Ngajanji/Ngadyan was according to Robert M. W. Dixon, the name for the language spoken by a people whose proper tribal name was Ngadyandyi.
Language
The Ngajanji spoke Ngadyan, a dialect of Dyirbal, and one showing the greatest differences with the others, particularly in phonology, where it displays vowel lengthening. A vowel followed by l, r or y and a successive consonant would result in the lengthening of the vowel in question: thus gibar in the other dialects became gibaa, and jalgur became jaaguu. It also had a mother-in-law language in which, when one's mother-in-law or her kin were around, one substituted standard words with a special lexicon. Thus guda would be replaced by nyimbaa, having the same meaning. By the time Robert Dixon started studying the language in the mid 1960s, the number of speakers was down to 6. The last informants concerning Ngajan lived in Malanda.
The origin of the 3 volcanic lakes in the area, Yidyam, Barany and Ngimun is related in Ngajanji myth as the result of the infraction of a taboo by 2 men who had just being initiated into the tribe. At the time of the event, the terrain of the Ngajanji was open scrubland. Their transgression roused the ire of the Rainbow serpent, who set the land under their camping site trembling, as cyclonic winds also blew in, and a strange red hue coloured the sky. As a result of the fissures in the earth, the panicking people were swallowed up and disappeared into the bowels of the earth. Dixon considers this legend, which he recorded in 1964, to accurately reflect the historic formation of the volcanic lakes some 10,000 years ago, an event retained by virtue of the tenacious transmission of memories of the eruption among this people and another Dyirbal tribe, the Mamu.
History
The Ngajanji around Yungaburra and Lake Eacham were affected by the rush of settlement that followed John Atherton's discovery of tin in 1878 at Tinaroo, and development of Robson's track linking the district to the coast.
Descendants
A Russian adventurer Leandro Ilin settled in the area in 1910, together with several other Russian émigrés, to establish a settlement they called 'Little Siberia'. A widowed Ngajanji woman, Kittie Clarke, was befrfiended by him, and after she fell pregnant with his child, he proposed marriage. He failed to obtain permission from the soi-disantProtector of Aborigines at Atherton, and had to struggle to legalize their relationship. They had five children. A documentary film of the story was produced in 2005 by Julie Nimmo.
Last speakers
The last speakers of the dialect were Tommy Land, Jimmy Brown, Mollie Raymond and Ginnie Daniels.
Alternative names
Eacham
Eashim
Eaton
Hucheon
Jitjam.
Narcha
Natchin
Nga:tja.
Ngachanji
Ngadjen
Ngadyan
Ngadyan
Ngadyandyi
Ngaitjandji
Ngatjai
Source:
Some words
yibi. In Dyirbal this was jugumbil,and gumbul in Girramay.