Septum piercings are not a Western invention
The modern Western septum piercing the bull-ring style horseshoe or simple captive bead ring through the nasal septum emerged in the 1970s American punk scene, with significant amplification by the 1990s modern primitive movement. But the underlying practice of piercing the nasal septum is documented across multiple human cultures going back thousands of years, with origins on every inhabited continent except Antarctica. This is one of the oldest body modifications in human history, and the modern Western version is a recent adaptation rather than an invention.
This guide traces the cultural history of septum piercing across the indigenous traditions where it originated, examines what the piercing meant in each context, and considers how the modern Western septum piercing relates to those origins. The question of whether wearing a septum piercing as a non-indigenous person constitutes cultural appropriation has no single answer but knowing the history is necessary for thinking about that question seriously.
Indigenous origins: the Americas
Septum piercings are extensively documented in pre-Columbian cultures across the Americas, particularly in Mesoamerica (Aztec, Mayan, Olmec) and across multiple Amazonian and Andean cultures.
Aztec and Mayan septum piercings
Both the Aztec and Maya cultures incorporated septum jewellery into ceremonial and high-status contexts. Septum piercings were associated with warriors, nobility, and religious ceremony. Jewellery materials ranged from jade and obsidian to gold (post-contact period) material choice itself signalled status. The septum was one of several pierced points in elaborate ceremonial regalia.
Amazonian and indigenous South American cultures
Many Amazonian peoples the Asurini, Matsés, Yanomami, and others have continuous septum piercing traditions still practised today. Materials vary by culture: bone, wood, feathers, and modern materials in some communities. Meanings include rite of passage, warrior status, marital status, and spiritual connection. These are living traditions, not historical artefacts.
North American indigenous peoples
Septum piercing was practised by some Pacific Northwest indigenous peoples (Haida, Tlingit) and some Plains nations, often associated with hunting, warrior status, or shamanic practice. Archaeological evidence suggests these traditions are at least several centuries old; some are continuous to the present.
Indigenous origins: the Pacific
Maori and Pacific Islander traditions
The Maori of Aotearoa (New Zealand) have a documented tradition of nasal piercing, though the more prominent piercings in Maori cultural practice are facial tattoos (moko) and earlobe stretching. Some other Pacific Islander cultures particularly in Melanesia (Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu) have extensive septum piercing traditions, often using bone, shell, or wooden pieces.
Aboriginal Australian practices
Some Aboriginal Australian groups practised nasal septum piercing as part of initiation ceremonies and rite-of-passage traditions, particularly in northern and central Australia. The practice was less universal across Aboriginal cultures than in some Pacific or Amazonian contexts.
Indigenous origins: South Asia and the Middle East
Bedouin and Arab traditions
Septum piercing has documented traditions among Bedouin and some Arab cultures, going back at least 4,000 years based on archaeological evidence. The Bedouin tradition specifically associates septum jewellery with marriage a husband traditionally gifts septum jewellery to his wife as a sign of his ability to provide. The piece's value reflects family wealth and status.
South Asian context
Nasal jewellery is extensively associated with South Asian cultures (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal), though the dominant tradition there is the nostril piercing rather than the septum. Septum piercings do appear in some South Asian cultural contexts, particularly in tribal and rural communities in central and northeastern India, but the nostril remains the more prominent nasal piercing in mainstream South Asian tradition.
African traditions
Septum piercings appear in some African cultural contexts particularly among some Maasai groups in East Africa and certain communities in West and Central Africa. The practices and meanings vary substantially by community, but septum jewellery often signals adult status, marital eligibility, or spiritual significance. As with other indigenous contexts, these traditions vary in whether they are continuous to the present or historical.
The modern Western septum: 1970s to present
The modern Western septum piercing has a relatively short and well-documented history. The trajectory:
• 1970s — punk subculture in the UK and US adopts septum piercing as a marker of subcultural identity, deliberately drawing from indigenous traditions but largely without explicit credit
• 1980s — septum piercing spreads through underground music and alternative scenes; the modern primitive movement begins to articulate explicit connections to indigenous traditions
• 1990s — modern primitive movement, led by figures like Fakir Musafar, brings explicit attention to indigenous origins of body modifications, including septum piercing
• 2000s — septum piercing migrates from subcultural to alternative mainstream
• 2010s–present — septum piercing becomes a fully mainstream piercing option, widely worn across demographic groups with limited reference to either its indigenous origins or its subcultural history
The cultural appropriation question
The question of whether wearing a septum piercing as a non-indigenous person constitutes cultural appropriation has no single answer, and the discussion deserves more nuance than it typically receives online.
The honest framing
Most indigenous cultures whose traditions inspired modern septum piercing have not, as far as we can tell from indigenous-led discussions, considered casual wear of the piercing by non-indigenous people to be appropriation in the way that wearing ceremonial regalia, eagle feathers, or war bonnets would be. This is not universal individual indigenous people have different views but the dominant indigenous-voiced positions on septum piercing specifically are not strongly objection-based.
