History of Tattoos

Tattoos have been around for thousands of years. They have represented status symbols, love, religion, even punishment. The history of tattoos is long and varied.

  1. The Earliest Tattoos

    • For a long time, the earliest tattoos were thought to be on female mummies dating to c.2000 B.C. But now it is believed the Iceman, discovered on the Italian-Austrian border in 1991, has the earliest known tattoos. He was carbon-dated at around 5,200 years old, according to Joann Fletcher, research fellow in the department of archaeology at the University of York in Britain on smithsonian.com.

    The Purpose

    • Fletcher says she believes tattoos on ancient Egyptian women were meant to safeguard the female during pregnancy and labor. The placement of the tattoos --on the abdomen, the breasts and the top of the thighs--could signify the custom of tattoos only on females.

    The Tattooer

    • Though Fletcher says there is no written evidence of who did the tattooing, it seems that older women would mark the younger ones.

    The Instruments

    • Archaeologist W.M.F. Petrie discovered a sharp point in a wooden handle that dates to c. 3000 B.C. at the site of Abydos. These could have been used to create tattoos. In addition, he found a set of small bronze instruments at a different site. These dated to c. 1450 B.C. and were thought to be grouped together to form a uniform set of dots.

    Patterns

    • The mummies mostly had dotted patterns of lines and diamonds, though some showed more naturalistic images.

    Colors

    • Mostly dark or black pigments were used in the earliest tattoos.

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