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Topic: Australian frontier wars

Australian frontier wars

Years: 1788 - 1834

The Australian frontier wars are a series of conflicts that are fought between Indigenous Australians and European settlers that span a total of one hundred and forty-six years.

The first fighting takes place several months after the landing of the First Fleet in January 1788 and the last clashes occur as late as 1934.

The most common estimates of fatalities in the fighting are at least twenty thousand Indigenous Australians and between two thousand and twenty-five hundred Europeans.

However, recent scholarship on the frontier wars in what is now the state of Queensland indicates that Indigenous fatalities may have been significantly higher.

Indeed, while battles and massacres occur in a number of locations across Australia, they are particularly bloody in Queensland, owing to its comparatively larger pre-contact Indigenous population.Far more devastating in their impact on the Aboriginal population, however, are the effects of disease, infertility, loss of hunting grounds, starvation, and general despair, loss of pride, and the alcoholic 'remedy' for this devastation.

There are indications that smallpox epidemics may have impacted heavily on some Aboriginal tribes, with depopulation in large sections of what is now Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland up to 50% or more, even before the move inland from Sydney of squatters and their livestock.

Other diseases hitherto unknown in the indigenous population—such as the common cold, flu, measles, venereal diseases and tuberculosis—also have an impact, significantly reducing their numbers and tribal cohesion, so limiting their ability to adapt and resist invasion and dispossession.

“History is a vast early warning system.”

― Norman Cousins, Saturday Review, April 15, 1978