Tattoos have become a prevalent part of the culture in the modern world. But where did tattoos first originate? Even in ancient times, tattooing practices were common in many parts of the globe.
There were tattoos in both ancient Japan and Egypt. The Māori of New Zealand has been practicing sacred Ta Mōko tattooing for centuries as a way to indicate who they are as individuals as well as who their community is.
However, no one culture can lay the claim to first inventing the art form. Tattooing practices were known in Europe and North America since times of antiquity. The Greeks depicted their tattooed Thracian neighbors, the Indo-European-speaking people, on their pottery. The Picts, the indigenous people of what is today northern Scotland, were documented by Roman historians as having complex tattoos.
The oldest preserved tattoos come from Ötzi the Iceman, a 5,300-year-old mummified body frozen in ice discovered in the mountains of Italy in 1991. In 2019, researchers identified 2,000-year-old tattoo needles from southeastern Utah’s Pueblo archaeological sites. The cactus spines bound with yucca leaves still had the remnants of tattoo ink on them.
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