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The Cruise of HMS Bacchante 1879-1882: Ngarrindjeri People, Wurley, South Australia 1881

Albumen print | 16.7 x 21.3 cm (image) | RCIN 2580772

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  • Photograph of group of Ngarrindjeri (Narrinyeri) peoples outside two wood and straw huts. Immediately outside of the huts stand men and on the front row are seated elder men and women, one of whom holds a baby.

    The Ngarrindjeri are indigenous to South Australia and have their own language. The term Ngarrindjeri, roughly translated, means 'belonging to men.' 

    This is a photograph from one of the nine albums compiled following Prince Albert Victor (1864-92) and Prince George of Wales' (1865-1936) world tour aboard HMS Bacchante from 1879 to 1882. The photographs were collected by their chaperon and tutor, John Neale Dalton.

    The majority of the images in these albums are topographical views and architectural studies, loosely arranged according to the group’s itinerary. They include photographs of artefacts, local people and public figures, as well as portraits of the princes taken during the tour. The attempt to recreate the experience of a journey through such an assortment of images is common to many amateur travelling albums of this period. In 1886, some of the photographs in the albums were reproduced as engravings in the published accounts of the voyage, The Cruise of Her Majesty's Ship Bacchante, 1879-1882.

    Provenance

    Album compiled by the Reverend J N Dalton (1839-1931) and presented to King George V

  • Medium and techniques

    Albumen print

    Measurements

    16.7 x 21.3 cm (image)

  • Alternative title(s)

    [Historic Title] Narringeri, Wurley. [The Cruise of H.M.S. Bacchante 1879-1882. Volume IV, Australia, Fiji].