The Euahlayi Tribe: A Study of Aboriginal Life in Australia. K. Langloh Parker

The Euahlayi Tribe: A Study of Aboriginal Life in Australia - K. Langloh Parker


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first division among this tribe is a blood distinction (I phratries'):—

      Gwaigulleeah LIGHT BLOODED

       Gwaimudthen DARK BLOODED.

      This distinction is not confined to the human beings of the tribe, who must be of one or the other, but there are the Gwaigulleeah and Gwaimudthen divisions in all things. The first and chief division in our tribe, as regards customary marriage law, is the partition of all tribes-folk into these 'phratries,' or 'exogamous moieties.' While in most Australian tribes the meanings of the names of phratries are lost, where the meanings are known they are usually names of animals—Eagle, Hawk, and Crow, White Cockatoo and Black Cockatoo, and so forth. Among the great Kamilaroi tribe, akin in speech to the Euahlayi, the names of phratries, DILBI and KUPATHIN, are of unknown significance. The Euahlayi names, we have seen, are Gwaigulleeah, Light blooded, and Gwaimudthen, Dark blooded.

      The origin of this division is said to be the fact that the original ancestors were, on the one side, a red race coming from the west, the Gwaigulleeah; on the other, a dark race coming from the east.

      A Gwaigulleeah may under no circumstances marry a Gwaigulleeah; he or she must mate with a Gwaimudthen. This rule has no exception. A child belongs to the same phratry as its mother.

      The next name of connection is local, based on belonging to one country or hunting-ground; this name a child takes from its mother wherever it may happen to be born. Any one who is called a Noongahburrah belongs to the Noongah-Kurrajong country; Ghurreeburrah to the orchid country; Mirriehburrah, poligonum country; Bibbilah, Bibbil country, and so on. This division, not of blood relationship, carries no independent marriage restriction, but keeps up a feeling equivalent to Scotch, Irish, or English, and is counted by the blacks as 'relationship,' but not sufficiently so to bar marriage.

      The next division is the name in common for all daughters, or all sons of one family of sisters. The daughters take the name from their maternal grandmother, the sons from their maternal great-uncle.

      Of these divisions, called I Matrimonial Classes, there are four for each sex, bearing the same names as among the Kamilaroi. The names are—

      Masculine Kumbo BROTHER AND SISTER

       Feminine, Bootha

      Masculine Murree BROTHER AND SISTER

       Feminine, Matha

      Masculine Hippi BROTHER AND SISTER

       Feminine, Hippitha

      Masculine Kubbee BROTHER AND SISTER

       Feminine, Kubbootha

      The children of Bootha will be

      Masculine Hippi BROTHER AND SISTER

       Feminine, Hippitha

      The children of Matha will be

      Masculine Kubbee BROTHER AND SISTER

       Feminine, Kubbootha

      The children of Hippatha will be

      Masculine Kumbo BROTHER AND SISTER

       Feminine, Bootha

      The children of Kubbootha will be

      Masculine Murree BROTHER AND SISTER

       Feminine, Matha

      Thus, you see, they take, if girls, their grandmother's and her sisters' 'class' names in common; if boys, the 'class' name of their grandmother's brothers.

      Bootha can only marry Murree,

       Matha can only marry Kumbo,

       Hippitha can only marry Kubbee,

       Kubbootha can only marry Hippi.

      Both men and women are often addressed by these names when spoken to.

      A PROPOS of names, a child is never called at night by the same name as in the daytime, lest the 'devils' hear it and entice him away.

      Names are made for the newly born according to circumstances; a girl born under a Dheal tree, for example, was called Dheala. Any incident happening at the time of birth may gain a child a name, such as a particular lizard passing. Two of my black maids were called after lizards in that way: Barahgurree and Bogginbinnia.

      Nimmaylee is a porcupine with the spines coming; such an one having been brought to the camp just as a girl was born, she became Nimmaylee.

      The mothers, with native politeness, ask you to give their children English names, but much mote often use in familiar conversation either the Kumbo Bootha names, or others derived from place of birth, from some circumstance connected with it, a child's mispronunciation of a word, some peculiarity noticed in the child, or still more often they call each other by the name proclaiming the degree of relationship.

      For example, a girl calls the daughters of her mother and of her aunts alike sisters.

      Boahdee SISTER

       Wambaneah FULL BROTHER

       Dayadee HALF BROTHER

       Gurrooghee UNCLE

       Wulgundee UNCLE'S WIFE

       Kummean SISTER'S SISTER

       Numbardee MOTHER

       Numbardee MOTHER'S SISTER

       Beealahdee FATHER

       Beealahdee MOTHER'S SISTERS' HUSBANDS

       Gnahgnahdee GRANDMOTHER ON FATHER'S SIDE

       Bargie GRANDMOTHER ON MOTHER'S SIDE

       Dadadee GRANDFATHER ON MOTHER'S SIAE

       Gurroomi A SON-IN-LAW, OR ONE WHO COULD BE A SON-IN-LAW

       Goonooahdee A DAUGHTER-IN-LAW, OR ONE WHO COULD BE A DAUGHTER-IN-LAW

       Gooleerh HUSBAND OR WIFE, OR ONE WHO MIGHT BE SO.

      So relationships are always kept in their memories by being daily used as names. There are other general names, too, such as—

      Mullayerh A TEMPORARY MATE OR COMPANION

       Moothie A FRIEND OF CHILDHOOD IN AFTER LIFE

       Doore-oothai A LOVER

       Dillahga AN ELDERLY MAN OF THE SAME TOTEM

       Tuckandee A YOUNG MAN OF THE SAME TOTEM, RECKONED AS A SORT OF

       BROTHER.

      Another list of names used ordinarily is—

      Boothan LAST POSSIBLE CHILD OF A WOMAN

       Mahmee OLD WOMAN

       Beewun MOTHERLESS GIRL

       Gowun FATHERLESS GIRL

       Yumbui FATHERLESS BOY

       Moogul ONLY CHILD.

      Those of the same totem are reckoned as brothers and sisters, so cannot intermarry. 'Boyjerh' relations, as those on the father's side are called, are not so important as on the mother's side, but are still recognised.

      Now for the great Dhe, or totem system, by some called Mah, but Dhe, is the more correct.

      Dinewan, or emu, is a totem, and has amongst its multiplex totems' or 'sub-totems'—

      Goodoo OR CODFISH

       Gumbarl SILVER BREAM

       Inga CRAYFISH

       Boomool SHRIMPS

       Gowargay WATER EMU SPIRIT

       Moograbah BIG BLACK-AND-WHITE MAGPIE

       Booloorl LITTLE NIGHT OWL

       Byahmul BLACK SWAN

       Eerin A LITTLE NIGHT OWL

       Beerwon A BIRD LIKE A SWALLOW

       Dulloorah THE MANNA-BRINGING BIRDS

       Bunnyal FLIES

       Dheal SACRED FIRE

      


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