Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Nggamadi

The Nggamadi were an indigenous Australian people of the Cape York Peninsula of northern Queensland.

Name

They are often conflated with the Ankamuti,[a] but Tindale regarded them as a separate tribal reality. Terry Crowley writes:-

In the region referred to locally as the "Seven Rivers" area (the seven rivers being the Jardine, MacDonald, Skardon, Doughboy, Ducie and Jackson Rivers, and Crystal Creek), which constitutes the very narrow coastal stretch from the northern side of Port Musgrave as far as the Doughboy River, and also the inland area of Crystal Creek and the middle Jardine River, were the aŋkamuṯi -speaking people. The non-coastal aŋkamuṯi of the Jardine River were alternatively called yampaɣuƫaŋu or utuðanamu (meaning "leaf people" and "scrub dwellers" respectively). The aŋkamuṯi have previously been referred to in the literature by the name ŋkamuṯi (Gamiti in Roth 1910:96), Ngkamadyi in McConnel (1939-1940:60) and Nggammadi in Sharp (1939:257), which was used for the aŋkamuṯi by the CV-dropping groups to the south of Port Musgrave (Crowley 1981:146).[2]

Country

Norman Tindale estimated that the Nggamadi had about 750 square miles (1,900 km2) of territory. They lay north of the Dulhunty River as far as around Vrilya Point (Cockatoo Creek), and were present also at the Jackson and Skardon rivers.[3]

Alternative names

  • Ngkamadyi
  • Ngammatti
  • Nggamiti
  • Ngamiti
  • Ngammatta
  • Gamete
  • Gamiti
  • Gametty[4]
  • Gomokudin[3]

Notes

  1. ^ "Crowley (1983: 310) has established that some of these names are variant representations of the name of a language distinguished as either Nggammadi (var. Gamati, Gâmete, Gametty, Ngkamadyi, Nggamadi, Ngammatti), which is a form used by the initial CV-dropping speakers south of Port Musgrave or as Angkamuthi (var. Ankamati/Angkamuthi/Angkamuti/Anggamudi/An'Gamoti)."[1]

Citations

  1. ^ Powell 2014, pp. 137–138, 138.
  2. ^ Crowley 1983, p. 310.
  3. ^ a b Tindale 1974, p. 183.
  4. ^ Mathews 1900, p. 131.

Sources