This is primarily a list of towns and cities in Australia by year of settlement. The article also contains information on permanent settlements established in Australia before British settlement commenced in 1788.
For 40,000–70,000 years, the Australian mainland and Tasmania have been inhabited by the Australian Aboriginal people, and the Torres Strait Islands (now part of Queensland) by Torres Strait Islanders. Aboriginal people were hunter-gatherers and fire stick farmers who travelled between seasonal settlements inside country boundaries. Many groups had more permanent camps that they lived in for much of the year. Torres Strait Islanders engaged in some agriculture and had permanent villages. In 1788, the British Empire began colonising Australia, constructing permanent towns and farms. Aboriginal people began living in permanent settlements, some by choice while others were forced.
The Cocos-Keeling Islands and Christmas Island have only been inhabited since the 1880s. Information for them can be found in the table below. Norfolk Island was first settled by Polynesians in the 13th or 14th century. In 1788 the British colonised the island, by that time the Polynesians had been gone for hundreds of years. Jervis Bay Territory is located on the Australian mainland and has two small villages. Prior to British settlement, the area was inhabited by Yuin aboriginal people. The Coral Sea Islands, Heard Island and McDonald Islands and the Australian Antarctic Territory have never had permanent inhabitants, but do have weather and research stations where people temporarily live and work. The Ashmore and Cartier Islands have never been inhabited, but are regularly visited by traditional Indonesian fishers.
From 1947 to 1966, Australia administered the island of Nauru, which has been inhabited for at least three thousand years. The Nauruan people traditionally lived in permanent villages. Nauru is now an independent sovereign country formally called the Republic of Nauru. Australia governed the Territory of New Guinea (1920–1941), Territory of Papua (1902–1945) and then the Territory of Papua and New Guinea (1945–1979), which were all located on the island of New Guinea. Many of the native Papuan people traditionally lived in permanent settlements. In 1979 these territories became the independent sovereign country of Papua New Guinea.
Year | Town/City | State/Territory | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1788 | Sydney | New South Wales | First permanent Australian city. [1] Largest city in Australia, capital of New South Wales. |
1788 | Parramatta | New South Wales | Second-oldest settlement in Australia. [2] Now a part of the Sydney urban area. |
1788 | Kingston | Norfolk Island | Island settled as part of the Colony of New South Wales. [3] It is now a separate territory of Australia. |
1791 | Windsor | New South Wales | Part of the City of Hawkesbury and Sydney urban area |
1794 | Richmond | New South Wales | Originally known as Richmond Hill, which is part of the City of Hawkesbury and Sydney urban area |
1794 | Pitt Town Bottoms | New South Wales | Originally known as Mulgrave Place. Part of the City of Hawkesbury. [4] |
1798 | Liverpool | New South Wales | Now part of the greater Sydney metro area. [5] |
Year | Town/City | State/Territory | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1801 | Newcastle | New South Wales | Original settlement abandoned in 1802. Resettled in 1804. |
1803 | Hobart | Tasmania | Hobart is Australia's second oldest capital city. Largest city and capital of Tasmania. [6] Originally settled at Risdon Cove, the settlement was moved to Sullivans Cove in 1804. |
1803 | George Town | Tasmania | |
1806 | Launceston | Tasmania | |
1807 | New Norfolk | Tasmania | |
1808 | Sorell | Tasmania |
Year | Town/City | State/Territory | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1812 | Ross | Tasmania | |
1813 | Longford | Tasmania | |
