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Mingin people

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The Mingin, also known as the Mingginda, are an Aboriginal Australian people of the state of Queensland, who lived in the Gulf Country east of Moonlight Creek and the Yukulta / Ganggalidda people in the southern Gulf of Carpentaria.[1]

Language

The Mingin language's affiliation has yet to be determined but is thought to have belonged to the Tangkic language family, and to have been closely related to the languages of the Wellesley Islands and in particular Yukulta spoken by the neighbouring Ganggalida.[2]

Country

Norman Tindale estimated Mingin land as encompassing around 2,500 square miles (6,500 km2), in the savannah plains south of Burketown on the Barkly River, as far east to the banks of the Leichhardt River. Their southern limits lay around Augustus Downs and Gregory Downs. Their sole contact with the coast was at the area where the Albert River drains into the Gulf of Carpentaria.[3]

Social customs

The Mingin were a circumcising tribe which dropped the rite from their initiation ceremonies sometime around the middle of the 19th century.[3] They had close links, though speaking apparently quite distinct languages, with the neighbouring Maikudunu. According to one early settler in their area, their tribal traditions held that they were respectively formed by branching off from the Kalkatungu, a people whom they, and the Maikudunu, thereafter reportedly held in contempt.[4][5]

History

The Mingin lived along the coastal territory lying west of the Leichhardt River. One oral account, conserved by the Ganggalida, has them encountering intruders in the area of the Albert River. The Leichhardt river forms a natural divide between differing Aboriginal cultures, circumcision not being practised east of it, from which one may infer that the Mingginda included it in their initiatory rituals.

Within a very short period after the beginning of white settlement in the area, the Mingin were decimated, either through white colonial violence, introduced diseases, or both. The yellow fever that ravaged the settlement of Burketown, which was founded in the heartland of their territory, is thought to have been a major factor precipitating their disappearance, and by the 1930s they were thought of as extinct.[6] The Ganggalida people spread to occupy the niche once occupied by the Mingin, and have successfully petitioned for a native title right to the latter tribe's traditional lands around Burketown on the basis of the principle of succession.

Alternative names

  • Mingir (misprint)
  • Minikin
  • Minkin
  • Myngeen

Source: Tindale 1974, p. 181

Words

Animals

  • jaco-jaco (kangaroo)
  • kallanarra (mosquito)
  • karimbala (white cockatoo)
  • koodoo (tame dog)
  • koorina (fly)
  • megilpurra (wild dog)
  • ooabiba (egg)
  • paganbaba (snake)
  • piringooraa (wild turkey)
  • piteldoo (pelican)
  • poolunganna (emu)
  • pooralga (native companion)
  • wapoora (possum)
  • wongoola (crow)
  • worra (fish)

Body parts

  • bilba (thigh)
  • boormba (hair of the head)
  • changa (foot)
  • charn-nga (tongue)
  • dimira (bone)
  • kiwira (nose)
  • lia (teeth)
  • makola (breasts)
  • mara (ear)
  • migilla (eye)
  • na-nga-ra (hand)
  • pagooroo (skin)
  • paranga (fat)
  • pardaga (stomach)
  • parka (mouth)
  • tangana (blood)
  • turra (bowel and excrement)
  • wedda (head)
  • yarin-nga (beard)

Numbers

  • choarng-ngo (one)
  • tigina (two)
  • tarngiltna (three)

People

  • birgenkoora (brother-younger)
  • churbooyo (God)
  • kiagi (father)
  • koo-ar-ee (being who taught them everything)
  • koondoonoo (mother)
  • magoo (black woman)
  • nacile (brother-elder)
  • nurka (aboriginal man)
  • ooardigiri (old woman)
  • ooroonda (a young man)
  • parda (ghosts)
  • pardingara (an old man)
  • pelgincorra (a baby)
  • takandana (a white man)
  • tano ara mingoo? (where are black?)
  • tyana (track of a foot)
  • wompoora (the blacks)
  • yillolunga (sister-elder)

Source: Curr 1886, p. 314

Notes

Citations

  1. ^ Trigger 2015, pp. 56–57.
  2. ^ Trigger 2015, p. 61.
  3. ^ a b Tindale 1974, p. 181.
  4. ^ Turnbull 1903, pp. 9–11.
  5. ^ Turnbull 1911, pp. 79–80.
  6. ^ Trigger 2015, p. 56.

Sources