|
The Yirrganydji people〔Yirrganydjii Tribal Aboriginal Corporation (n.d) Yirrganydjii display on the Cairns Esplanade (originally reported at http://www.cairns.qld.gov.au/files/esplanade/Cultural%203%20Node.pdf/)〕 (aka Irukandji〔(Normal Tindale's Catalogue of Australian Aboriginal tribe's entry for Irukandji )〕) are a group of Australian Aborigines who are the Traditional Owners and original custodians of a narrow coastal strip within Djabugay country that runs northwards from Cairns, Queensland to Port Douglas (Mowbray River), Queensland.〔Tindale, N. (1940) ''The results of Norman Tindale and Joseph Birdell's Harvard-Adelaide Universities Anthropological Expedition, 1938-39 distribution of Australian Aboriginal Tribes in 1940''〕 The Yirrganydji people were, until relatively recently, regarded as seafarers who shared in common, descent from predecessors who once all spoke Yirrgay (which to early linguists noted as a dialect of the Djabugay language), and were particularly associated with the coastal strip, river mouths, islands, and seas along the coast between the Cairns Trinity Inlet and Port Douglas. ==Alternative names== *''Yil-gun-gee'' (1891 ) *''Yerkanji'' (1910 ) *''Irukandji'' (1938 ) *''Yirkandyi'' (1939 ) *''Yirkandja'' (1984 ) *''Yettkie'' (1897 ) *''Yirkai'' (1910 ) *''Yerki'' (1932 ) 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Yirrganydji people」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|