All Object Lessons
Law & Governance

The Wampum Belt: A Treaty Made of Shells

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, civics, ethics, art, language
Core question How can a string of shells carry a treaty between two peoples for hundreds of years — and what does it mean when a country forgets a promise that another country still remembers?
A wampum belt held at a 2023 commemoration of the 1794 Treaty of Canandaigua. Wampum belts are not museum objects only — they are still living law for the Haudenosaunee. Photo: DanielPenfield / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 4.0
Introduction

In the woodlands of northeastern North America, around lakes and rivers we now call the Great Lakes and the St Lawrence, there has been a way of recording agreements for hundreds of years. The agreement is not written down. It is woven into a belt of small shell beads. The shells come from two creatures of the coast — the whelk, which gives white beads, and the quahog clam, which gives purple. The beads are arranged in patterns. Each pattern means something. The whole belt can be read by someone who knows the tradition. The Haudenosaunee — known to many people as the Iroquois — have used these belts to record treaties, alliances, condolences, and important events. One belt, called the Two Row Wampum, records a treaty made in 1613 between Haudenosaunee leaders and Dutch traders. The pattern shows two lines of purple beads on a white background — two paths down the same river of life, one for each people, neither steering the other's boat. The Haudenosaunee say the treaty is still in force. Many of the countries that came after the Dutch — including the United States and Canada — do not always remember it the same way. This lesson asks how a belt can be a law, what happens when peoples remember the same agreement differently, and what we can still learn from a tradition that turns shells into binding words.

The object
Origin
Made by the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Confederacy) and other First Nations peoples of the northeastern woodlands of North America. The Haudenosaunee Confederacy includes the Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca, and (since 1722) Tuscarora nations.
Period
Used since at least the 16th century. The wider tradition of shell-bead record keeping is much older. Still made and used today.
Made of
Small cylinder beads carved from two kinds of shell — white from the whelk, purple from the quahog clam. Beads are woven onto strands of plant fibre or sinew, then linked into long belts in careful patterns.
Size
Most belts are 10 to 20 cm wide and 60 cm to 2 metres long. Some, like the Hiawatha Belt, are larger.
Number of objects
Hundreds of historical wampum belts survive. Many more were made and have been lost. New belts are still being made by Haudenosaunee craftspeople today.
Where it is now
Some are still held by Haudenosaunee communities. Others are in museums in the United States, Canada, and Europe. Many of these museum belts are now being formally returned to the communities they belong to.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. Most students think of treaties as long written documents. The Haudenosaunee tradition is different. How will you help students see a belt as a real legal record?
  2. Treaty rights are a live issue in Canada and the United States today. How will you teach this honestly without taking a partisan position?
  3. The Haudenosaunee are a living people with their own government today. How will you keep them at the centre of the lesson, not in the past tense?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Imagine you have to record an agreement between two peoples. You have no paper. You have no recording machines. You need the agreement to last for centuries, to be remembered exactly, and to be readable by people who were not there when it was made. The Haudenosaunee solved this problem about 500 years ago. They used small shell beads — white and purple — woven into belts. Each pattern in the belt means something specific. The belt is read from one end to the other, like a story or a contract. Why might shells make good treaty records?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several reasons. First: the shells are durable. Wampum beads survive for centuries when properly cared for. Second: the colours are clear. White and purple show up sharply against each other and do not fade. Third: the patterns are physical. You can run your fingers along them, count them, see them clearly. Fourth: the belts are valuable, so they are kept carefully. Fifth: the tradition is shared — many people are trained to read the belts, so the meaning is held by a community, not by one person who could die without passing it on. The Haudenosaunee also developed careful procedures for using wampum: belts are passed from hand to hand at meetings, the agreement is spoken aloud as the belt is given, and the spoken words and the patterns reinforce each other. This is similar in spirit to a Western legal system where written law and spoken testimony work together. Students should see that 'no writing' does not mean 'no record'. The Haudenosaunee have one of the most sophisticated record-keeping systems ever developed. Like the quipu or the Indus seal, it tells us that 'writing' is one option among several.