1814 | Bathurst | New South Wales | Oldest inland settlement in Australia |
1815 | Blackheath | New South Wales | |
1817 | Shellharbour | New South Wales | |
1818 | Penrith | New South Wales |
Year | Town/City | State/Territory | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1820s | Singleton | New South Wales | |
1820 | Campbelltown | New South Wales | Now part of the greater Sydney metro area. |
1820 | Maitland | New South Wales | |
1821 | Morpeth | New South Wales | |
1821 | Port Macquarie | New South Wales | |
1821 | Mudgee | New South Wales | |
1821 | Perth | Tasmania | |
1823 | Gosford | New South Wales | One of the two mergers of the Central Coast with Wyong |
1823 | Richmond | Tasmania | |
1823 | Wellington | New South Wales | |
1824 | Redcliffe | Queensland | First European settlement in Queensland |
1825 | Brisbane | Queensland | Largest city and capital of Queensland. |
1826 | King George's Sound (Albany) | Western Australia | Oldest settlement in the western half of Australia |
1826 | Burrangong Station (Young) | New South Wales | Settled as Burrangong Station, in Lambing Flat. Gazetted as Young in the 1860s. |
1827 | Burnie | Tasmania | Settled as Emu Bay, renamed in the early 1840s to Burnie after William Burnie. |
1827 | Oceania House, Home Island | Cocos-Keeling Islands | The islands were uninhabited prior to 1827. They became a territory of Australia in 1955. |
1827 | Tarago | New South Wales | |
1829 | Clarence | Western Australia | Abandoned in the early 1830s. |
1829 | Fremantle | Western Australia | |
1829 | Perth | Western Australia | Established as Swan River Colony. Largest city and capital of Western Australia. |
1829 | Guildford | Western Australia |
Year | Town/City | State/Territory | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1830 | Augusta | Western Australia | |
1830 | Berrima | New South Wales | |
1830 | Port Arthur | Tasmania | [7] |
1831 | Mandurah | Western Australia | |
1831 | Taree | New South Wales | |
1832 | Busselton | Western Australia | |
1833 | Northam | Western Australia | |
1833 | Goulburn | New South Wales | First Inland city |
1833 | Muswellbrook | New South Wales | |
1834 | Portland | Victoria | Oldest European settlement in Victoria. |
1834 | Wollongong | New South Wales | |
1834 | Pinjarra | Western Australia | |
1835 | York | Western Australia | [8] [9] |
1835 | Melbourne | Victoria | Second-largest city in Australia and capital of Victoria. |
1836 | Adelaide | South Australia | Largest city and capital of South Australia. |
1836 | Bunbury | Western Australia | |
1836 | Gawler | South Australia | |
1836 | Holbrook | New South Wales | |
1836 | Kempsey | New South Wales | |
1836 | Kingscote | South Australia | Oldest European settlement in South Australia |
1836 | Littlehampton | South Australia | |
1836 | Sunbury | Victoria | |
1836 | Wauchope | New South Wales | |
1837 | Bungendore | New South Wales | |
1837 | Colo Vale | New South Wales | |
1837 | Dandenong | Victoria | Now part of the greater Melbourne metro area. |
1837 | Southport | Tasmania | Most southern township in Australia. |
1837 | Yass | New South Wales | |
1838 | Buninyong | Victoria | |
1838 | Geelong | Victoria | |
1838 | Gundagai | New South Wales | |
1838 | Queanbeyan | New South Wales | |
1839 | Albury | New South Wales | |
1839 | Braidwood | New South Wales | |
1839 | Echunga | South Australia | |
1839 | Gumeracha | South Australia | |
1839 | Hahndorf | South Australia | |
1839 | Mount Barker | South Australia | |
1839 | Port Lincoln | South Australia | |
1839 | Seymour | Victoria | |
1839 | Thebarton | South Australia |
Year | Town/City | State/Territory | Notes | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1840s | Benalla | Victoria | ||||
1840s | Dalby | Queensland | ||||
1840s | Traralgon | Victoria | ||||
1840s | Toowoomba | Queensland | ||||
1840s | Ulladulla | New South Wales | [10] | |||
1840s | Wee Waa | New South Wales | ||||
