Bidjigal
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The Bidjigal (also spelt Bediagal) people were a group of Indigenous Australians living to the West of Sydney. Their geographical location is confusing, as they seem to have been based in southern Sydney, in the region between the Cooks River and the Georges River and yet also seem to have inhabited land in north-western Sydney, in what is now Baulkham Hills.
Attenbrow (2002) discusses their possible origin and location, and concludes that the question is "somewhat vexed", while Kohen (1993) suggests that there may have been some confusion between two distict groups: the Bidjigal (living in the Baulham Hills area) and the Bediagal at Botany Bay in the Salt Pan Creek area. If this is the case, then this article is about the Bidjigal people living in the Baulkham Hills area.
The Bidjigal are sometimes said to be a clan of the Dharuk people, and sometimes a clan of the Eora people, and this may result from the confusion described above. However, it is also possible that they were a distinct group with their own Bidjigal language. The name Bidjigal means plains-dweller in the Dharuk language.
Perhaps the most famous Bidjigal person was Pemulwuy, who successfully led Aboriginal Resistance forces against the British Army before finally being captured and killed (and eventually beheaded).
The name of the Bidjigal is today remembered by the name of Bidjigal Reserve, in Baulkham Hills to the North-West of Sydney. The Bidjigal Reserve was known as Excelsior Reserve until 2002. It is the site of the earliest known Aboriginal occupation of Sydney.
[edit] Further Reading
Willmott, E., 1987, “Pemulwuy – the rainbow warrior”, Weldons.
[edit] References
- Attenbrow, V., 2002, Sydney’s Aboriginal Past, UNSW Press
- Kohen, J., The Darug and their Neighbours: the traditional Aboriginal owners of the Sydney region. Darug Link in association with Blacktown City Council 1993 p 21