2
In 1613, Haudenosaunee leaders met Dutch traders in what is now upstate New York. They made an agreement. The agreement was recorded in a belt of wampum. The belt has two long lines of purple beads on a white background. The two purple lines run side by side without crossing. The Haudenosaunee say the agreement is this: two peoples, each in their own boat, going down the same river of life. One boat carries the Haudenosaunee with their laws, language, and ways. The other carries the Europeans with theirs. Neither steers the other's boat. Neither pushes the other's boat off course. They go down the river together but separately, in peace, friendship, and respect. The agreement is called the Two Row Wampum. The Haudenosaunee say it is still in force. What would it mean if both sides honoured this treaty today?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

This is one of the deepest questions in the lesson. The Two Row Wampum is the oldest treaty between Indigenous peoples and Europeans on what is now the territory of the United States and Canada. It set a principle: two peoples sharing land, neither erasing the other. Over the next 400 years, that principle was broken many times. European settlers took Haudenosaunee land. Many treaties that came after the Two Row Wampum promised more — that schools, hospitals, and supplies would be provided in exchange for land — and many of those promises were broken. Haudenosaunee today often point to the Two Row Wampum as a kind of foundation: a treaty that, if it had been kept, would have led to a very different history. Some Haudenosaunee leaders have used it as the basis for modern claims about sovereignty, land rights, and self-government. They argue that the Haudenosaunee never gave up the right to govern themselves. The treaty did not say they would. It said only that the two peoples would travel side by side. Students should see that this is a living question. There are real debates today, in courts and in politics, about what treaty obligations remain. The Two Row Wampum is one of the oldest pieces of evidence for the Haudenosaunee position.

3
In the 1700s, Haudenosaunee government was carefully studied by European observers. The Confederacy had a Great Law, called the Kaianere'kó:wa, which set out how the six nations would make decisions together. There were chiefs chosen by clan mothers (older women in each clan). There were rules for debate, voting, and overturning decisions. Disputes were resolved by careful ceremony. War could not be declared without the agreement of all six nations. Benjamin Franklin, one of the founders of the United States, met Haudenosaunee leaders many times. He admired their system. Some scholars say parts of it influenced the United States Constitution. Why might one democracy borrow from another?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

This is a question with a real and complicated answer. The Haudenosaunee Confederacy was already old in 1750 — possibly several centuries old. It worked. The new United States was looking for a model of how thirteen separate states could cooperate without one dominating the others. Franklin in 1751 wrote: 'It would be a strange thing if Six Nations of ignorant savages should be capable of forming a Scheme for such an Union, and yet that a like Union should be impracticable for ten or a Dozen English Colonies.' (His use of 'savages' was the language of his time. He clearly admired the Haudenosaunee system.) In 1988, the United States Congress formally acknowledged the influence of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy on the Constitution. Historians still debate exactly how much was borrowed and how directly, but the connection is real. Students should see that the United States and Canada did not invent democracy from nothing. They borrowed from many sources, including ancient Greece, Roman law, English Parliament — and the Haudenosaunee. The wampum belts are physical evidence of one of the oldest functioning democracies in the world. End the discovery here. The histories are tangled together more than older textbooks once said.

4
For most of the 19th and 20th centuries, many wampum belts were taken from Haudenosaunee communities and put in museums. Some were stolen during conflicts. Some were sold by people who did not have the right to sell them. Some were given by Haudenosaunee leaders who hoped the belts would be cared for and were instead locked in drawers. In recent decades, this has begun to change. The New York State Museum returned 12 wampum belts to the Onondaga Nation in 1989. The Royal Ontario Museum has returned others. Several Canadian museums have completed formal repatriations. The Haudenosaunee say a belt in a museum case is a belt that cannot do its work. What is the work of a wampum belt?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

To carry an agreement. A wampum belt is not just an art object or a historical artefact. It is a working legal document, in the same way a written treaty is. It records a specific agreement, in a specific form, that the community can read and reaffirm. Belts are used in modern Haudenosaunee government — at council meetings, in negotiations with Canadian and American officials, in ceremonies of condolence when a leader dies. A belt that is locked in a museum drawer 1,000 km away cannot be used this way. This is why repatriation matters. It is not only about justice for the past. It is about whether the Haudenosaunee can carry out their own ongoing legal and ceremonial life. Students should see that 'museum' and 'living object' are not always the same thing. Many objects in museums are perfectly happy there — they are admired, studied, preserved. Others, like wampum belts, were never meant to be removed from their communities. Returning them is part of giving back the means of self-government. End the discovery here. The work continues.