1840 | Macclesfield | South Australia | ||||
1840 | Melrose | South Australia | Oldest town in the Flinders Ranges. | |||
1840 | Oakbank | South Australia | ||||
1842 | Ballina | New South Wales | [11] | |||
1842 | Caboolture | Queensland | ||||
1842 | Horsham | Victoria | ||||
1842 | Kapunda | South Australia | ||||
1842 | Lobethal | South Australia | ||||
1843 | Boydtown | New South Wales | ||||
1843 | Eden | New South Wales | ||||
1843 | Wangaratta | Victoria | ||||
1844 | Bacchus Marsh | Victoria | ||||
1844 | Tweed Heads | New South Wales | ||||
1844 | Wingham | New South Wales | ||||
1845 | Jimboomba | Queensland | ||||
1845 | Port Pirie | South Australia | ||||
1846 | Cowra, New South Wales | 1846 | Grafton | New South Wales | [12] | |
1846 | Ipswich | Queensland | ||||
1846 | Orange | New South Wales | ||||
1846 | Swan Hill | Victoria | ||||
1847 | Temora | New South Wales | ||||
1847 | Maryborough | Queensland | ||||
1847 | Rockingham | Western Australia | ||||
1847 | Wagga Wagga | New South Wales | ||||
1848 | Birdwood | South Australia | Originally named Blumberg. | |||
1848 | Nanango | Queensland | ||||
1849 | Armidale | New South Wales | ||||
1849 | Cooma | New South Wales | ||||
1849 | Dubbo | New South Wales | ||||
1849 | Gayndah | Queensland | ||||
1849 | Surat | Queensland |
Year | Town/City | State/Territory | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1850s | Boggabri | New South Wales | |
1850s | Casino | New South Wales | [13] |
1850s | Woodside | South Australia | |
1850 | Cessnock | New South Wales | |
1850 | Deniliquin | New South Wales | |
1850 | Geraldton | Western Australia | |
1850 | Meadows | South Australia | |
1850 | Warwick | Queensland | |
1850 | Tamworth | New South Wales | |
1851 | Bega | New South Wales | [14] |
1851 | Bendigo | Victoria | |
1851 | Ballarat | Victoria | |
1851 | Castlemaine | Victoria | |
1851 | Hamilton | Victoria | |
1851 | Horsham | Victoria | |
1851 | Moama | New South Wales | |
1851 | Sale | Victoria | |
1851 | Tenterfield | New South Wales | |
1852 | Bordertown | South Australia | |
1852 | Daylesford | Victoria | |
1852 | Glen Innes | New South Wales | |
1852 | Lismore | New South Wales | |
1852 | Mount Gambier | South Australia | |
1852 | Nowra | New South Wales | |
1852 | Port Augusta | South Australia | |
1852 | Port Elliot | South Australia | |
1852 | Walcha | New South Wales | |
1852 | Wodonga | Victoria | |
1853 | Beechworth | Victoria | |
1853 | Goolwa | South Australia | |
1853 | Currajong (Parkes) | New South Wales | Originally founded as Currajong, but known as "Bushman's". Renamed to Parkes in 1873. |
1853 | Port Gregory | Western Australia | |
1854 | Colac | Victoria | |
1854 | Camperdown | Victoria | |
1854 | Devonport | Tasmania | |
1854 | Echuca | Victoria | |
1854 | Gladstone | Queensland | |
1854 | Stirling | South Australia | |
1854 | Tinonee | New South Wales | |
1854 | Yamba | New South Wales | |
1855 | Gatton | Queensland | |
1855 | Samford | Queensland | |
1855 | Warrnambool | Victoria | |
1856 | Gunnedah | New South Wales | |
1856 | Inverell | New South Wales | |
1856 | Quirindi | New South Wales | |
1857 | Ararat | Victoria | |
1857 | Ulverstone | Tasmania | |
1858 | Chiltern | Victoria | |
1858 | Laidley | Queensland | |
1858 | Rockhampton | Queensland | |
1858 | Corowa | New South Wales | |
1859 | Allora | Queensland | |
1859 | Barmera | South Australia | |
1859 | Hay | New South Wales | |
1859 | Scottsdale | Tasmania | [15] |
1859 | Walgett | New South Wales |
Year | Town/City | State/Territory | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1860s | Glenrowan | Victoria | |
1860s | Mangalore | Victoria | [16] |
1860 | Bairnsdale | Victoria | [17] |
1860 | Barnawartha | Victoria | |
1860 | Shepparton | Victoria | |
1860 | Narrabri | New South Wales | |
1861 | Cootamundra | New South Wales | Officially settled in 1847 as a stock run, incorporated in 1861. |
1861 | Bowen | Queensland | |
