Moluccan Fighting Craft on Australian Shores: Contact Rock Art from Awunbarna, Arnhem Land

Author:

de Ruyter MickORCID,Wesley Daryl,van Duivenvoorde Wendy,Lewis Darrell,Johnston Iain

Abstract

AbstractTwo similar watercraft depicted in rock art at Awunbarna, Arnhem Land, Australia, are unlike the Macassanprahusand Western craft shown at other contact sites in northern Australia, but are sufficiently detailed to offer evidence for identification. Both craft appear to display triangular flags, pennants, and prow adornments indicating martial status. By comparing these two depictions with historically recorded watercraft from Island Southeast Asia, their probable origin is shown to have been eastern Maluku Tenggara in Indonesia. These motifs provide the first known direct archaeological evidence for ethnic diversity for the origins of mariners from Island Southeast Asia other than Makassar, Sulawesi. The rock-art depictions are representative of ceremonially decorated fighting craft used to lead trading voyages and raids, and may be linked to trade, fishing, resource exploitation, or slavery. This potentially unique identification of Moluccan watercraft in Arnhem Land rock art offers evidence of the elusive encounters between the Indigenous people of northern Australia and people from the archipelagos to the north, evidence with which to expand both the nature and context of Australia’s contact narrative.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Flinders University

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Archeology,History,Archeology

Reference80 articles.

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4. Bigourdan, Nicolas 2016 Aboriginal Watercraft Depictions in Western Australia. Report, Department of Maritime Archaeology, Western Australian Museum, No. 206. Fremantle, Australia.

5. Bigourdan, Nicolas, and Michael McCarthy 2007 Aboriginal Watercraft Depictions in Western Australia: On Land, and Underwater? Bulletin of the Australasian Institute for Maritime Archaeology 31:1–10.

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