What this object teaches

A wampum belt is a long woven band of small shell beads — white from whelk shells and purple from quahog clams — used by the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) and other First Nations peoples of the northeastern North American woodlands to record agreements, treaties, and important events. Each pattern in the belt means something specific. Belts can be read by trained people in the community, generation after generation. The Two Row Wampum, made in 1613, records the oldest treaty between Indigenous peoples and Europeans in this region: two peoples in separate boats, going down the same river of life, neither steering the other's boat. The Haudenosaunee say this treaty is still in force. The Haudenosaunee Confederacy is one of the oldest continuous democracies in the world. Some of its ideas about cooperation among separate nations influenced the United States Constitution. In recent decades, museums have begun returning wampum belts to the communities they belong to, recognising that the belts are not just historical objects but working legal documents.

QuestionWhat many people assumeWhat is actually true
What is wampum?A kind of moneyMostly shell beads used to record agreements; some trade use with Europeans came later
Are wampum belts just art?YesThey are working legal documents, like written treaties — readable by trained people in the community
Are the Haudenosaunee still here?They were wiped outThey are alive today, with their own government, language, and treaty system. Around 75,000 enrolled members.
Did the Haudenosaunee influence the US Constitution?NoYes — the US Congress formally acknowledged this in 1988. Benjamin Franklin and others studied their government.
Where are the belts now?Mostly in museumsMany are now being returned. The Haudenosaunee say belts in museum cases cannot do their work.
Key words
Wampum
Small cylinder beads made from white whelk shells and purple quahog clam shells. The beads are woven into strings or belts and used to record agreements, treaties, and important events.
Example: A typical wampum bead is about 6 mm long and 4 mm wide. Making one bead by hand can take hours of careful work.
Haudenosaunee
The people known to many outsiders as the Iroquois. The name means 'people of the longhouse'. The Haudenosaunee Confederacy includes six nations: Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca, and (since 1722) Tuscarora.
Example: The Haudenosaunee Confederacy is one of the oldest continuous democracies in the world. It has its own government, passport, and laws.
Two Row Wampum
A wampum belt that records the 1613 treaty between Haudenosaunee leaders and Dutch traders. The two purple lines on the belt represent two peoples in separate boats, going down the same river of life, neither steering the other's boat.
Example: The Two Row Wampum is the oldest known treaty between Indigenous peoples and Europeans on what is now United States and Canadian territory.
Confederacy
A union of separate nations or states that work together while keeping their own governments. The Haudenosaunee Confederacy is one of the oldest in the world.
Example: The Six Nations of the Haudenosaunee each keep their own councils, language, and identity, but they make joint decisions on big matters at the Grand Council.
Repatriation
Returning an object — or sometimes a person's remains — to the community it came from. Many wampum belts have been formally returned in recent decades.
Example: In 1989, the New York State Museum returned 12 wampum belts to the Onondaga Nation. The belts had been kept in the museum's collection for over 80 years.
Treaty
A formal agreement between two or more peoples or governments. Treaties between First Nations and European settlers are still legally in force in many parts of North America.
Example: The Treaty of Canandaigua, signed in 1794 between the United States and the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, is still acknowledged today, with annual gifts of cloth still given.
Use this in other subjects
  • History: Build a class timeline of treaties between Indigenous peoples and European settlers in North America: Two Row Wampum (1613), Iroquois-British alliance (1722), Treaty of Canandaigua (1794), the long series of US treaties through the 1800s, modern land claims agreements in Canada (from the 1970s). Discuss what 'treaty' has meant in different times.
  • Geography: On a map of northeastern North America, mark the traditional Haudenosaunee territory — much of what is now upstate New York, southern Ontario, Quebec, and parts of Pennsylvania. Compare with where the Haudenosaunee live today. Discuss how borders, cities, and roads have changed but how the people remain.
  • Civics: Compare the Haudenosaunee Confederacy government with a modern democracy. Both have separate nations cooperating, careful procedures for making decisions, and rules for changing leaders. Both depend on shared agreements. The Haudenosaunee system is older.
  • Art: Look closely at images of wampum belts. Each pattern carries meaning. Each student designs a 'belt' on paper, choosing patterns to represent an agreement they want to record — between friends, classmates, or family. Display the belts and discuss what each one means.
  • Language: Many English words come from Haudenosaunee or related Indigenous languages — 'caucus' comes from an Algonquian word; 'Tammany' is from a Lenape leader. Discuss how words travel between cultures, and how the influence of one tradition on another can be hidden in everyday language.
  • Citizenship: Discuss what it means for a country to honour an old treaty. The Haudenosaunee point to treaties from the 1600s and 1700s as still binding. The United States and Canada have at times agreed; at times disagreed. Strong answers will see that this is a real, current question, not just history.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

Wampum was just money.