1861 | Bowral | New South Wales | |
1861 | Forbes | New South Wales | |
1861 | Moss Vale | New South Wales | |
1862 | Inglewood | Queensland | |
1862 | Moree | New South Wales | |
1862 | St George | Queensland | |
1862 | Tharwa | Australian Capital Territory | Oldest official settlement in the Australian Capital Territory |
1863 | Cossack | Western Australia | First town in northwest Australia |
1863 | Springsure | Queensland | |
1863 | Tambo | Queensland | Oldest town in western Queensland |
1863 | Victor Harbor | South Australia | |
1863 | Walhalla | Victoria | |
1864 | Clermont | Queensland | |
1864 | Northampton | Western Australia | |
1864 | Ingham | Queensland | |
1864 | Mitchell | Queensland | |
1864 | Somerset | Queensland | No longer inhabited. |
1865 | Burketown | Queensland | [18] |
1865 | Charleville | Queensland | |
1865 | Roebourne | Western Australia | |
1865 | Townsville | Queensland | |
1866 | Beenleigh | Queensland | |
1866 | Mount Victoria | New South Wales | |
1867 | Cloncurry | Queensland | |
1867 | Nambucca Heads | New South Wales | [19] |
1867 | Normanton | Queensland | |
1867 | Roma | Queensland | |
1868 | Bridgetown | Western Australia | |
1868 | Cunnamulla | Queensland | |
1868 | Gympie | Queensland | |
1868 | Yeppoon | Queensland | |
1869 | Bourke | New South Wales | |
1869 | Darwin | Northern Territory | Largest city and capital of the Northern Territory. |
1869 | Walla Walla | New South Wales |
Year | Town/City | State/Territory | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1870s | Beaudesert | Queensland | |
1870s | Coffs Harbour | New South Wales | [20] |
1870s | Eucla | Western Australia | |
1870 | Gulgong | New South Wales | |
1870s | Lithgow | New South Wales | |
1870s | Mackay | Queensland | |
1870s | Morwell | Victoria | |
1870 | Bellingen | New South Wales | [21] |
1870 | Bundaberg | Queensland | |
1870 | Cobar | New South Wales | Name derives from the Ngiyambaa language of the Wangaibon and Weilwan peoples. |
1870 | Hughenden | Queensland | |
1870 | Medlow Bath | New South Wales | |
1870 | Nagambie | Victoria | |
1870 | Nambour | Queensland | |
1870 | Oakey | Queensland | |
1870 | Yandina | Queensland | |
1871 | Charters Towers | Queensland | |
1871 | Cossack | Western Australia | |
1871 | Forsayth | Queensland | |
1871 | Landsborough | Queensland | |
1871 | Tewantin | Queensland | |
1872 | Adelaide River | Northern Territory | |
1872 | Alice Springs | Northern Territory | Second-largest city in the Northern Territory |
1872 | Condon | Western Australia | Abandoned 1927, in favour of Port Hedland |
1872 | Esk | Queensland | |
1872 | Forster | New South Wales | |
1872 | Lowood | Queensland | |
1872 | Stanthorpe | Queensland | |
1873 | Cooktown | Queensland | |
1874 | Southport | Queensland | |
1876 | Cairns | Queensland | |
1876 | Crows Nest | Queensland | |
1876 | Kyabram | Victoria | |
1876 | Pittsworth | Queensland | |
1876 | Winton | Queensland | |
1877 | Chinchilla | Queensland | |
1877 | Mareeba | Queensland | |
1877 | Warragul | Victoria | |
1878 | Farina | South Australia | |
1878 | Killarney | Queensland | |
1878 | Miles | Queensland | |
1879 | Boulia | Queensland | |
1879 | Dunsborough | Western Australia | |
1879 | Emerald | Queensland | |
1879 | Innisfail | Queensland | |
1879 | Katoomba | New South Wales | |
1879 | Moe | Victoria |
Year | Town/City | State/Territory | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1880s | Canungra | Queensland | |
1880s | Gordonvale | Queensland | |
1880 | Milparinka | New South Wales | |
1882 | Ayr | Queensland | |
1882 | Boonah | Queensland | |
1882 | Hall | Australian Capital Territory | |
1882 | Mount Morgan | Queensland | |
1883 | Broken Hill | New South Wales | |
1883 | Broome | Western Australia | |
1883 | Caloundra | Queensland | |
1883 | Captains Flat | New South Wales | |
1883 | Carnarvon | Western Australia | |
1883 | Coolangatta | Queensland | |
1883 | Derby | Western Australia | |
