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AUSTRALIAN ABORIGINAL ARTIFACTS:
OCTOBER TREASURE OF THE MONTH
In 1922, Galvestonian Charles Everett donated to the Rosenberg Library a collection of
artifacts made and used by the aboriginal tribes of Australia.
Aborigines, or
indigenous peoples, have inhabited the continent of
Australia
for thousands of years.
Archaeological
evidence suggests that the Aborigines migrated to
Australia
via Southeast Asia between
40,000 and 50,000 years ago. Prior to British colonization, it
is estimated that there were approximately 500,000 Aborigines
living in Australia.
Aboriginal communities within Australia
were quite diverse.
Some aboriginal groups practiced an
agrarian form of subsistence, while others hunted and gathered
their food.
Diet staples included kangaroos,
emus, turtles, fruits, and native plants.
Coastal tribes relied on fishing
and shellfish collecting.
Clothing, tools, weapons, and
baskets were all manufactured using the available plant and
animal materials.
The Aborigines
maintained traditional customs and lifeways.
Aboriginal tribes followed a
complex system of kinship by which tribes were divided into
several classes, or sections.
Strict rules for marriage,
residence, and descent dictate how these sections interacted
with one another.
Spirituality also played an
important role in Aboriginal culture.
Aborigines practiced totemism, a
belief system in which humans are thought to share a mystical
relationship with nature.
“The Dreamtime” is the aboriginal
story of creation which describes the ancient ancestors rising
from below the earth to form the sky, bodies of water,
geological formations, animals, and plants.
When a human dies, it is thought
that the spirit of the deceased metamorphoses into a different
form—such as a river or a rock—but continues to remain a part of
the natural world.
The British colonization of Australia, which
began in 1788, had a lethal impact on the Aborigines.
Along with the European colonists
came diseases foreign to the native peoples.
Epidemics of smallpox, chickenpox,
influenza, and measles led to a significant decline in the
aboriginal population.
This, in
addition to economic marginalization and loss of political
sovereignty, was devastating to Australia’s
indigenous tribes.
Eventually, most Aborigines were
assimilated into Australian society as low-paid laborers who
were, for the most part, alienated from the political and
economic mainstream.
Between the 1970s and 1990s,
several landmark legislative measures were enacted to renew and
protect the rights of indigenous Australians.
Today, about
410,000 Aborigines live in
Australia, making up 2% of the
continent’s total population.
Photo Caption:
An assortment of
artifacts made by the Australian Aborigines, including bracelets
made of wild boar tusk, a guana lizard tooth necklace, and a
fishing hook fashioned from an animal claw.
Donated to the Rosenberg Library by Mr. Charles Everett in
1922.
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