 Tattoos
Tattoos... Everyone has a different reaction to that  word. It always got my attention. I think the first one I saw on a live  person, was my cousins. I must have been 7 or 8 years old. He had a  funny caricature of a devil on his arm with "born to raise hell" written  over it. I was amazed by it and although it wasn't until my mid 20's  when I christened my skin, I wanted one the second I saw that little  devil.

Today, tattooing is far more accepted in society than it was  back in the 60's, still; there are people that frown upon the idea of  marking your body with ink....forever. Whether it's a religious issue,  or their own personal preference, they can't deny that the tattoo is  almost as old as civilization itself.

The word tattoo is derived from the Tahitian word  "tatu", meaning to mark or to touch something. The earliest known  tattooed person is the infamous "Iceman" found in 1991, in the Otzal  Alps, located in Italy. Carbon dating proved that he had lived about  5,300 years ago. Fifty-eight tattoos were noted on his body!!  Archaeologists think he was an important figure in his society. 
The  tattoos were charcoal and water based.
Ancient cultures used tattoos to ward off sickness or  bad luck. The Egyptians were the first to use needles to tattoo the  body. Archaeologists exhuming tombs, have even found children's dolls  decorated with 
tattoos. Tattooing spread through Greece, and Arabia, and  By 2000 BC., 
the tattoo had arrived in Asia. The Japanese
The Japanese first used tattoos to identify  criminals. Later it was transformed into an art form, producing some of  the world's most beautiful tattoos. The Yakuza (Japanese mafia) use  their tattoos to intimidate their rivals. 
Japanese style of tattooing  has influenced hundreds of artists today.
 
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