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List of Australian Aboriginal mythological figures

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The Rainbow Snake is a common feature of the mythology and art of indigenous Australian cultures[1]

The following is a list of Australian Indigenous Australian deities and spirits.

New South Wales[edit]

  • Baiame (Baayami), creator spirit of some peoples of New South Wales, including the Gamilaraay and the Wiradjuri
  • Bahloo (Baaluu), Gamilaraay personification of the moon who keeps three pet snakes
  • Birrahgnooloo (Birrangulu), Gamilaraay fertility spirit who would send floods if properly asked to; one of Baiame's two wives
  • Daramulum (Dharramalan), sky hero and son of Baiame and Birrahngnooloo
  • Dirawong, Bundjalung creator being
  • Dulagal, (Yuin people) predatory child-eater with red eyes, no neck and a long forehead, and walking "from side to side"
  • Ganhanbili, second wife of Baiame
  • Gurangatch a rainbow serpent / human inhabitant of the Dreaming who in his battle with the quoll Mirragañ created the landscape
  • Mirragañ a quoll / human inhabitant the Dreaming who went to hunt the rainbow serpent / human inhabitant of the Dreaming Gurangatch
  • Mungoon-Gali giant goanna in Yuwaalaraay myth, married to Kubbitha or Kabbitha the black duck who created the Murrumbidgee River, rival to Ouyouboolooey the black snake who stole Mungoon-Gali's poison for the snakes.
  • Whowie six-legged seven meter long frog-headed goanna of the Murray River who menaced nearby tribes
  • Wurrunna, culture hero
  • Yhi (Yaraay/Yaay), Gamilaraay personification of the sun and creator spirit

Northern Territory[edit]

  • Adnoartina, the lizard guard of Uluru
  • Altjira, Arrernte sky god who created the earth
  • Ankotarinja, the first man of Arrernte mythology
  • Bamapana, Yolngu trickster spirit who creates discord
  • Banaitja, creator deity
  • Barnumbirr, Yolngu creator spirit
  • Barraiya, creator of the first vagina
  • Bluetongue Lizard, an elderly trickster
  • Bobbi-Bobbi, benevolent Binbinga snake deity
  • Djanggawul, three creator-siblings of northeast Arnhem Land mythology
  • Djunkgao, a group of sisters associated with floods and ocean currents
  • Eingana (Jawoyn people) rainbow snake whose body during the rainy season releases animals and plants that the community relies on for food
  • Galeru, rainbow snake in Arnhem Land mythology who swallowed the Djanggawul
  • Garkain the Recluse, predatory being whose victim's souls are forced to forever wander the vast jungles of their final resting place
  • Inapertwa in Arrernte mythology, simple ancestral beings formed into all plants, birds, animals and later humans
  • Ipilja-ipilja 100ft gecko of Anindilyakwa myth. Adorned with hairs and whiskers. Spews swamp water to make the clouds of the sky, thunder is ipilja-ipilja's roaring. Ipilja-ipilja's home is a swamp filled with deadly waters. Similar to legends of maratji by Tiwi and Iwaidja people.
  • Julunggul, Yolngu rainbow snake goddess associated with initiation, fertility, rebirth and water
  • Karora, creator god
  • Kunapipi, a mother goddess and the patron deity of many heroes
  • Malingee, malignant nocturnal spirit
  • Mamaragan, lightning deity
  • Mangar-kunjer-kunja, Arrernte lizard deity who created humans
  • Manuriki, god of beauty
  • Minka Bird bird that foretells death among the Ngarindjeri of Murray River
  • Maratji in Tiwi and Iwaidja myth. Lizards guard waterholes, cause floods and thunderstorms when intruded upon. Similar to Ipilja-ipilja.
  • Mimi, fairy-like beings of Arnhem Land
  • Minawara and Multultu, legendary ancestors of the Nambutji
  • Mokoi, an evil spirit in Yolngu stories who kidnapped and ate children
  • Namarrkon (also known as Namarrgon[2]), Lightning man, makes lightning appear and creates roars of thunder in storms
  • Ngintaka, Pitjantjatjara creator being
  • Nogomain, a god who gives spirit children to mortal parents
  • Onur, Karraur lunar deity
  • Papinijuwari, a type of one-eyed giant which feeds on the bodies of the dead and the blood of the sick
  • Tjilpa-men, significant mythic figures Aranda, Anmatyerre, Kaytetye, Ngalia, Ilpara and Kukatja stories. Tjilpa is the Arrernte word for quoll.
  • Tjinimin, the ancestor of the Australian people. He is associated with the bat and with Kunmanggur the rainbow serpent - per the Murinbata
  • Ulanji, snake ancestor of the Binbinga
  • Wala, solar goddess
  • Wawalag, Yolngu sisters who were swallowed by a serpent, only to be regurgitated
  • Wollunqua, snake deity associated with rain and fertility
  • Wuluwaid, rain god of Arnhem Land
  • Wuriupranili, a solar goddess whose torch is the sun
  • Wurugag and Waramurungundi, first man and woman of Kunwinjku legend
  • Yawkyawk, Aboriginal (Kunwinjku) shape-shifting mermaids who live in waterholes, freshwater springs, and rock pools, cause the weather and are related by blood or through marriage (or depending on the tradition, both) to the rainbow serpent Ngalyod.
  • Yee-Na-Pah, an Arrernte thorny devil spirit girl who marries and echidna spirit man.
  • Yurlungur, Yolngu snake deity who swallowed and regurgitated the Wawalag sisters; associated with initiation and rebirth

