History revision test 1 Flashcards
When did Australia’s first migrants arrive?
january 1788
Who was in command of the first fleet?
Governor Arthur Phillip
Where did the first fleet arrive initially?
Botany Bay
Where was the first European settlement?
On Port Jackson’s shore (Sydney Cove)
Why did the British settle in Australia?
The main reason for a British settlement in Australia was to provide a place of punishment where convicts could be sent.
Why did the British map Australia?
To make sure, parts of Australia didn’t become established settlements of other countries
The colonial government realised that it was important to fill in the gaps on the map as a first step to planning where new settlements could be established.
Settlements around the coastline would help Britain lay claim to the whole continent. Being at war with France gave an added pressure to British exploration.
First area explored by British
The area around Port Jackson was the first area to be explored and the Hawkesbury River and Coal River (later Newcastle) had also been explored in the early years of the settlement.
When was the charting of Australia’s coastline complete?
It was in 1803 (15 years after the arrival of the First Fleet) before the charting of the continent’s coastline was completed,
When was the mapping of Australia’s coastline published?
It was not until 1814 that these maps were formally published
List the difficulties the British faced in Australia
At first, convicts and marines struggled to survive.
The soil was poor, the climate was different to England and few of the convicts had proper farming experience.
Some settlers had success along the Nepean-Hawkesbury River at Windsor where the soil was better, but floods destroyed crops
What helped develop the wool and sheep industry?
The crossing of the Blue Mountains by Lawson, Wentworth and Blaxland in 1815 helped develop the wheat and sheep industry from the 1820s on.
How long have Aborigines inhabited Australia?
For over 50 000 years
Define terra nullius
Land belonging to no-one.
How was language, beliefs, practices and knowledge conveyed from generation to generation?
Through song, art, stories and dance.
Define dreaming
The stories and beliefs concerning the creation of the world
Estimated aboriginal population
300 000 to 700 000
Estimated language number pre colonisation
They were distributed across the continent in some 250 different language groups.
List the consequences of Aboriginal and European contact
Government policies aimed to isolate aboriginal communities
Disruption to life (socially & culturally)
Massacres
Loss of land (dispossession)
imported diseases (death)
Introduction of alcohol (no knowledge of it & had not built up social restraints to limit its effects)
widespread suffering and death
What did the Europeans believe the Aborigines would do if they took land?
For them it seemed that the Aboriginal Australians just moved over the land (nomadic lifestyle); and believed that if the Europeans took some land, the Aborigines could just as easily move somewhere else
Describe European Society
The Europeans believed that one could not distinguish between the practice of the Christian religion on one hand and their civilisation on the other.
They spoke of ‘Christianity’ and ‘civilisation’ as being one and the same thing.
They believed that their technological superiority in things like guns and ships, the knowledge of which had been built from many generations and many civilisations, made them superior.
They also had a different view of the land. The land was there for them to exploit and was something they could own; a piece of paper called a ‘title’ was proof of this ownership. They saw fences as a means to private ownership and if this did not exist, there was no private ownership.
Four major non-european groups that lived in Australia
These included: Afghans Chinese Japanese South Sea Islanders