Member Login
Username:Password:
or Sign up here
Discover

KAURNA

:''For the state electoral district in South Australia, see Electoral district of Kaurna.
The 'Kaurna' (pronounced "Garner" or "Gowna") people are a group of Indigenous Australians whose traditional lands lie in and around the Adelaide Plains of South Australia. 'Kaurna language' is the spoken language of the Kaurna people.

Contents
Lands
People and culture
Pangkarra and yerta
Other names
See also
External links

Lands


The traditional Kaurna cover the regions of South Australia from Cape Jervis at the bottom of the Fleurieu Peninsula to Port Wakefield on the eastern shore of Gulf Saint Vincent and as far north as Crystal Brook in the Mid North. Their lands were bordered by those of the Peramangk and Ngadjuri to the East, Nukunu to the North and the Narangga to the West. Kaurna'Warra, A selected wordlist form the language of the Karuna People of the Adelaide Plains, , Phil, Fitzpartick, Department of Environment and Planning, Aboriginal Heritage Branch, 1991,
Tribes were also found at Snowtown, Blyth, Hoyleton, Hamley Bridge, Clarendon, Gawler and Myponga, where they were sometimes known as Nantuwara. The Jultiwira (stringy bark forests) of the Mount Lofty Ranges was a boundary. Between Hamley Bridge and Crystal Brook, they were known as Padnaindi. Kudnarto, In loving memory of my mother-in-law Anaseini Didrua Barrack Little is known of the usage of the Adelaide Plains by the Kaurna but it naturally serves as a hunting and gathering route. In 1836, at the first arrival of european settlers, fires were observed burning along the coast. These fires were part of the Kaurna's scrub clearing to encourage the growth of grass for Emu and Kangaroo.

People and culture


The traditional way of life of the Kaurna people was destroyed within twenty years of European settlement with the last surviving Kaurna, a woman called Ivaritji, dying in 1931. The Kaurna population had been seriously depleted prior to 1836, with the spread of smallpox from the eastern states.[1] The population again severely declined upon the arrival of European settlers in 1836 at Holdfast Bay (now Glenelg), from about 1000 members before settlement to 180 in 1856. The land was considered to be terra nullius by the enactment of the South Australia Act on 14 August 1834 by the British Parliament.
Pangkarra and yerta

The Kaurna people lived in independent family structures in defined territories called 'pangkarra'. Pangkarra access always had to the coastline and ran extensively inland. The coastline was essential for seafood hunting and the inland territories provided protection to the people during bad weather. The pangkarra were then grouped into subgroups called 'yerta'. All the members in the yerta and different pangkarra were intimately linked. Marriage between a man and a woman within the same yerta was forbidden. The Kaurna performed circumcision as an initiatory right and were the southernmost indigenous tribe to do so.

Other names


Some of the names by which the Kaurna people are also known include: Kaura (misprint), Coorna, Koornawarra, Nantuwara (in relation to the Northern yerta "Kanagaroo Speakers"), Nantuwaru, Nganawara, Meljurna or Meyukattanna (in relation to the Northern yerta 'quarrelsome men', as named by the Southern yerta).

See also



★ 'Indigenous Australians'

Kaurna language

History of Adelaide

Tjilbruke


Tjilbruke's Trail
Other indigenous ethnic groups in South Australia:

Adynyamathanha

Arabunna

Kokatha

Mirning

Ngarrindjeri

Narungga

Pitjantjatjara

Yankuntjara

External links



Concise History of the Kaurna People

The Kaurna People

Kaurna Warra

Kaurna Culture

Bibliography of articles

Kaurna Yerta

Kaurna Place Names

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.