1883 | Edmonton | Queensland | |
1883 | Narromine | New South Wales | |
1884 | Alpha | Queensland | |
1884 | Camooweal | Queensland | |
1884 | Karridale | Western Australia | |
1884 | Wyalong | New South Wales | |
1885 | Barcaldine | Queensland | [22] |
1885 | Batemans Bay | New South Wales | |
1885 | Childers | Queensland | |
1885 | Cooroy | Queensland | |
1885 | Guyra | New South Wales | |
1885 | Old Onslow | Western Australia | Abandoned in 1925. |
1885 | Wallangarra | Queensland | |
1886 | Wyndham | Western Australia | |
1887 | Birdsville | Queensland | |
1887 | Blackbutt | Queensland | |
1887 | Eidsvold | Queensland | |
1887 | Mildura | Victoria | |
1887 | Mittagong | New South Wales | |
1887 | Southern Cross | Western Australia | |
1888 | Flying Fish Cove | Christmas Island | Island was uninhabited prior to 1888. Became a territory of Australia in 1958. |
1888 | Goondiwindi | Queensland | |
1888 | Kilcoy | Queensland | |
1888 | Kuranda | Queensland | |
1888 | Longreach | Queensland | |
1888 | North Star | New South Wales | |
1888 | Uranquinty | New South Wales | [23] |
1888 | Woolgoolga | New South Wales | |
1889 | Nannup | Western Australia |
Year | Town/City | State/Territory | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1890s | Kingaroy | Queensland | |
1890s | Margaret River | Western Australia | |
1890s | Mount Hope | New South Wales | |
1890 | Eumundi | Queensland | |
1890 | Innamincka | South Australia | |
1890 | Oodnadatta | South Australia | |
1890 | Tarcutta | New South Wales | |
1891 | Maleny | Queensland | |
1892 | Bomaderry | New South Wales | |
1892 | Coolgardie | Western Australia | [24] |
1893 | Kalgoorlie | Western Australia | |
1893 | Tuncurry | New South Wales | |
1895 | Norseman | Western Australia | |
1895 | Waroona | Western Australia | |
1896 | Esperance | Western Australia | |
1896 | Port Hedland | Western Australia | |
1897 | Gwalia | Western Australia | Abandoned. |
1898 | Katanning | Western Australia | |
1898 | Waverley | Western Australia | [25] |
1899 | Quindalup | Western Australia |
Year | Town/City | State/Territory | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1900s | Fitzroy Crossing | Western Australia | |
1901 | Tarcoola | South Australia | |
1904 | Kyogle | New South Wales | |
1904 | Renmark | South Australia | |
1908 | Maroochydore | Queensland | [26] |
1910 | Dwellingup | Western Australia | |
1910 | Koojan | Western Australia | |
1910 | Wonthaggi | Victoria | |
1911 | Berri | South Australia | |
1911 | Batchelor | Northern Territory | |
1913 | Canberra | Australian Capital Territory | Largest inland city, capital of the Australian Capital Territory and of Australia. |
1913 | Leeton | New South Wales | |
1915 | Coober Pedy | South Australia | |
1916 | Griffith | New South Wales | |
1917 | Quilpie | Queensland | |
1919 | Yerrinbool | New South Wales | |
1920 | Port Augusta | South Australia | |
1920 | Whyalla | South Australia | |
1921 | Monash | South Australia | |
1922 | Tin Can Bay | Queensland | Originally known as Wallu. [27] |
1923 | Mount Isa | Queensland | |
1924 | Onslow | Western Australia | Moved from Old Onslow. |
1924 | Biloela | Queensland | |
1924 | Monto | Queensland | |
1924 | Murray Bridge | South Australia | |
1925 | Cowaramup | Western Australia | |
1926 | Katherine | Northern Territory | |
1926 | Carbunup River | Carbunup River | |
1934 | Tarraleah | Tasmania | |
1936 | Seventeen Seventy | Queensland | |
1940 | Loveday | South Australia | |
1946 | Wittenoom | Western Australia | Closed in 2007 due to asbestos contamination. [28] |
1947 | Bronte Park | Tasmania | |
1947 | Woomera | South Australia | |
1953 | Bindoon | Western Australia | |
1956 | Jurien Bay | Western Australia | |
1960s | Tom Price | Western Australia | |
1961 | Kununurra | Western Australia | |
1961 | Weipa | Queensland | |
1963 | Gracetown | Western Australia | |
1965 | Dampier | Western Australia | |