Right

Wampum was sometimes used in trade with Europeans, but its main purpose among the Haudenosaunee was to record agreements, treaties, condolences, and important events. Calling it 'money' tells half the story.

Why

This was an early European misunderstanding that stuck. Wampum is closer to a legal document than to a coin.

Wrong

The Haudenosaunee are extinct or only exist in museums.

Right

The Haudenosaunee are alive today, with around 75,000 enrolled members, six nations, their own government, and active treaty negotiations. They speak their languages, make wampum, and govern themselves.

Why

Older textbooks often used the past tense for First Nations peoples. The truth is a present tense.

Wrong

The United States invented modern democracy from European sources only.

Right

The Haudenosaunee Confederacy was already an old democracy when the United States was founded. Benjamin Franklin and other founders studied it. The US Congress in 1988 formally acknowledged the Haudenosaunee influence on the Constitution.

Why

This story has been hidden in many history books. Telling it more honestly gives credit where it is due.

Wrong

Old treaties from the 1600s and 1700s no longer matter.

Right

Many of these treaties are still legally in force. The Treaty of Canandaigua of 1794 is acknowledged each year with gifts of cloth from the US government. The Two Row Wampum of 1613 is cited in modern Haudenosaunee statements about sovereignty.

Why

'Old' and 'no longer in force' are very different things. Treaties are agreements between peoples, and peoples remember.

Teaching this with care

This lesson is about a living people with a living legal tradition. Treat it that way. Use the proper terms — Haudenosaunee, Iroquois (used by both insiders and outsiders, but Haudenosaunee is the people's own term), the Six Nations, Confederacy, Two Row Wampum. Pronounce 'Haudenosaunee' as roughly 'hoe-dee-no-SHOW-nee'. Do not use the past tense for the Haudenosaunee. They are alive today, with their own government and treaties. Do not call their society 'primitive' or 'simple' — the Confederacy is one of the oldest continuous democracies in the world. Be honest about the breaking of treaties by the US and Canadian governments, but do not turn the lesson into a one-sided history of grievance. The Two Row Wampum is also a positive idea — two peoples, side by side — that has been honoured at times and broken at times. When discussing repatriation, present it as ongoing work rather than a settled question. Some institutions are returning belts; others have not. If you have Indigenous students or students with First Nations connections, give them space to share if they want, but do not put them on the spot. Do not use the words 'tribe' or 'savages' or 'pagan' — these were colonial-era words that are now considered disrespectful in many contexts. Use 'nation' or 'people'. Finally, treat wampum belts as legal documents, not just as art. The whole lesson rests on this distinction. They are both — but the legal weight is what older history often missed.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about wampum belts.

  1. What is a wampum belt, and what is it used for?

    A wampum belt is a long woven band of small white and purple shell beads, used by the Haudenosaunee and other First Nations peoples of northeastern North America to record agreements, treaties, and important events. Each pattern in the belt means something specific.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the materials (shell beads), the people (Haudenosaunee or Iroquois), and the use (recording agreements).
  2. What is the Two Row Wampum, and what does it record?

    The Two Row Wampum is a belt made in 1613. It records a treaty between Haudenosaunee leaders and Dutch traders. The two purple lines on the belt represent two peoples in separate boats going down the same river of life, neither steering the other's boat.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention both the date or context and the meaning of the two-row pattern. Either is enough for partial credit.
  3. Why is it wrong to call wampum 'just money'?

    Wampum was sometimes used in trade with Europeans, but its main purpose among the Haudenosaunee was to record agreements, treaties, and important events. It is closer to a legal document than to a coin.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the legal or record-keeping function. The point is that 'just money' tells only part of the story.
  4. How did the Haudenosaunee Confederacy influence the United States Constitution?

