Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/132750
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dc.contributor.authorSchultz, Chester-
dc.date.issued2021-05-18-
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2440/132750-
dc.descriptionAnalysis of the etymology of Witjalangken
dc.description.abstractWitjalangk is the Ramindjeri name given in 1934 by Reuben Walker for ‘Port Noarlunga’, according to Tindale’s notes from interviews with him and a typescript copied by Mark Wilson from Walker’s manuscript. Walker was then in his 70s, remembering the period between the 1860s and perhaps the 1890s. He had lived among the “Ramingeri” most of his life, and believed that they “had been a powerful tribe”, having a large territory with “a sea front from Port Noarlunga to the Murray Mouth”, including the whole of Fleurieu Peninsula, and inland to Clarendon. He also believed that “Wicharlung” (Witjalangk) marked a border between Ramindjeri hunting lands and their tawuli, i.e. adjacent hunting lands belonging to a different clan but allowing special mutual permissions to travel and hunt; and that these tawuli lands extended north to ‘Brighton’en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherChester Schultzen
dc.subjectPort Noarlungaen
dc.subjectOnkaparinga River mouthen
dc.subjectRamindjeri languageen
dc.subjectSouthern Adelaideen
dc.subjectAboriginal place namesen
dc.titleWitjalangken
dc.title.alternativePlace Name Summary (PNS) 4.02/03en
dc.typeTexten
Appears in Collections:Southern Kaurna Place Names Essays

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