- Program 2011
- Medieval Village
- Performance Program
- The Shed
- Farmers Market
- Napoleonic
- Jousting
- Workshops
- Musical Program
- Blacksmithing
- Art Exhibitions
- Woodchop Competition
- Photography Prize
- Skating
- Belly Dance
- Historical Program
- Special Events
- Welcome to Country
- Vociferous
- Knight Riders
- Steam Punk
- Steam
- Fantasy
- Satellite Events
- Machines
- Circus
- Film
- Program Schedule 2011
- Program 2010
- Program Schedule 2010
Welcome to Country
Lithgow has an indigenous history that goes back over 40,000 years.
As has been the case with many indigenous nations, European colonization meant a massive loss of local knowledge of nature, language & culture, and the Wiradjuri Nation, the predominant indigenous culture of the Lithgow Region, has not been immune.
The Mingaan Aboriginal Corporation, was formed in 2008 and is dedicated to promoting, protecting & preserving the local Wiradjuri culture.
Of the traditional ceremonies still being conducted in the Region, the Smoking ceremony & the Welcome to Country ceremony are probably the most important.
The Welcome to Country ceremony will be conducted by Sharon Riley & Flo Grant, with Ralf Naiden and Di McNabe performing a traditional Wiradjuri Dance ceremony.
Location: Just inside the Main Gate
Time: 10am Sat

photo by Glenda Phipps
About the Wiradjuri Nation & a Brief History
The Wiradjuri Nation is one of the largest Aboriginal nations in Australia.
It extends from the east, near present day Lithgow, to the west near Hay, north to Nyngan and south to Albury.
The Wiradjuri name means people of the three rivers, the rivers being the Macquarie, the Lachlan & the Murrumbidgee.
Pre European settlement, the Wiradjuri people were a hunter-gatherer society, made up of small clans or family groups whose movements followed seasonal food gathering and ritual patterns.
The Wiradjuri diet included yabbies and fish such as Murray cod from the rivers. In dry seasons, they ate kangaroos, emus and food gathered from the land, including fruit, nuts, yam daisies, wattle seeds, and orchid tubers. Some Wiradjuri tribes also travelled into Alpine areas in the summer to feast on Bogong moths.
The Wiradjuri were known for their handsome possum-skin cloaks stitched together from several possum furs.
Governor Macquarie was presented with one of these cloaks by a Wiradjuri man when he visited Bathurst in 1815.
Although the Wiradjuri people were initially friendly toward the first Europeans to come into their lands, they did not passively accept the theft & destruction of their sacred sites & habitats.
Windradyne, a young local warrior lead a guerrilla campaign of resistance in what became known as the Bathurst Wars (click here for more information).
Today, major Wiradjuri populations can be found in the New South Wales towns of Condobolin, Peak Hill, Narrandera and Griffith and throughout larger regional areas such as Bathurst, Dubbo, Orange, Lithgow, down to Wagga Wagga in the south.
Sites of interest for the Wiradjuri Nation
Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiradjuri
Wiradjuri Condobolin Corporation:
http://www.wiradjuricondocorp.com/
Wiradjuri News
Wiradjuri Native Land Claim: Molong
(Click here for biased & skewed ABC news story)
How iron is effecting the Yindjibarndi indigenous community:
Interesting Indigenous News

click here to read BBC coverage of this event.
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