Queensland[edit]

South Australia[edit]

Tasmania[edit]

Victoria[edit]

  • Baiame, southeast Australian creational ancestral hero
  • Balayang, bat deity and brother of Bunjil
  • Binbeal, Kulin rainbow deity and son of Bunjil
  • Bunjil, Kulin creator deity and ancestral being, represented as an eagle
  • Bunyip, mythical creature said to lurk in swamps, billabongs, creeks, riverbeds, and waterholes
  • Daramulum, southeast Australian deity and son of Baiame
  • Gnowee, solar goddess who searches daily for her lost son; her torch is the sun
  • Karatgurk, seven sisters who represent the Pleiades star cluster
  • Kondole, man who became the first whale
  • Lo-an-tuka, wife of Loo-errn
  • Loo-errn, spirit ancestor and guardian of the Brataualung people
  • Nargun, fierce half-human, half-stone creature of Gunai legend
  • Thinan-malkia, evil spirit who captures victims with nets that entangle their feet
  • Tiddalik, frog of southeast Australian legend who drank all the water in the land, and had to be made to laugh to regurgitate it
  • Waang, Kulin trickster, culture hero and ancestral being, represented as a crow
  • Wambeen, evil lightning-hurling figure who targets travellers

Western Australia[edit]

  • Bagadjimbiri, a pair of Karadjeri creator-spirits
  • Dilga, Karadjeri goddess of fertility and growth, and mother of the Bagadjimbiri
  • Julana, lecherous Jumu spirit who surprises women by burrowing beneath the sand, leaping out, and raping them
  • Kidili, Mandjindja moon deity who was castrated for attempting to rape the first women, who in turn became the Pleiades
  • Kurdaitcha (or kurdaitcha man) is a ritual "executioner" in Australian Indigenous Australian culture (specifically the term comes from the Arrernte people).[3]
  • Ngariman, Karadjeri quoll-man who killed the Bagadjimbiri and was drowned in revenge
  • Njirana, Jumu deity and father of Julana
  • Ungud, snake deity associated with rainbows and the fertility and erections of the tribe's shamans
  • Wagyl, Noongar snakelike creator being
  • Wati-kutjara, a pair of western Australian lizard-men
  • Wirnpa a rainmaking snake who created the land around Percival Lakes during the Dreaming
  • Wondjina, Mowanjum cloud or rain spirits

Pan-continental[edit]


Unknown[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Noonuccal, Oodgeroo; Noonuccal, Kabul Oodgeroo (September 1988), "The Rainbow Serpent", Meanjin, 47 (3): 373–377, ISSN 0025-6293
  2. ^ Grant Mills (14 November 2012). "Kakadu Dreaming". The Adelaide Review. Opinion Media. Retrieved 20 October 2018.
  3. ^ Kurdaitcha
  4. ^ Oodgeroo Noonuccal; Kabul Oodgeroo Noonuccal, 1953-; Haywood, Eric Shane; Narkaling Inc (2001), The rainbow serpent, Narkaling Inc, retrieved 12 May 2013{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)

References[edit]