1816 Proclamation to Aborigines anagoria

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1816 Proclamation to Aborigines anagoria

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Summary

Governor Davey's [sic] Proclamation to the Aborigines, 1816 [sic].
The image depicts four scenes:

1. Peaceful intermingling of white settlers and Aborigines, all dressed in European clothing
2. An Aboriginal group shake hands with Governor Arthur watched on by peaceful white soldiers/settlers
3. An Aboriginal man spears a white settler, and is consequently hanged by the military under the watch of Governor Arthur
4. An white settler shoots an Aboriginal man and is consequently hanged by the military under the watch of Governor Arthur
Notes: Some decades after these panels (of unknown number and artist/s) were created, an original was located and mistakenly thought to have been produced during the time of Thomas Davey, Lieutenant Governor of Van Diemen's Land from 1813 to 1817. They were thus incorrectly labelled as "Governor Davey's Proclamation to the Aborigines" (and are still popularly known as such). In fact it depicts Lieutenant-Governor George Arthur's proclamation of c.1828-1830.

Originally conceived by Surveyor General George Frankland as a way of communicating the proclamation to Aborigines, his original drawing was reproduced onto boards and mounted on trees in remote areas of Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) where Aborigines would see them.
Deutsch: Gouverneur Daveys Proklamation an die Aborigines, 1816

date_range

Date

1830
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Source

American Museum of National History, New York
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain

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