Madngela

Madngela

The Madngella, otherwise known as the Matngala[1] or Hermit Hill tribe,[2][3] are an indigenous Australian people of the Northern Territory, Australia.

Language

The Madngella spoke Matngele, one of the Eastern Daly languages,[4] now extinct.

Country

The Madngella lived traditionally in the middle and lower reaches of the Daly River nearby to the Mulluk-Mulluk people.[5] Norman Tindale assigned to them some 100 square miles (260 km2) of tribal land around Hermit Hill, and the area west of the Daly River, placing them to the southeast of the Yunggor people.[6] The Pongaponga lay to their north.[2]

Social system

In the merbok system of ceremonial exchange, the Madngella used the words in a way that indicated the coastal provenance of the articles (ninymer) exchanged, north-easterly and south-westerly. Medrdokfrom the former direction was calledpork[lower-alpha 1] padaka, as opposed to the south-westerly merbok, called nim berinken, where berinken is a generic term used of tribes living south-west of the Madngella.[7]

Circumcision

A technique used in native medicine by the Madngella to heal infections to the penis after ritual circumcision had been performed was described by the Norwegian ethnographer Knut Dahl.[8]

History

The Madngella tribe had experienced intense culture shock in the wake of white settlement, whose effects over 50 years, according to who studied them in the early 1930s, had been to disintegrate many of their attachments to the traditional way of life.[5]

Jesuit missionaries, after several endeavours to set up a station in the general area of the Daly River, eventually managed to establish a viable community at Hermit Hill.[9]

Alternative names

  • Madngella.
  • Muttangulla.
  • Matngelli.
  • Hermit Hill tribe.[6]

Notes

  1. porkwas a variety of hooked spear which the Madngella obtained by cultural diffusion from the north-east

Citations

  1. Green 1989, p. xiv, map.
  2. Dahl 1926, p. 15.
  3. Dixon 2002, p. xli.
  4. Stanner 1933, p. 156.
  5. Tindale 1974, p. 230.
  6. Stanner 1933, p. 158.
  7. Dahl 1895, pp. 122–123.
  8. Dahl 1926, pp. 33–38.

Sources


Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Madngela, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.