
Please select a historical
period:
25
years ago / 50 years ago /
80 years ago / 125
years ago / 150 years
ago
250 years ago / 400
years ago / 700 years ago
/ 1,200 years ago
1,500 years ago / 2,000
years ago / 3,000 years ago
/ 4,000 years ago / 5,000
years ago / 10,000 years ago
For
many years the rugged Blue Mountains blocked western expansion
of the Sydney settlement. Discovery of a passage over the mountains
in 1813 opened the way for inland exploration. Settlements were
established in Hobart, Tasmania in 1803; on the Brisbane River,
Queensland in 1824; on the Swan River, Western Australia in 1829;
on Port Phillip Bay, Victoria in 1835; and on Gulf St Vincent,
South Australia in 1836. The capital cities of Australia's five
states have grown from those sites. The Aboriginals were pushed
off their land by violence, and their traditional culture only
survived in desert and jungle areas. In 1900, Queen Victoria proclaimed
Australia as an independent member of the British empire with
dominion status.
The shoot-out at the Glenrowan Inn has become part of Australian
19th century folklore. Living conditions were hard on the Australian
frontier, and there was little government control. On the night
of Sunday June 27, 1880 the gang of Ned Kelly, the notorious "bushranger"
or outlaw, was tracked to the small village of Glenrowan.
Early the next morning, police arrived. Kelly, looking for all
the world like a medieval knight, wore a heavy steel helmet that
enclosed his head, and body armour to protect himself from police
bullets. Eventually 50 police surrounded the hotel where the Kelly
Gang held out, but even though wounded, Kelly fought on. Then
two gang members were killed, and another wounded. The hotel was
set on fire and Kelly was finally captured after he was shot in
the legs. He was tried, found guilty and hung.
Today some see Kelly as a kind of Robin Hood, while others say
he was just a violent murderer and thief. Kelly himself said,
"If my lips teach the public that men are made mad by bad
treatment, and if the police are taught that they may exasperate
to madness men they persecute and ill treat, my life will not
be entirely thrown away."
Over time, the Maori people of New Zealand evolved a culture sustained
by agriculture and hunting. They had a complex social structure
of tribes, sub-tribes and clans, and a stratified society made
up of nobility, priestly and slave classes. Family relationships
and blood lines, whakapapa, was paramount as it delineated origins
and status.
Land was held communally, with each tribe and sub-tribe having
a marae (meeting place where the tribe's ancestral spirits resided)
and often living in a fortified village or pa. Intricate tattooing
was frequently sported, with men of noble rank being heavily tattooed
from face to feet (women wore only a facial tattoo on the chin).
Maori history was not recorded using the written word; instead,
it was kept in long, very specific and highly stylized songs and
chants. The Maori were a warlike people with frequent battles
between the various clans. The introduction of European firearms
made these wars more destructive, however.
The British military officers and civilian officials who arrived
after the treaty of Waitangi in 1840 were not treated with hostility
at first. But the large numbers of
European settlers that arrived, many displaced by the industrialization
of the British economy, caused tension. As well there was mutual
confusion about what was actually meant by the 1840 treaty. The
British viewed it as a Maori surrender, while the Maori saw it
as nothing more than an agreement of friendship between equals.
The demand for land by arriving settlers and the reluctance of
the Maori to sell sparked a series of skirmishes which escalated
into the Maori Wars (1860-1865). Pitted against superior numbers
and firepower, the Maori eventually succumbed, some holding out
to the last in their fortified villages. The defeat led to widespread
land confiscation by the British administration. The colony of
New Zealand gained dominion status a few years after Australia
in 1907.
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25
years ago / 50 years ago /
80 years ago / 125
years ago / 150 years
ago
250 years ago / 400
years ago / 700 years ago
/ 1,200 years ago
1,500 years ago / 2,000
years ago / 3,000 years ago
/ 4,000 years ago / 5,000
years ago / 10,000 years ago