dnathan.com
David NATHAN
http://www.dnathan.com/djn/webcv.htm
Photo by Meili Fang. Digtal language resource developer. Research Associate, Dept Zoology, University of Oxford. Email djn@soas.ac.uk. Conferences papers, workshops, lectures etc. Nathan, David. In press. On the reach of digital language archives. In Language Documentation and Conservation (Special Issue on Research, Records and Responsibility: Ten years of the Pacific and Regional Archive for Digital Sources in Endangered Cultures). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 42-55. Http:/ www.elpublishi...
findingbennelong.com
Return | Finding Bennelong
http://www.findingbennelong.com/return
Skip to main content. Bennelong had been abroad almost three years and learnt much about the alien country and culture of the English. But the journey had affected Bennelong and he seemed a different man. With his long-neglected brick hut now in ruins, Bennelong now resided at Government House. Judge Advocate David Collins, An account of the English colony in New South Wales, Volume 1, 1802. Judge Advocate David Collins, An account of the English colony in New South Wales, Volume 1, 1802. He expressed hi...
findingbennelong.com
Abduction | Finding Bennelong
http://www.findingbennelong.com/abduction
Skip to main content. Governor Phillip urgently needed a suitable replacement for Arabanoo. In November 1789 he sent Lieutenant William Bradley with a party of marines to Manly Cove where they succeeded in the traumatic abduction of two men - Colebee, a Cadigal, and a younger man, Bennelong, a Wangal. The captives were taken to Government House but they subsequently escaped. Captain Watkin Tench, A Complete Account of the Settlement at Port Jackson, in New South Wales, (1789) 1793. Captain Watkin Tench, ...
findingbennelong.com
Discovery | Finding Bennelong
http://www.findingbennelong.com/discovery
Skip to main content. The identification of Bennelong's likely grave site in Putney in 2010 sparked media interest across Australia and the world. 200 years after his death we reflect on this extraordinary man who was among the first indigenous Australians to reside amongst the British settlers, visit England and live to tell the tale. Sydney Gazette, 9 January 1813. Aboriginal History Vol 33. Aboriginal History Vol 33. Kate Fullagar - Woollarawarre Bennelong: rethinking the tragic narrative. Constructin...
tiddastakeback.com
cadigal | tiddas takeback
https://tiddastakeback.com/tag/cadigal
Subscribe to posts via email. Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email. Join 265 other followers. Posts that include…. Ttblondon #ttb #indigenousx #originsfestival. 19th Biennale of Sydney. Australia Council for the Arts. In All Our Glory. Origins Festival of First Nations. October 25, 2013. Dreams are said to be the voice of the unconscious. There is no distinguishment from creation to today. What do our dreams tell us that words can not? In 1788 Lt Wi...
findingbennelong.com
Obituary | Finding Bennelong
http://www.findingbennelong.com/obituary
Skip to main content. A single, damning obituary by the unsympathetic Sydney Gazette perhaps did more than anything else to cast Bennelong as an ungrateful, uncivilised outcast - a pariah who rejected British benevolence and the benefits of British civilisation. Sydney Gazette, 9 January 1813. He was much addicted to spirit-drinking, and for the last five months of his life was seldom sober. Sydney Gazette, 29 March 1817. Much of Bennelong’s life and career has been coloured by a single. Aboriginal Histo...
findingbennelong.com
Travellers | Finding Bennelong
http://www.findingbennelong.com/travellers
Skip to main content. In December 1792 Governor Arthur Phillip returned to England accompanied by Bennelong and Yemmerawanne. Following a six-month voyage, they landed in Falmouth, England on 19 May 1793. Bennelong and Yemmerawanne stepped ashore into an alien world where they were cast as both colonial exhibits and Eora diplomats. Lloyd's Evening Post, 29 May 1793. Lloyd's Evening Post, 29 May 1793. Governor Phillip signified a determination of quitting his government, and returning to England in the At...
findingbennelong.com
Settlement | Finding Bennelong
http://www.findingbennelong.com/settlement
Skip to main content. Bennelong re-opened friendly dialogue with the British, but this time it was on his own terms. In October 1790 he voluntarily returned to the settlement at Sydney Cove in the role of diplomat, thereby extending his influence both amongst the British and the Eora. Captain Watkin Tench, A Complete Account of the Settlement at Port Jackson, in New South Wales, (1790) 1793. Captain Watkin Tench, A Complete Account of the Settlement at Port Jackson, in New South Wales, (1790) 1793. Capta...
findingbennelong.com
Strangers | Finding Bennelong
http://www.findingbennelong.com/strangers
Skip to main content. Governor Arthur Phillip attempted to establish open communications with the Eora people, but the wary Eora avoided the settlement. In desperation, Phillip captured Arabanoo at Manly Cove. He was detained at Government House for questioning, but died of smallpox in May 1789. William Bradley, A voyage to New South Wales, (1786-1792) 1802. Lord Sydney, Instructions for Governor Arthur Phillip, 25 April 1787. As Kow-wan or Kowang, lies within Wangal territory. [4]. In April and May 1789...