-
Catherine Eliza Somerville Stow (1 May 1856 – 27
March 1940), who
wrote as K.
Langloh Parker, was a
South Australian born
writer who
lived in
northern New South...
-
suggested that
Baiame was a
construct of
early Christian missionaries, but K
Langloh Parker dated belief in
Baiame to (at latest) 1830,
prior to missionary...
-
Australian Legendary Tales is a
translated collection of
stories told to K.
Langloh Parker by
Australian Aboriginal people. The book was
immediately po****r...
- Air
Commodore Peter Langloh Donkin, CBE, DSO (19 June 1913 – 12 July 2000) was a New
Zealand reconnaissance pilot with the
Royal Air
Force (RAF). He is...
- more
information on the
Euahlayi dialect and tribe, see Parker, K.
Langloh (Katie
Langloh); Lang, Andrew, 1844–1912 (1905), The
Euahlayi tribe : a
study of...
- The
Yuwaalaraay distinguished various kinds of Gamilaraay,
telling K.
Langloh Parker: With us,
Byamee the name is not
derived from the verb to make-which...
- "A
native carrying a
message stick"
image from The
Euahlayi Tribe by K.
Langloh Parker (1905)...
- to be the
blood of the
attacked brothers,
which sta****
there forever.
Langloh-Parker, K. (1918). The
Walkabouts Of Wur-Run-Nah. Adelaide: G. H****ell...
- Birrangula, is a name of the Creator. Ash,
Giacon &
Lissarrague 2003, p. 41.
Langloh-Parker, K. (1905). The
Euahlayi Tribe: A
Study of
Aboriginal Life in Australia...
-
Australian Aboriginal mythology resembling a
giant six-legged
goanna Parker, K.
Langloh (1898). More
Australian Legendary Tales. London:
David Nutt. pp. 61–7....