Ngiyampaa


The Ngiyampaa also known as the Ngemba, are an indigenous Australian people of the state of New South Wales. The generic name refers to an aggregation of three groups, the Ngiyampaa, the Ngiyampaa Wangaaypuwan, and the Ngiyampaa Weilwan, respectively clans of a larger Ngiyampaa nation.

Language

Their language consisted of varieties of Ngiyampaa, which was composed of two dialects, Ngiyambaa Wangaaybuwan and Wayilwan Ngiyambaa. The Wangaaypuwan people are so called because they use wangaay to say 'no', as opposed to the Ngiyampaa in the Macquarie Marshes and towards Walgett, who were historically defined separately by colonial ethnographers as Weilwan, so-called because their word for 'no' was wayil. The distinction between Ngiyampaa, Wangaaypuwan/Wangaibon and Weilwan traditionally drawn, and sanctioned by the classification of Norman Tindale, may rest upon a flawed assumption of marked 'tribal' differences based on Ngiyampaa linguistic discriminations between internal groups or clans whose word for 'no' varied.

Country

According to Tindale's estimation, Ngiyampaa tribal lands extended over some in the territory, much of it peneplain, lying south of the south bank of the Barwon and Darling rivers, from Brewarrina to Dunlop. Their area included Yanda Creek down to the source of Mulga Creek, and took in the Bogan River. The Weilwan clan were on their southeastern flank, the Wangaaypuwan clan southwest while the Gamilaraay were to the northeast and the Paakantyi to their west and northwest.
Mount Grenfell, some 50 miles northwest of Cobar is an important site for the Ngiyampaa, who were barred from accessing it until the 1970s.

Group classifications

A geographical distinction regarding the homeland camping world is attested between three groups, all inhabiting areas devoid of permanent watercourses.
These two groups are collectively referred to as drylanders.
A further distinction was drawn between the above three groups and two groups of river people whose descendants now dwell to the east and west of the ngurrampaa. These are the
In 1914 a regional newspaper stated that there had been a massacre in 1859 of around 300 Ngiyampaa at Hospital Creek, close to Brewarrina.

Some words