MLA Educational Series

Explore Indigenous and colonial place names, historical figures and stories of Victoria, Australia. Discover Wadawurrung Country, cultural meanings, settlement history and the people who shaped land, identity and history.

Written and delivered by
James Vegter and Trevor Abrahams

Indigenous Place Names, Colonial History & Key Figures of Victoria, Australia

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Magic Lands Alliance (MLA) Educational Series

The MLA Educational Series is a comprehensive, interdisciplinary learning program grounded in First Nations knowledge systems, scientific research, and historical truth-telling. It is designed to connect learners to Country—through geology, ecology, culture, language, and story—tracing relationships across deep time into the present.

The articles currently available on the Magic Lands platform represent the first stage of this educational series—a growing body of research and storytelling focused on the science, history, and culture of Victoria, Australia. These works form the foundation of a much larger learning framework, bringing together knowledge from across Wadawurrung Country and beyond.

Developed alongside the feature film Magic Lands – Purra and Buckley’s Chance, the series offers a rich exploration of Victoria’s landscapes and the knowledge systems of its First Peoples. Drawing on more than 800 referenced articles and years of research across Victoria, Australia, and global contexts (Vegter, 2025), the program integrates disciplines including archaeology, geology, ecology, and Indigenous cultural sciences to reveal the interconnected story of land, life, and identity.

As the Magic Lands film projects move through production and completion, on-Country cultural infrastructure will be developed, enabling the full delivery of structured courses, immersive education experiences, and Indigenous-led tourism initiatives. These next stages will transform the series from a digital knowledge base into a living, place-based learning environment.

At present, the educational content is freely accessible online (as of April 2026), ensuring open access to knowledge during this foundational phase. Over time, this will evolve into a supported education and tourism model that sustains long-term cultural, educational, and community outcomes.

Grounded in collaboration with First Nations communities, the MLA Educational Series invites learners to engage deeply with the enduring relationships between people, Country, sky, and sea—before, during, and after colonisation.

Written and delivered by
James Vegter and Trevor Abrahams