The town derives its name from an
Aboriginal word meaning
water hole, or 'wild fowl on creek.' In 1856, gold was reported at Tanunda Creek.
Prussian immigrants who arrived with Pastor
Gotthard Fritzsche founded the village of
Bethanien in 1842, the first settlement in the vicinity of today's Tanunda. One year later, Prussians relocating from
Klemzig on the
Torrens River, where they had settled upon immigrating in 1838 with Pastor
August Kavel, came to the Barossa Valley and founded the village of Langmeil. Their new community bore the name of a Prussian town near
Zullichau, from where the settlers had originated; it is now a Polish village known as
Okunin. Sometime later, another village was founded and named Tanunda. Due to anti-German sentiments, both Langmeil and Bethanien were
renamed during the
Great War to Bilyara and Bethany respectively, although Bilyara reverted to Langmeil in 1975. As development of the Tanunda area continued, the villages of Langmeil and Tanunda were joined. Today the township is simply called Tanunda. == Demographics ==