    Benjamin Franklin and other founders studied the Haudenosaunee government, which was already an old democracy. Some of its ideas about cooperation among separate nations influenced the Constitution. The US Congress formally acknowledged this in 1988.
    Marking note: Accept any answer that mentions the influence and shows the student understands this is a documented connection, not a guess.
  5. Why does it matter when wampum belts are returned to Haudenosaunee communities from museums?

    Because the belts are working legal documents, not just historical objects. They are used in modern Haudenosaunee government, at council meetings, and in ceremonies. A belt locked in a museum drawer cannot do its work.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that recognises the belts as living legal documents, not just artefacts. The point is the active use of the belts today.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. The Two Row Wampum says two peoples can travel side by side without steering each other's boats. Today, in your country, are there examples of this kind of relationship — or examples where it has not worked?

    This is a question with no single answer, depending on where students live. They may suggest examples of communities living respectfully alongside each other, and examples where one community has tried to control another. Strong answers will see that the Two Row Wampum sets out a principle that is hard to live by — and that many countries today, including the US and Canada, are still arguing about how to honour it. End by saying that this 400-year-old principle is still being tested in courts, parliaments, and communities.
  2. Should objects like wampum belts be in museums, or should they all be returned to the communities they came from?

    Push students past quick answers. Some will say all belts should be returned. Others will worry about what is lost when museums lose their collections. Strong answers will see that wampum belts are a special case because they are working legal documents, not just artefacts. The right answer might be different for different objects: some are happy in museums; some are not. End by saying that thoughtful museums and Indigenous communities are working on this together, and that the answer is changing year by year.
  3. If you had to record a really important agreement — between two friends, two families, or two countries — without writing or technology, how would you do it?

