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The Constitution of the Five Nations

On Sept 16, 1987 the U.S. Senate passed a resolution stating that the U.S. Constitution was explicitly modeled after the Iroquois Confederacy.

Long before Columbus set foot on American soil, five Iroquoian-speaking nations formed an alliance. This union, called the Iroquois League, originally consisted of the Cayuga, Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga and Seneca Nations. The Five Nations Confederation called themselves the "People of the Longhouse." The exact date of this alliance is unknown, but most historians agree it occurred in the early 16th century.

The Five Nations Confederation developed a constitution (called the Constitution of the Five Nations) to govern their coalition. When the Tuscarora joined the league in the early 18th century, the confederation became known as the Six Nations.

According to Iroquois tradition, the Confederacy of the Five Nations was founded by Deganawidah, a spiritual leader, who persuaded the Cayuga, Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga and Seneca Nations to cease intertribal warfare and to unite. Hiawatha, Deganawidah's spokesman, traveled among the five tribes preaching unification. Under his influence, the tribes eventually formed a strong alliance that lasted until the American Revolution.

The Constitution of the Five Nations is a poetic democracy. The agreement was designed both to unite its members and to protect and maintain the freedom of individual tribal members. In many ways the Five Nations Constitution is very similar to the US Constitution.

In 1979, Donald A. Grinde collected written evidence about Iroquoian interchange with European Americans and published his findings in a book titled The Iroquois and the Founding of the American Nation. Grinde emphasizes the interaction of Franklin and Jefferson with the Iroquois, and urges a more in-depth look at how the Iroquois influenced the Articles of the Constitution.

Spirit Horse that gallops among the stars at midnight

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