HISTORY OF TATTOOING
Obviously, the word “tattoo” is a fairly new one, as far
as the beginnings of words go, the first time ever being used in 1769
in Captain James Cook‘s diary. It comes from a Polynesian word,
as many of the Pacific islands at the time tattooed themselves. English
speaking sailors first got their tattoos on these islands, then introduced
the custom to Europe. However, tattooing was believed to have started
in Egypt, before Egypt was even an organized society, 6,000 years ago.
At that time, the only tattoos archeologists believe were done were tattoos
on women’s legs that were meant to protect the woman from the dangers
of childbirth. From Egypt tattooing was later spread and shared with other
parts of Africa, into Asia, and Pacific islands through trade lines and
travelers.
Every culture since has tattooed themselves in one form or another, for
reasons of spirituality, protection, strength, and history. Tattoos have
been marks that the bearer is very proud of, or ashamed to wear. The Polynesians
allowed both men and women to be tattooed, while in other cultures only
men were permitted. The Japanese have been tattooing since at least 400
BC, for ornamental and narrative purposes, but also as a marking on criminals
to identify them. Much more recently, in the 1800’s in became fashionable
for members of European royalty to be tattooed.
The first electric tattoo machine was first invented by Thomas Edison
in 1876, who drew out blueprints for an electric engraver that became
the machine that revolutionized tattooing. Patents for tattoo machines
were filed less than ten years later by different individuals, each adding
their own improvements. Samuel O’Reilly is credited with the first
created “electric pen”, the device built from the Edison blueprints.
The only thing O’Reilly changed from the Edison version was that
he added an ink reservoir. The machine we use today was first patented
by Charlie Wagner, which was called a dual coil reciprocating engraver,
especially made for tattooing.
If sailors spread the art of tattooing by water, it was circuses that
spread the mystery of tattooing by land. From the start of the modern
circus, a constant freak show exhibit has always been the heavily tattooed
man or woman. Circuses in America would each promise that they had the
most tattooed person in the whole world, and for a world without photography,
this was the first experience with tattoos that middle America had.
Tattooing had always had those opposed to it, from the first time it was
banned in 787 AD by Pope Hadrian. After a Hepatitis outbreak in the 1960’s
was blamed on tattooing, many states outlawed the art. Tattooing had become
synonymous with rebellion, gangs, dirty sailors, and motorcycles. Lyle
Tuttle tried to change societies views on tattooing by himself tattooing
female celebrities, but even today a few states still outlaw the practice.
Today, tattoos are becoming less taboo and more accepted as cleaner, more
professional shops open up and the artistic boundaries are pushed with
the medium of tattoo art. Also, the advances in color and other tattoo
equipment have made tattoos more than just a symbol or a testimony, but
a real piece of art on skin.