![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjdzb1uPSpFK3wvvbD1NiM8ipeA_ynYlvsgv_6qxpjmbvVqQMoKHKN5UuZYjtelzlHDJM5Bnwn_WQdie3hN-kUvVqtKfpON6Ir6U4Funipkj5kdBQG9W4VFJLsVHKvwF7MdRkKhz_fIoFk/s320/IroquoisFlag_web_m.jpg)
The five shapes, often called "devices" represent the five original tribes. From left to right they represent the Seneca, the keepers of the Western Door; the Cayugas, the "people of the marsh" and "keepers of the Great Pipe"; The Onondaga, who were the "name bearers" who kept the wampum belt that contained the history of the Iroquois; the Oneida, the "stone people" symbolized by the Great Tree; and lastly the Mohawk, the "keepers of the eastern door".
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