1965 | Goldsworthy | Western Australia | Former mining town. Abandoned in 1992. |
1966 | Newman | Western Australia | Originally named Mount Newman until 1981. |
1967 | Exmouth | Western Australia | |
1968 | Karratha | Western Australia | |
1969 | Moranbah | Queensland | |
1970 | Ravenswood | Western Australia | |
1972 | Shay Gap | Western Australia | Former mining town. Closed in 1994. |
1980s | Joondalup | Western Australia | |
1981 | Palmerston | Northern Territory | |
1982 | Jabiru | Northern Territory | |
1987 | Roxby Downs | South Australia |
The Torres Strait, also known as Zenadh Kes, is a strait between Australia and the Melanesian island of New Guinea. It is 150 km (93 mi) wide at its narrowest extent. To the south is Cape York Peninsula, the northernmost extremity of the Australian mainland. To the north is the Western Province of Papua New Guinea. It is named after the Spanish navigator Luís Vaz de Torres, who sailed through the strait in 1606.
Cape York Peninsula is a peninsula located in Far North Queensland, Australia. It is the largest wilderness in northern Australia. The land is mostly flat and about half of the area is used for grazing cattle. The relatively undisturbed eucalyptus-wooded savannahs, tropical rainforests and other types of habitat are now recognised and preserved for their global environmental significance. Although much of the peninsula remains pristine, with a diverse repertoire of endemic flora and fauna, some of its wildlife may be threatened by industry and overgrazing as well as introduced species and weeds.
The Torres Strait Islands are an archipelago of at least 274 small islands in the Torres Strait, a waterway separating far northern continental Australia's Cape York Peninsula and the island of New Guinea. They span an area of 48,000 km2 (19,000 sq mi), but their total land area is 566 km2 (219 sq mi).
Torres Strait Islanders are the Indigenous Melanesian people of the Torres Strait Islands, which are part of the state of Queensland, Australia. Ethnically distinct from the Aboriginal peoples of the rest of Australia, they are often grouped with them as Indigenous Australians. Today, there are many more Torres Strait Islander people living in mainland Australia than on the Islands.
Boigu Island is the most northerly inhabited island of Queensland and of Australia. It is part of the Top Western group of the Torres Strait Islands, which lie in the Torres Strait separating Cape York Peninsula from the island of New Guinea. The mainland of Papua New Guinea is only 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) away from Boigu. Boigu has an area of 89.6 square kilometres (34.6 sq mi). Boigu Island is also the name of the town and locality on the island within the Torres Strait Island Region. Boigu is predominantly inhabited by indigenous Torres Strait Islanders. In the 2021 census, the population of the island was 199, of whom 189 people or 95% of the population identified as Indigenous Australians.
The Indigenous peoples of Oceania are Aboriginal Australians, Papuans, and Austronesians. These indigenous peoples have a historical continuity with pre-colonial societies that developed on their territories. With the notable exceptions of Australia, New Zealand, Hawaii, New Caledonia, Guam, and Northern Mariana Islands, indigenous peoples make up the majority of the populations of Oceania.
Aboriginal Australians are the various Indigenous peoples of the Australian mainland and many of its islands, excluding the ethnically distinct people of the Torres Strait Islands.
Far North Queensland (FNQ) is the northernmost part of the Australian state of Queensland. Its largest city is Cairns and it is dominated geographically by Cape York Peninsula, which stretches north to the Torres Strait, and west to the Gulf Country. The waters of Torres Strait include the only international border in the area contiguous with the Australian mainland, between Australia and Papua New Guinea.
