Woureddy (c.1790 – 7 July 1842), also known as Wurati, Woorady and Mutteelee, was a leading warrior and cleverman from the Nuenonne clan of Aboriginal Tasmanians in Australia.
He acted as a guide for George Augustus Robinson in his expeditions to round up the remaining Indigenous people of Tasmania during the early 1830s.
Woureddy was a highly significant figure in communicating Indigenous culture to Robinson and his disclosures remain a prime source of information about pre-colonial Aboriginal Tasmanian customs. He was also the husband of Truganini for period of around ten years.[1]
His image, and the busts of him and Truganini have over time been utilised and incorporated in conversations about the past in Tasmania.[2][3][4][5] The image by Thomas Bock is utilised in Cassandra Pybus's biography of Truganini.[6]
^Plomley, NJB; Robinson, George Augustus (2008). Friendly Mission, the Tasmanian journals and papers of George Augustus Robinson. Hobart: Quintus. ISBN9780977557226.
^Duterrau, Benjamin (1835), Woureddy, retrieved 4 August 2024, see also for background about Duterrau's painting from newspaper report at the time: - "Van Diemen's Land". The Sydney Herald. Vol. VII, no. 584. New South Wales, Australia. 1 June 1837. p. 2. Retrieved 4 August 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
^"Memories of the Past". Tasmanian News. No. 7918. Tasmania, Australia. 8 October 1906. p. 4 (Fourth Edition). Retrieved 4 August 2024 – via National Library of Australia.