Humanities Information

Tribal Tattoo Designs - Why Are They So Popular?


Tribal tattoos have been practiced for thousands of years. Modern people still get them done for many reasons such as to belong to a modern 'tribe' even if they do it on a subconcious level.

Getting tattooed was also seen as a rite of passage into adulthood. A belief goes that if a girl can't take the pain of tattooing, she is un-marriageable, because she will never be able to deal with the pain of child birth. If a boy can't deal with the pain he is considered to be a bad risk as a warrior, and could become isolated from the tribe.

Some primitive tribes use tattooing as a rite of social status. The Maori, of New Zealand use tattooing primarily for this purpose. To the Maori, a person's Moko designs enhanced their prestige and show transition from one social status to another. At its highest level, Moko designs proclaimed the sacredness of chieftanship.

The Hawaiians are prominent among people who have specific tattoo gods. In Hawaii, the images of the tattoo gods are kept in the temples of tattoo priests. Each tattoo session begins with a prayer to the tattoo gods that the operation might not cause death, that the wounds might heal soon, and that the designs might be handsome. Many modern American tattooist will tell you, "When you should get a tattoo, the tattoo god will tell you that it is time."

In the 1970's, American tattooing discovered primitive, tribal tattoos. People wanted simple designs with meaning and they began copying designs, primarily from the islands of the South Pacific. In the past few decades, people of European stock began looking for tribal tattoos of their own origins and created a new form of tattoo commonly known as neo tribal tattoos.

Unique Tattoo Pictures Designs

FREE Tattoo eZine


MORE RESOURCES:

01/10/2025
Mandatory CSR disclosure regulation and stock price synchronicity: evidence from a quasi-natural experiment

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Published online: 10 January 2025; doi:10.1057/s41599-024-04218-4

Mandatory CSR disclosure regulation and stock price synchronicity: evidence from a quasi-natural experiment

more info


01/10/2025
The dynamics of translation from and into Arabic in the Arab world: bibliometric analysis of the Index Translationum UNESCO database (1979–2012)

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Published online: 10 January 2025; doi:10.1057/s41599-024-04225-5

The dynamics of translation from and into Arabic in the Arab world: bibliometric analysis of the Index Translationum UNESCO database (1979–2012)

more info


01/10/2025
Expectations of the older people from housing in the context of aging in place: the case of Afyonkarahisar City (Türkiye)

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Published online: 10 January 2025; doi:10.1057/s41599-024-04235-3

Expectations of the older people from housing in the context of aging in place: the case of Afyonkarahisar City (Türkiye)

more info


01/10/2025
Dams, development and disposability: Eco-anxiety, precarity and submerging voices in Na. D’souza’s Dweepa

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Published online: 10 January 2025; doi:10.1057/s41599-024-04294-6

Dams, development and disposability: Eco-anxiety, precarity and submerging voices in Na. D’souza’s Dweepa

more info


01/10/2025
Acoustic exposure and fire: an analysis of ‘correfocs’ in Barcelona

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Published online: 10 January 2025; doi:10.1057/s41599-024-04264-y

Acoustic exposure and fire: an analysis of ‘correfocs’ in Barcelona

more info


01/10/2025
Multi-echelon reverse logistics network design in the context of circular economy: a Hong Kong case study

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Published online: 10 January 2025; doi:10.1057/s41599-024-04323-4

Multi-echelon reverse logistics network design in the context of circular economy: a Hong Kong case study

more info


01/09/2025
The land left behind: a systematic review of transnational migration-induced change and its implication for rural sustainability in Nepal

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Published online: 09 January 2025; doi:10.1057/s41599-024-04180-1

The land left behind: a systematic review of transnational migration-induced change and its implication for rural sustainability in Nepal

more info


01/09/2025
Revealing the rural multifunctionality declining and its causes in depopulated regions of Northeast China: a case study of Heilongjiang Province

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Published online: 09 January 2025; doi:10.1057/s41599-024-04291-9

Revealing the rural multifunctionality declining and its causes in depopulated regions of Northeast China: a case study of Heilongjiang Province

more info



home | site map | contact us