The states and territories are the second level of government of Australia. The states are administrative divisions that are self-governing polities that are partly sovereign, having ceded some sovereign rights to the federal government. They have their own constitutions, legislatures, executive governments, judiciaries and law enforcement agencies that administer and deliver public policies and programs. Territories can be autonomous and administer local policies and programs much like the states in practice, but are still legally subordinate to the federal government.
Saibai Island, commonly called Saibai, is an island of the Torres Strait Islands archipelago, located in the Torres Strait of Queensland, Australia. The island is situated north of the Australian mainland and south of the island of New Guinea. The island is a locality within the Torres Strait Island Region local government area. The town of Saibai is located on the north-west coast of the island. According to the 2016 census, Saibai Island had a population of 465 people.
Doomadgee is a town and a locality in the Aboriginal Shire of Doomadgee, Queensland, Australia. It is a mostly Indigenous community, situated about 140 kilometres (87 mi) from the Northern Territory border, and 93 kilometres (58 mi) west of Burketown.
Talbot Islands are a group of Torres Strait Islands in Queensland, Australia. They lie between the Australian mainland and the island of New Guinea and a few kilometres west of Saibai Island, Torres Strait, only 4 km from the Papua New Guinea mainland at the mouth of the Mai Kussa River.
The first colonies of the British Empire on the continent of Australia were the penal colony of New South Wales, founded in 1788, and the Swan River Colony, founded in 1829. Over the next few decades, the colonies of New Zealand, Queensland, South Australia, Van Diemen's Land, and Victoria were created from New South Wales, as well as an aborted Colony of North Australia. On 1 January 1901, these colonies, excepting New Zealand, became states in the Commonwealth of Australia. Since federation, the internal borders have remained mostly stable, except for the creation of some territories with limited self-government: the Northern Territory from South Australia, to govern the vast, sparsely populated centre of the country; the split of the Northern Territory into Central Australia and North Australia, and then the quick merger of those back into the Northern Territory; and the Australian Capital Territory, a federal district ceded from New South Wales.
There are three languages spoken in the Torres Strait Islands: two indigenous languages and an English-based creole. The indigenous language spoken mainly in the western and central islands is Kalaw Lagaw Ya, belonging to the Pama–Nyungan languages of the Australian mainland. The other indigenous language spoken mainly in the eastern islands is Meriam Mir: a member of the Trans-Fly languages spoken on the nearby south coast of New Guinea and the only Papuan language spoken on Australian territory. Both languages are agglutinative; however Kalaw Lagaw Ya appears to be undergoing a transition into a declensional language while Meriam Mìr is more clearly agglutinative. Yumplatok, or Torres Strait Creole, the third language, is a non-typical Pacific English Creole and is the main language of communication on the islands.
The history of Indigenous Australians began at least 65,000 years ago when humans first populated the Australian continental landmasses. This article covers the history of Aboriginal Australian and Torres Strait Islander peoples, two broadly defined groups which each include other sub-groups defined by language and culture.
The Barcaldine Region is a local government area in Central West Queensland, Australia. Established in 2008, it was preceded by three previous local government areas which had existed for over a century.
The Torres Strait Regional Authority is an Australian Government body established in 1994 to administer the Torres Strait Islands. It consists of 20 elected representatives. The primary function of the authority is to strengthen the economic, social and cultural development of the peoples of the Torres Strait area.
Bramble Cay, also known as Maizab Kaur and Massaramcoer, is a small cay located at the northeastern edge of Australia and the Torres Strait Islands of Queensland and at the northern end of the Great Barrier Reef. Lying around 50 km (31 mi) north of Erub Island in the Gulf of Papua, it is the northernmost point of land of Australia and marks the end of the Great Barrier Reef.
Dauan Island is an island in the Torres Strait, Queensland, Australia; it is also known as Cornwallis Island. Dauan Island is also a town and locality in the Torres Strait Island Region, Queensland, Australia. In the 2021 census, the locality of Dauan Island had a population of 131 people.