Wampum belt, woven on 19 warps, with in the centre a maximum of 18 rows of beads, made by the Iroquois or Haudenosaunee indigenous confederacy in northeast North America, 1600-1800

Dublin Core

Title

Wampum belt, woven on 19 warps, with in the centre a maximum of 18 rows of beads, made by the Iroquois or Haudenosaunee indigenous confederacy in northeast North America, 1600-1800

Subject

shell and wool

Dimensions:
Height: 13 centimetres
Length: 138 centimetres (storage box)
Width: 26 centimetres (storage box)
Width: 127 centimetres
Depth: 5 centimetres (storage box)
Depth: 0.50 centimetres

Description

Wampum belt, woven on 19 warps, with in the centre a maximum of 18 rows of beads. The warps are of two-ply 'S' twist wool, of native origin?, as are the wefts. The design consists of three rectangles, the one in the middle being 19 beads long and 18 wide, with a second rectangle inside, 8 long by 6 wide. The two end rectangles are 31 beads long, by 16 beads high at one end, and 33 beads long for the rectangle at the other end: the internal rectangles of are both 10 beads long, and 6 beads high. The ground is of purple beads, with the design in white. The uprights of the rectangles are two white beads wide, and the horizontal bars only one bead high. The bottoms and tops of the rectangles run along the edges of the belt. Since the middle rectangle has two more rows, this necessitates a reduction by two warps of the belt, between 7 and 27 wefts from the white rectangle in the centre. Whether this occured pre- or post-collection is uncertain. The peculiar shape of the belt is visible in the registration drawing. At both ends, three purple beads in, are white stripes, 5 rows wide at one end, and 6 rows wide at the other. The belt is 370 beads long.

Files

wampum belt.jpg

Citation

“Wampum belt, woven on 19 warps, with in the centre a maximum of 18 rows of beads, made by the Iroquois or Haudenosaunee indigenous confederacy in northeast North America, 1600-1800,” HAA Image Hosting, accessed May 11, 2026, https://haaimagehosting.omeka.fas.harvard.edu/items/show/1331.

Output Formats

Embed

Copy the code below into your web page