Badimaya

The Badimaya people (also written Badimia) are an Aboriginal Australian people from the Mid west region of Western Australia.

Alternative names and spellings

Names according to Norman Tindale:[1]

  • Badimala
  • Badimara
  • Barimaia, Bardimaia, Badimaia
  • Bidungu (Watjarri exonym, meaning "rockhole water drinkers," implying shiftlessness)
  • Padimaia
  • Parimaia
  • Patimara
  • Waadal
  • Wardal

Country

Traditional Badimaya country was calculated by Tindale to encompass approximately 11,300 square miles (29,000 km2), and is bordered by the Western Desert language groups of the Tjuparn and the Wanmala to the east, the Noongar to the south-west and Watjarri to the north-west.[2][3]

This country covers Cue, Nannine and Mount Magnet to the north, Paynes Find to the south, Yalgoo to the southwest, and the northwest lay along the Sandford River.[1]

Language

Badimaya has been classified as one of the Kartu languages of the Pama–Nyungan family.[4] It is critically endangered, but language revival efforts are continuing as of 2020.[5]

Social organisation and customs

The Badimaya were reported to practise both circumcision and subincision.[1]

Notes

    Citations

    1. Tindale 1974, p. 240.
    2. Wagner & George 2013.
    3. George & Edney 2017.
    4. Blevins 2001, p. 78.
    5. "Irra Wangga Language Centre: Mid West languages: Badimaya". Bindiyarra Aboriginal Community Aboriginal Corporation. Retrieved 14 January 2020.

    Sources

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