The Unjadi (Unyadi) were an indigenous Australian people of the Cape York Peninsula of northern Queensland.

Language

According to Lauriston Sharp, the Unjadi language differed only marginally from that spoken by the neighbouring Okara.[1]

Country

The Unjadi's traditional lands, embracing some 500 square miles (1,300 km2) of territory, lay around the upper Dulhunty tributary of the Ducie river as far north as the headwaters of the Jardine River.[2]

Social organization

The American anthropologist R. Lauriston Sharp described the Unjadi as belonging to what he called the Jathaikana type with regard to their totemic organization.[3] By this he meant that the Unjadi lacked a moiety and section division. Their totemic clans were patrilineal whose totems were not normally tabu, tabus being applied rigorously only to personal totems from the mother's clan, which were assigned to male and female individuals with the onset of puberty.[4]

Alternative names

Notes

    Citations

    1. Sharp 1939, p. 259, n.6.
    2. 1 2 Tindale 1974, p. 186.
    3. Sharp 1939, p. 258.
    4. Sharp 1939, p. 259.
    5. Thomson 1934, p. 219.

    Sources

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