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What was Bennelong's last name?

Bennelong's full name was Woollarawarre Bennelong.


Who was the Aboriginal man taken to England by Captain Arthur Phillip?

Captain Arthur Phillip took the Aborigine Bennelong to England. Bennelong was a senior man of the Eora, a Koori, people of the Port Jackson area, when the First Fleet arrived in Australia, in 1788. He was captured on 25 November 1789, for the purpose of being used as a mediary between the white and Aboriginal cultures. Captain Arthur Phillip, wanted to learn about the language and customs of the indigenous people. Bennelong willingly liaised between the cultures, and adopted European dress and other ways. Bennelong travelled with Phillip to England in 1792, and returned to Australia in 1795. However, he was ostracised from his own people, the Aborigines, when he found it too difficult to integrate into the European culture, and tried to return to his own people. He died on 3 January 1813.


What tribe was Bennelong in?

Bennelong was a senior tribesman of the Koori people in the Eora tribe.


How did Bennelong die?

Bennelong, an Aboriginal leader of the Wangal clan in Australia, died on January 3, 1813. After years of fluctuating health, he succumbed to illness, which was exacerbated by his exposure to European settlers and their lifestyle. His death marked the end of a significant chapter in the interaction between Indigenous Australians and European colonizers. Bennelong was buried at the site of the first government house in Sydney, a place of historical significance.


What Englishman discovered Australia and befriended Bennelong?

The question as it stands cannot be answered. No Englishman discovered Australia and befriended Bennelong, an Aboriginal man of the Eora tribe. Australia was discovered by the Dutch, around 80 years before the first Englishman set foot on the continent. This first Emglishman was William Dampier, who landed in Austalia's northwest in 1688, long after the first recorded Dutch landing in 1606. Dampier was not even remotely interested in communicating with the aboriginal people. Almost a century later, in 1770, James Cook became the first Englishman to sight the eastern coast of Australia, but he did not befriend any Aborigines either. It has Captain Arthur Philip, who led the First Fleet to Australia in 1788, who befriended Bennelong.