Wodiwodi

The Wodiwodi also pronounced Whardi Whardi (according to an interview with Joan Mc Grady- early 1990s) peoples are the Indigenous Australian people on the eastern coast of the continent; they are a sub-group of the Dharawal nation.[1]

Language

The Wodiwodi language, considered a dialect of Dharawal was briefly described by William Ridley in 1875,[2] who obtained this information, via her husband, from the wife of John Malone, Lizzie Malone, whose mother was a Shoalhaven Indigenous person.[3]

Country

The Wodiwodi are estimated by Norman Tindale to have had some 2600 square kilometres (1000 square miles) of country in the area north of the Shoalhaven River and reaching to Wollongong; their territory takes in the Illawarra district,[4] including Lake Illawarra, Berkeley and Hooka Creek. Their descendants are considered one of the custodians of the land in this area.[5]

Mythology

The Wodiwodi word for the creator figure called Baiame by contiguous tribes, was Mirrirul, from the word mirīr, meaning "sky."[6][7]

Alternative spellings and names

  • Woddi Woddi

Whardi Whardi

  • Illawarra (a regional name)[4]

Some words

  • būnbāri (boy)
  • būrrū (kangaroo)
  • jiruŋgaluŋ (white man)[3][8]
  • kudjaguz (child)
  • mirriguŋ (dog)

Landscape features

The Wodi Wodi Walking Track, Stanwell Park, New South Wales is named after the Wodiwodi people.[9]

Notes

    Citations

    1. "Kiama Library".
    2. Ridley 1875, pp. 111–114.
    3. Malone 1878, pp. 264–265.
    4. Tindale 1974, p. 201.
    5. Wollongong City Council.
    6. Malone 1878, p. 263.
    7. Ridley 1875, p. 111.
    8. Ridley 1875, pp. 111–112.
    9. VisitNSW.com.

    Sources

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