Yumu

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The Yumu, also written Jumu, were an indigenous Australian people of the Northern Territory.

Northern Territory federal territory of Australia

The Northern Territory is an Australian territory in the central and central northern regions of Australia. It shares borders with Western Australia to the west, South Australia to the south, and Queensland to the east. To the north, the territory looks out to the Timor Sea, the Arafura Sea and the Gulf of Carpentaria, including Western New Guinea and other Indonesian islands. The NT covers 1,349,129 square kilometres (520,902 sq mi), making it the third-largest Australian federal division, and the 11th-largest country subdivision in the world. It is sparsely populated, with a population of only 246,700, making it the least-populous of Australia's eight states and major territories, with fewer than half as many people as Tasmania.

Contents

Language

The Yumu language was called Ŋatatara. This was often mistaken for their ethnonym, and transcribed Ngatatara leading to confusion between the Yumu and the Ngaatjatjarra of Western Australia. [1]

An ethnonym is a name applied to a given ethnic group. Ethnonyms can be divided into two categories: exonyms and autonyms, or endonyms.

The Ngaatjatjarra, otherwise spelt Ngadadjara, are an indigenous Australian people of Western Australia.

Country

According to Norman Tindale, the Yumu ranged over some 4,900 square miles (13,000 km2) of tribal land, in the Western MacDonnell Ranges, running east of Mount Russell to the vicinity of Mount Zeil. Their northern reaches were apparently just south of central Mount Wedge and Lake Bennett. He puts their southern limits around Mount Solitary and Mount Udor. They were also present at Haast Bluff (Ulambaura), which they called Paura, [1] Mount Liebig and Peculiar. [2]

MacDonnell Ranges the Northern Territory, Australia

The MacDonnell Ranges, a mountain range and an interim Australian bioregion, is located in the Northern Territory and has an area of 3,929,444 hectares. The range is a 644 km (400 mi) long series of mountains in central Australia, consisting of parallel ridges running to the east and west of Alice Springs. The mountain range contains many spectacular gaps and gorges as well as areas of Aboriginal significance.

Mount Zeil mountain in Australia

Mount Zeil is a mountain situated in the western MacDonnell Ranges in Australia's Northern Territory. It is the highest peak in the Northern Territory, and the highest peak on the Australian mainland west of the Great Dividing Range.

Haasts Bluff, Northern Territory town in the Northern Territory, Australia

Haasts Bluff, also known as Ikuntji, is an Indigenous Australian community in Central Australia, a region of the Northern Territory. The community is located in the MacDonnell Shire local government area, 227 kilometres (141 mi) west of Alice Springs. At the 2006 census, the community, including outstations, had a population of 207.

Social organization

The marriage rules of the Yumu were, as with the Ngalia, found to be identical to that of the Arrernte class system with the difference that prefixes were attached to the respective sexes, t(j)a- for males, and na- for females.

The Ngaliya (Ngalia) are an indigenous Australian people of the Northern Territory who speak a dialect of the Warlpiri language. They are not to be confused with the Ngalia of the Western Desert.

Men with skin nameOnly marry women namedSons will beDaughters will be
TjapaltjarriNakamarraTjungurrayiNungurrayi
TjapangatiNampitjinpaTjapanangkaNapanangka
TjakamarraNapaltjarriTjupurrulaNapurrula
TjampitjinpaNapangatiTjangalaNangala
TjapanangkaNapurrulaTjapangatiNapangati
TjungurrayiNangalaTjapaltjarriNapaltjarri
TjupurrulaNapanangkaTjakamarraNakamarra
TjangalaNungurrayiTjampitjinpaNampitjinpa [3]

Myths

According to Géza Róheim, like the Pintupi, the Yumu believed that menstruation was induced by a hirsute demon (mamu) called 'hair-big' (Inyutalu) is the cause of menstruation, which occurs when he penetrates the vagina, scratching it with his nails. [4] [lower-alpha 1]

Géza Róheim was a Hungarian psychoanalyst and anthropologist.

The Pintupi are an Australian Aboriginal group who are part of the Western Desert cultural group and whose homeland is in the area west of Lake MacDonald and Lake Mackay in Western Australia. These people moved into the Aboriginal communities of Papunya and Haasts Bluff in the west of the Northern Territory in the 1940s–1980s. The last Pintupi to leave their traditional lifestyle in the desert, in 1984, are a group known as the Pintupi Nine, also sometimes called the "lost tribe".

History of contact

According to Tindale, the majority of the Yumu people died as a consequence of an epidemic which swept their community between 1932 and 1940. A remnant of children were adopted into the Kukatja tribe thereafter. [2] Their land was then claimed by the Ngalia as being mara windjul(unpossessed country). [1] Both Margaret Heffernan and Sarah Holcombe, writing decades later, could find no evidence for their existence, [lower-alpha 2] while some early observers such as H. K. Fry considered them to be a branch of the Kukatja (Luritja). [3]

Henry Kenneth Fry was a physician and anthropologist, and Medical Officer for the City of Adelaide.

Alternative names

Notes

  1. Ted Strehlow had reservations about Róheim's reports, noting that he had never been inside the tribal territories and that his informants, knowing he was eager to obtain salacious details, supplied him liberally with anecdotes in order to barter with him. [5] On the other hand, John Morton has recently argued;'Róheim's interpretation of childhood sexuality (is) a constructive force in the perpetuation of culture as historically significant. Róheim, I want to say, can be said to have uncovered the basic Freudian form of the social contract in Central Australia, shedding particular light on the place of child development in it, and it is this which needs to be compared with the modern imposition of the social contract from a large-scale, centralized, 'civilizing' government at the present time.' [6]
  2. 'Heffernan found that the eastern neighbours of the Pintupi are the Mayutjarra (Kukatja) Like myself, Heffernan appears to have found no evidence of the 'Yumu', the name that Tindale gave to the peoples of Mount Liebig, Haasts Bluff and the Papunya region.' [7]
  3. The reason for the Kukatja term is that the Yumu say ŋada/ŋata instead of the expected (by outsiders) naŋata. [8]

Citations

  1. 1 2 3 Tindale 1974, p. 138.
  2. 1 2 Tindale 1974, p. 227.
  3. 1 2 Fry 1934, p. 472.
  4. Róheim 1933, pp. 233–234.
  5. Strehlow 1971, p. xlii.
  6. Morton 2013, p. 16.
  7. Holcombe 2016, p. 112.
  8. Tindale 1974, pp. 227–228.
  9. Tindale 1974, p. 228.

Sources

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