Throughout history, love and sexuality have always played an important role in female tattoo, far more so than in its male equivalent. In tribal societies, tattoo was invariably used to mark and “communicate” the passage of the various phases in a woman’s sexual development: puberty, matrimony, maternity, widowhood... and as a consequence was also considered a fascinating and erotic decorationLove and sex are also the origins of much of contemporary female tattoo. According to Cesare Lombroso (a criminologist living in Turin between 1835 and 1909) “it is in the female sex that the prejudices, rites and ornaments of ancient times, long since abandoned by men, find refuge... and it is above all among the women of primitive populations that traditional tattooing practices have survived. This is not because of any innate barbarism, insensitivity or criminal inclination, but rather for reasons to do with vanity, whim, seduction or simply religious or tribal tradition...” The origins of the ancient and widespread practice of female tattoo, as well as its survival, are confirmed by the many examples still to be found in all the countries where it is known, in the indigenous populations of Oceania, America, Asia and including those of Mediterranean and African religion. Archaeologists working in the Greek islands have uncovered terracotta statuettes dating back to the time of Homer. “Almost all of them portray female bodies tattooed with geometrical designs, mostly on the belly and thighs”. One of the most frequently recurring symbols is the triangle, like “the sexual triangle of Iberian and Cypriot idols”, or closer to our own times, among Berber women the “triangle that holds the sacred palm is a symbol of divine fertility “. The triangle is also common to many tribes in which tattoo has kept its magical function (like the tattoo in the form of two interlocking Vs (the seal of Solomon) and still has this same precise meaning: “The Chaouia think, for example, that any woman who hasn’t got a tattoo on her left heel won’t have children”; whilst for the Zaian, it wasn’t important where they had a tattoo, but the needle that did it had to have been used to stitch the sheets of a virgin and the woman doing the tattoo had to have had a lot of children.
This tradition still survives today. Lacassagne (French anthropologist - criminologist, 1843-1924) wrote: “Far more than among young men, for young women tattoo is a bad sign and clearly constitutes a precursor to prostitution”. In “De la prostitution dans la ville de Paris”, 1836, by Parent-Duchatelet, we can read that “... girls who frequent soldiers and sailors have the habit of tattooing figures or inscriptions on the skin. The most typical example is the one reported among prostitutes in Copenhagen in 1891. Among the clients of prostitutes there are a certain number of men who go looking for tattooed women, regardless of the erotic nature of the tattoos themselves”.







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