The Wayilwan (also rendered Weilwan or Wailwan; also known as Ngiyampaa Wayilwan and Ngemba Wayilwan) are an Aboriginal Australian people of the state of New South Wales. They are a clan of the Ngiyampaa (nee-yam-par) nation.
Name
The Wayilwan ethnonym is derived from their word for "no" in the Ngiyambaa language, (wayil/weil/wail).[1]
Like other Ngiyampaa people such as the Wangaaypuwan, they also referred to themselves according to their home country.[2][3]
Language
The Wayilwan spoke the dialect of Ngiyambaa called "Ngiyampaa Wayilwan" and as such also called themselves "those who speak Ngiyampaa the Wayilwan way".
Country
Weilwan country covered 5,000 square miles (13,000 km2), running along the southern bank of the Barwon River from Brewarrina to Walgett, and along Marra Creek and the Castlereagh, Marthaguy, and Macquarie rivers. Their southern frontier was at Quambone and in the vicinity of Coonamble.[1]
Social organisation
The Wayilwan were divided into kin groups, one of which is known: the Waiabara.
Alternative names
- Ngemba (name of their language)
- Ngemba (name of their language)
- Ngiumba (name of their language)
- Ngiyampaa (name of their language)
- Ngiyampaa Wayilwan (those who speak Ngiyampaa the Wayilwan way)
- Waal-won
- Wahoon (misprint) )[1]
- Wailwan
- Wailwun
- Wali
- Waljwan
- Wallwan
- Weilwan
- Weilwun
- Wilawun
- Wile Wan
- Wilwan
Notes
Citations
Sources
- Honery, Thomas (1878). "Wailwun Language and Traditions". Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 7: 245–254. JSTOR 2841001.
- Tindale, Norman Barnett (1974). "Koamu (QLD)". Aboriginal Tribes of Australia: Their Terrain, Environmental Controls, Distribution, Limits, and Proper Names. Australian National University. ISBN 978-0-708-10741-6.