Language
Dyirbal belongs to the Dyirbalic branch of the Pama–Nyungan language family. It is one of several dialects, for ''Giramay'', ''Mamu'', ''Dyiru'', ''Gulŋay'', and ''Ngajan''. It is an ergative language allowing words in the sentence in any order. It has four genders, classifying things as 'masculine' (''bayi''), 'feminine'(''balan''), 'edible'(non-flesh foods) (''balam'') or 'neuter' (''bala''). In addition to this, a dozen different markers could be added to any noun, indicating the precise location, distance or direction of what is being referred to. It also used to have a special mother-in-law language, called ''Dyalŋuy'' (Jalnguy), switching to it from everyday language (''guwal'') whenever one's mother-in-law was present, or, in the case of a woman, one's father-in-law.Country
They lived in the tropical rainforest much of which, apart from the coastal areas, was then cleared in order to facilitate banana plantations. Norman Tindale calculated that their tribal territory encompassed some , taking in the areas of Herberton southwards as far the headwaters of the Herbert River north of Cashmere. Their eastern boundary lay around Tully Falls. Ravenshoe, Millaa Millaa, and Woodleigh were also developed on Dyirbal land. A myth still current appears to explain the difference between the highland flora and that of the coastal zone: The tall upcountry forest members, trees like bull oak, water gum and black walnut had the idea of advancing eastwards to set down roots along the coast, but their endeavour was obstructed by the mangroves, which fashioned boomerangs from their roots and fought the arboreal invaders off so that the lowlands are clear of such species. In 1996 a large part of Girramay country, including sacred sites, was bulldozed, dynamited and fenced in by King Ranch, the American pastoral company, after it obtained a lease from the Queensland Government, paying $2 per acre for forest, and $5 per acre for scrubland. Sacred sites like ''Yungigali'', which in a Dreamtime legend was where a dog was transmogrified into a rock, were devastated.Society
The Dyirbal consisted of several hordes, such as the ''Njirma'', who were located at Ravenshoe. Each of the clans composing the Dyirbal had four sections, with a corresponding totem: * The section's dominant totem was ( black eel) * The section's dominant totem was ( kite hawk) * The section's dominant totem was (large eel) * The section's dominant totem was ( eaglehawk) The marriage rules regarding the four sections were as follows: * men had to marry women. Their offspring were . * men had to marry women. Their offspring were . * men had to marry . Their offspring were . * men had to marry . Their offspring were .History
The first contact with whites goes back to 1848, at which time it has been estimated that each dialect group in the generic Djirbal tribal societies had around 500 members. Dixon estimates the total numbers at 5,000, which, within five decades of white settlement, indiscriminate shootings and disease, had the impact of leading to their decimation to something like 10% of their original strength by the end of the 19th century. They, with the related Girramaygans, eventually gathered together south of Tully in the Upper Murray, tolerated by settlers, one of whom is reported to have said in the 1920s that: 'There are no bad Aborigines left here: they've all been shot'. One pioneer was nicknamed scrub-itch (') because he adopted the habit of shooting at aborigines if he came across them dancing at their initiations corroborees. One Aboriginal woman who kept house with 'Scrub-itch' was ordered one day to fetch eggs from a scrub hen nest, and he then shot her dead as she dug into one of their breeding mounds. He had gotten bored by her attentions. It was a habit of whites among the Upper Murray tribes to take aboriginal concubines and, when they got pregnant, slaughter their own children.Encounter with Captain Cook
Either Dyirbal collective memory, or the ingenuity of one of its last speakers, Chloe Grant, tells of an incident conserved from the Girramaygan tribe. Were it true, it would mean that they had conserved for 200 years a clear memory of the day20th century
In the early 20th century, many families were forcibly removed from their country and placed in the Aboriginal reserve that also served as aCannibalistic episode
The Dyirbal tribes did not engage in cannibalism in order just to eat people. It had a punitive retaliatory function, especially with regard to people judged to have violated native law. The last instance occurred in 1940, when Mick Bulbu (tribal name ''Burburra'') was killed by Jumbulu for numerous violations of tribal law, and had part of his body cut up and eaten.Songs
Dyirbal songs are divided into dancing and love songs. The dancing style was called ''gama''. One recorded by Robert Dixon from Wille Kelly on the outskirts of Ravenshoe takes as its theme the willie wagtail (Dyirbal: ', or in the mother-in-law register of the language, ' "he who belongs to the fighting ground"). This bird, unlike most, is classified as male, since they are believed to be the ghosts (') of mythical men, and its method of fluttering its tail was likened to the dance, in shake-a-leg style (legs fixed in a position while the knees wobble) of an initiated man at a corroboree. It also conveyed the manner of a spirit moving in the otherworld. For the anthropologist, in its interweaving of native bird lore, customs and bush, it seemed, hauntingly, to embody the essence of North Queensland's traditional world. The first lines, repeated throughout the song, run: 'Alternative names
* ''Chirpa'' * ''Chirpalji'' * ''Choolngai'' (Wakara exonym) * ''Djirbal'' * ''Dyirbaldyi'' * ''Dyirbalngan'' * ''Njirma'' * ''Tjirbal'' Source:Some words
* The words for 'go up' vary according to the action or object ascended:', 'go up river'; ', 'go up anything else, except a tree, where ' is used, or more specifically, ', to rope oneself up a tree. If one's mother-in-law or a close relative of hers were present, one would substitute these terms with a different verb, '. * '. A Tully RiverIn film
Fabio Cavadini and his brother Alessandro Cavadini made aNotes
Citations
Sources
* * * * * * * * * * {{authority control Aboriginal peoples of Queensland Far North Queensland