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KURINGGAI

(Redirected from Guringai language)

'Kuringgai' (also spelt 'Ku-ring-gai', 'Kuring-gai', 'Guringai') is a name referring to an Indigenous Australian people of New South Wales.

Contents
History of the term
Today
References

History of the term


Fraser’s 1892 map. Kuringgai is marked 'VIII'.

In 1892, John Fraser used the term ''Kuringgai'' ( in his phonetic notation) to refer to the people inhabiting a large stretch of the central coastline of New South Wales.
According to Fraser, the Kuringgai were bordered by the Wachigari and the Paikalyung to the north, the Kamalarai to the northwest, the Wiradhari to the west and the Murrinjari to the south.
However, Norman Tindale would later say in 1974 that ''“the Awabakal are the central one of a series of tribes to which the arbitrary term Kuringgai has been applied by Fraser.”'' He divided the area Fraser labelled Kuringgai into several tribes, including the Tharawal, Eora, Dharuk, Darkinjang, Awabakal, Worimi, Birpai, Ngamba, and others.

Today


A number of things have been named after the Kuringgai, including:

Electoral district of Ku-ring-gai

Hornsby Ku-ring-gai Hospital

Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park

Ku-ring-gai Creative Arts High School

Ku-ring-gai Council

Mount Ku-ring-gai

References



An Australian Language as spoken by the Awabakal the people of Awaba and Lake Macquarie (Near Newcastle, New South Wales) being an account of their Language, Traditions, and Customs, , L. E., Threlkeld, Charles Potter, Government Printer, 1892,

Aboriginal Tribes of Australia: Their Terrain, Environmental Controls, Distribution, Limits and Proper Names, , Norman Barnett, Tindale, University of California Press, 1974, ISBN 0-520-02005-7

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