That said, three considerations remain worth holding:
• Know the history. Wearing a septum piercing while believing it's a 'new' modern invention erases the cultures that originated it. Even if the wearing itself isn't appropriation, the erasure of origin is a form of cultural disrespect.
• Avoid specifically ceremonial styles. Bone, feather, and traditional material septum pieces from specific cultures should not be worn as fashion by people outside those cultures. Generic metal pieces (titanium clickers, gold rings) don't carry the same direct cultural lineage.
• Listen when indigenous voices object. If specific cultures or individuals from those cultures express that they find non-indigenous wear of certain styles inappropriate, the appropriate response is to listen and adjust, not to argue that you've decided it isn't appropriation.
None of this is meant as a permission slip 'you've read this guide, now you can get a septum' but as context for thinking carefully. The act of taking the cultural history seriously is part of what makes the modern wearing of a septum piercing more than just consumption.
Modern meanings of the septum piercing
Once you understand the cultural depth, modern Western septum piercings carry their own layered meanings:
• Alternative subcultural identity punk, alt, goth associations remain strong
• Individuality and bodily autonomy — many wearers describe the septum as their most 'theirs' piercing because of its prominence
• Aesthetic statement without permanent visibility — septum jewellery can be flipped up inside the nose for work or formal contexts
• Modern interpretation of ancient practice for some wearers, an intentional connection to the long history of body modification across human cultures
Shop the look
Internal links
• Piercing symbolism & meaning: complete guide
• Septum piercing complete guide
• How to hide a septum piercing
• The Complete Guide to Nose Piercings
Frequently Asked Questions
Where did septum piercings originate?
Septum piercings have indigenous origins on every inhabited continent except Antarctica, with documented traditions going back thousands of years. Major originating cultural contexts include Mesoamerica (Aztec, Maya, Olmec), Amazonian and South American indigenous peoples, Pacific Islander cultures (especially Melanesia), Bedouin and some Arab traditions, parts of Aboriginal Australia, and some African cultures. The modern Western septum piercing emerged in the 1970s punk scene and is an adaptation of these earlier traditions.
Is wearing a septum piercing cultural appropriation?
It depends on context, intent, and style. Most indigenous cultures whose traditions inspired modern septum piercing have not characterised casual wear as appropriation in the same way as ceremonial regalia would be. However, knowing the cultural history matters wearing the piercing while believing it's a modern invention erases the cultures that originated it. Avoid traditional ceremonial styles from specific cultures (bone, feather, traditional material pieces); generic modern jewellery in titanium or gold doesn't carry the same direct lineage.
What does a septum piercing mean in modern Western culture?
Modernly, the septum carries layered meanings: subcultural identity (punk, alt, goth associations), individuality and bodily autonomy, aesthetic statement without permanent visibility (can be hidden by rotating jewellery), and for some wearers, an intentional connection to the long human history of body modification. The meaning a wearer assigns personally is also valid and not overruled by any external interpretation.
Which culture started the septum piercing tradition?
There isn't a single originating culture. The septum piercing developed independently in multiple cultures across the world the Americas, Pacific, parts of Asia, the Middle East, and Africa all have indigenous traditions of nasal septum piercing with origins predating contact between these regions. This is one of the few human body modifications that appears to have multiple independent origins rather than spreading from a single source.
How old are septum piercings as a practice?
At least several thousand years. Archaeological evidence from Bedouin and Middle Eastern cultures dates septum jewellery to roughly 4,000 years ago. Mesoamerican septum piercing traditions are documented from at least the Olmec period (~1500–400 BCE) and likely earlier. Pacific Islander and Aboriginal Australian septum traditions also have deep but harder-to-date archaeological roots. Septum piercing is one of the oldest documented body modifications in human history.
Why did punk culture adopt the septum piercing?
The 1970s punk movement adopted body modifications, including septum piercings, as deliberate rejection of mainstream beauty standards and middle-class respectability. The septum specifically was visible, somewhat transgressive in 1970s Western context, and carried the 'bull-ring' association that fit punk's confrontational aesthetic. The connection to indigenous traditions was real but often not explicitly credited the modern primitive movement in the 1990s helped articulate that connection more clearly.
Can I get a septum piercing if I'm not from a culture with that tradition?
Yes, in most contemporary contexts. The cultural appropriation discussion around septum piercing is more about how and what you wear than about whether you wear it at all. Generic modern septum jewellery in titanium, gold, or other body-jewellery materials doesn't carry direct ceremonial lineage from any specific indigenous tradition. Avoid traditional ceremonial styles (bone, feathers, specifically symbolic forms from named cultures), know the history, and listen when indigenous voices from specific cultures object that combination is the thoughtful approach.