    This is a creative question that links the lesson to bigger ideas. Students may suggest songs, ceremonies, special objects, marks on a tree, knots in a string. Push them to think about what makes a record last across generations. The deeper point is that 'no writing' does not mean 'no record'. The Haudenosaunee are one example. The Quipu is another. The astrolabe carried mathematical knowledge in metal. Different cultures find different ways to make agreements stick.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'How would you record a treaty between two peoples if you had no paper, no recording machines, and you needed it to last 400 years?' Take guesses. Then say: 'About 500 years ago, the Haudenosaunee — also known as the Iroquois — solved this problem with shells. We are going to find out how.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe the wampum belt: a long woven band of small white and purple shell beads, with patterns that record agreements. Used by the Haudenosaunee, a Confederacy of six nations in what is now upstate New York and parts of Canada. Pause and ask: 'How could a pattern of beads record a treaty?' Listen to answers. They will lead naturally into the idea of trained readers and shared community memory.
  3. UNDO THE WRONG STORIES (15 min)
    On the board, write three statements: (1) Wampum was just money. (2) The Haudenosaunee were wiped out. (3) Modern democracy is a European invention. Take each in turn. Replace each with what we now know — wampum was mainly a record of agreements; the Haudenosaunee are alive today; the Haudenosaunee Confederacy is one of the oldest democracies in the world and influenced the US Constitution. End by asking: 'Why might these wrong stories have lasted so long?'
  4. THE TWO ROW ACTIVITY (10 min)
    On paper, each student draws a simple two-row wampum design — two long parallel lines, with a band of dots between them. Each line represents a community, family, or group of friends. Each student writes: what does my community do well? What does the other community do well? What does each agree not to do to the other? Discuss: this is exactly the question the Two Row Wampum asked in 1613. The answer is hard. Living up to it is harder.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'If a treaty is 400 years old, does it still matter?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'For the Haudenosaunee, the answer is yes. The belts they made centuries ago are still active in their courts and their ceremonies. The countries around them sometimes agree, sometimes disagree. The shells are still there. The agreement is still there. The question is whether everyone involved keeps remembering.'
Classroom materials
The Bead Pattern
Instructions: Each student gets a strip of paper or a length of string. Using two colours of small objects (white and dark beads, or cut paper, or two kinds of dried bean), they make a pattern that records something true about themselves: their family, their school, an agreement they have with a friend. The pattern should be readable — each section means something. The students explain their patterns to each other. Discuss: how does pattern carry meaning? The wampum belt is the same idea, much older.
Example: In Mr Onondaga's class, students used dried white and black beans on long strips. One student made a pattern with two long white sections (her parents) joined by a small purple cluster (her). Another made a long alternating pattern (her seven brothers and sisters). The teacher said: 'You have just done what the Haudenosaunee belt makers do — turned an idea into a pattern that someone else can read. The skill is the same. Their materials are shells. Yours are beans. The work is making meaning visible.'
Two Boats, One River
Instructions: In small groups, students each take a piece of paper and draw two long parallel lines down the page — two boats on a river. Above each line, they write the name of a community, family, group of friends, school class, or country. In the space between, they write three things they would want both communities to keep, and three things they would want neither community to do to the other. Each group shares one set of answers with the class.
Example: In Mrs Hill's class, one group drew two lines labelled 'Year 7 students' and 'Year 8 students'. Between them, they wrote: 'Both keep our own friends. Both keep our own school clubs. Both keep our own decisions about lunch.' And below: 'Neither bullies the other. Neither tries to take over the other's space. Neither pretends the other does not exist.' The teacher said: 'You have just written a Two Row Wampum. The belt from 1613 said almost exactly this — about peoples, not year groups. The principle is the same. Living it is the hard part.'
What Treaty Means Today
Instructions: In small groups, students discuss: 'In your country, are there agreements between governments and Indigenous peoples that are still in force? What happens when one side believes they are kept and the other believes they are not?' This is a real question in Australia, New Zealand, Canada, the United States, parts of Latin America, and elsewhere. Different students will have different starting points. Each group shares one example or one question.
Example: In one Canadian class, students discussed Treaty 6 (1876) which still applies in parts of Saskatchewan and Alberta. In a US class, students discussed the Treaty of Canandaigua and the annual cloth gifts that are still given. In an Australian class, students discussed the lack of a national treaty with First Nations Australians. In an English class, students discussed the Crown's relationship with Maori under the Treaty of Waitangi. The teacher said: 'These conversations are happening in your countries right now. They are not closed history. They are open questions. The wampum belt is one tradition that helps us see why.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the Quipu for another non-paper system of recording, used by the Inca. Both the Quipu and the wampum belt show that 'writing' is one option among many.
  • Try a lesson on the Rosetta Stone for a contrast — a writing system that was decoded — and to compare different ideas of what makes a record.
  • Try a lesson on the Palestinian key for another object that carries an agreement (or a broken agreement) across generations. The two stories illuminate each other.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a longer discussion of treaty rights in your country today. The wampum belt is a starting point for a much larger conversation.
  • Connect this lesson to art class with a longer project on patterns that carry meaning. Wampum, kente cloth, adinkra symbols, Aboriginal Australian dot painting — many cultures have such traditions.
  • Connect this lesson to language class with a project on words that have travelled between Indigenous languages and English. 'Caucus', 'moose', 'kayak', 'tobacco', 'chocolate' all came from Indigenous languages of the Americas.
Key takeaways
  • A wampum belt is a long woven band of small white and purple shell beads, used by the Haudenosaunee and other First Nations peoples to record agreements, treaties, and important events.
  • Each pattern in the belt means something specific. Trained members of the community can read the belts, generation after generation. The belts are working legal documents, not just art.
  • The Two Row Wampum, made in 1613, is the oldest known treaty between Indigenous peoples and Europeans on what is now US and Canadian land. Its principle: two peoples, two boats, one river — neither steering the other.
  • The Haudenosaunee Confederacy is one of the oldest continuous democracies in the world. Some of its ideas influenced the United States Constitution. The US Congress formally acknowledged this in 1988.
  • Many wampum belts were taken from Haudenosaunee communities and put in museums. In recent decades, museums have begun returning them. The Haudenosaunee say belts in cases cannot do their work.
  • The Haudenosaunee are alive today. Treaties from the 1600s and 1700s are still part of their living law. Whether other countries honour them is still being argued in courts, parliaments, and communities.
Sources
  • The Two Row Wampum: Visualizing Time and Treaty — Stephen Augustine (2019) [academic]
  • Indigenous American Democracy and the US Constitution — Donald A. Grinde and Bruce E. Johansen (1991) [academic]
  • Returning the Wampum: Museum Repatriations — Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian (2024) [institution]
  • The Iroquois and the Founders — Public Broadcasting Service (2018) [news]
  • Haudenosaunee Confederacy: Official Website — Haudenosaunee Confederacy (2024) [institution]