The characteristics of a wampum belt is it is made out of white and purple beads and made of certain kinds of seashell's. Each string or belt holds a different message. The use of wampum stings or belts suggested the seriousness of the message and the sincerity of whoever made it. A wampum keeper was responsible for caring for the wampum and reading it. The reader would pass this hand over top of it ,bead by bead using the texture top remind him of the event or treaties it recorded. Wampum keepers were chosen by the clan they trained at a young age younger then 12 to remember the information on the belts and tell it in a dramatic and poetic way. Iroquois women made the wampum belts.
A wampums iconic white beads are indeed made from shells.
You mean wampum belts, not wampum which simply refers to the shell beads from which belts were made (the Wampanoag word Wampumpeag = small white shell beads).Wampum belts were not produced until after contact with Europeans, so it is likely that they were influenced by European writing and documents; since they natives could not write they recorded important events such as treaties or agreements in pictorial (pictographic) form on wampum belts.The link below takes you to an image of Tsawanhohi holding a wampum belt, 1825:
important events, treaties and agreements
lived in eastern USA and CANADAthey tended to live near waterthey created the dream catcher: catches bad spirits in your dreamsplayed a game similar to lacrossethey clustered their houses around a central squarethey got their food by hunting, fishing, and gathering fruits, berries , and nutsthey made traps for small animalsthey made nets and traps for fishduring hard times , when there was almost no food they'd chew their clothes or boil their mocassins in soupTHIS IS IMPORTANT: wampum was important to their culture.wampum belts and necklaces were made from wampum beads, which are actually white and purple shells. it was used as money between white men and Indians.they were also used as a form of communication between Indian tribes.wampum belts were made in pictures to show why it was made. one always wore a wampum belt while visiting another tribe.
Wampum belts were made to help record events, pledges, ideas, contracts, or treaties among other nations. These things were all remembered by the wampum keeper which remembered the events by heart so he knew everything that was going on in the nations. This meant that there was one wampum keeper between one nation.
Wampum
Wampum
they made wampum's
The Native American tribe traded goods using wampum beads as currency.
The characteristics of a wampum belt is it is made out of white and purple beads and made of certain kinds of seashell's. Each string or belt holds a different message. The use of wampum stings or belts suggested the seriousness of the message and the sincerity of whoever made it. A wampum keeper was responsible for caring for the wampum and reading it. The reader would pass this hand over top of it ,bead by bead using the texture top remind him of the event or treaties it recorded. Wampum keepers were chosen by the clan they trained at a young age younger then 12 to remember the information on the belts and tell it in a dramatic and poetic way. Iroquois women made the wampum belts.
A wampums iconic white beads are indeed made from shells.
You mean wampum belts, not wampum which simply refers to the shell beads from which belts were made (the Wampanoag word Wampumpeag = small white shell beads).Wampum belts were not produced until after contact with Europeans, so it is likely that they were influenced by European writing and documents; since they natives could not write they recorded important events such as treaties or agreements in pictorial (pictographic) form on wampum belts.The link below takes you to an image of Tsawanhohi holding a wampum belt, 1825:
Sacred beads called wampum, made from small shells, played an important role in Algonquin rituals; wampum were used in ceremonial jewelry, belts and sashes.
The address of the Wampum Area Historical Society Inc is: 3384 State Route 18, Wampum, PA 16157-3610
No, the "wampum" is completely mythical. Or is it... (it isn't)
They passed wampum when it was their turn to talk