire of Douglas
South Australia
* County of Kimberley, a cadastral unit in South Australia
Ta ...
with his girl. Jack Flinders eventually tracked him down near
Mary River and
Louisa Downs, and shot him dead.
Bilinarra people joined
Gurindji
Gurindji may refer to:
* Gurindji, Northern Territory, a locality in Australia
*Gurindji people, an Australian Aboriginal people
**Gurindji language, the language of the Gurindji people
** Gurindji Kriol language, the main language now spoken by ...
and other workers in the
Wave Hill walk-off
The Wave Hill walk-off, also known as the Gurindji strike, was a walk-off and strike by 200 Gurindji stockmen, house servants and their families, starting on 23 August 1966 and lasting for seven years. It took place at Wave Hill, a cattle stati ...
in 1967, to protest poor working conditions on the
cattle station
In Australia and New Zealand, a cattle station is a large farm ( station is equivalent to the American ranch), the main activity of which is the rearing of cattle. The owner of a cattle station is called a '' grazier''. The largest cattle stati ...
.
Alternative names
* ''Bilinara''
* ''Bilinurra''
* ''Billianera''
* ''Bilyanarra''
* ''Bilyanurra''
* ''Boonarra''
* ''Bringara''
* ''Bulinara''
* ''Pillenurra''
* ''Plinara''
Source:
Some words
* ''girrawa''. (goanna)
* ''jamud''. (
bush turkey)
* ''jiya'' (kangaroo)
* ''yinarrwa''. (
barramundi
The barramundi (''Lates calcarifer''), Asian sea bass, or giant sea perch (also known as dangri, apahap or siakap) is a species of catadromous fish in the family Latidae of the order Carangiformes. The species is widely distributed in the I ...
)
Source:
See also
*
Ngumpit
The Gurindji () are an Aboriginal Australian people of northern Australia, southwest of Katherine in the Northern Territory's Victoria River region.
Country
The Gurindji people live on an estimated of land. The land is situated on the headw ...
, a name used by the
Gurindji
Gurindji may refer to:
* Gurindji, Northern Territory, a locality in Australia
*Gurindji people, an Australian Aboriginal people
**Gurindji language, the language of the Gurindji people
** Gurindji Kriol language, the main language now spoken by ...
,
Malngin
The Malngin are an Aboriginal Australian people of the Kimberley region of Western Australia. The Malngin language was a dialect of Gurindj.
Country
Norman Tindale estimated their tribal lands to have encompassed some and placed their western ...
, Bilinara,
Mudburra
The Mudburra, also spelt Mudbara and other variants, are an Aboriginal Australian people of the Northern Territory.
Language
Mudburra is one of the far eastern forms of the Pama-Nyungan Ngumbin languages.
Country
The Mudburra people live i ...
and
Ngarinyman
The Ngarinman or Ngarinyman people are an Aboriginal Australian people of the Northern Territory who spoke the Ngarinyman language.
Country
According to an estimate made by Norman Tindale, the Ngarinman held some of territory. Their central do ...
peoples to refer to themselves as a group
Notes
Citations
Sources
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{{authority control
Aboriginal peoples of the Northern Territory