PICS: Tattoos discovered on ancient Egyptian mummies

An infrared image of the female mummy known as 'Gebelein Woman' can be seen in this photograph issued by The British Museum in London. Picture: Reuters

An infrared image of the female mummy known as 'Gebelein Woman' can be seen in this photograph issued by The British Museum in London. Picture: Reuters

Published Mar 1, 2018

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London - Researchers have discovered the

oldest figurative tattoos in the world on the upper arms of two

ancient Egyptian mummies, the British Museum said on Thursday.

A male mummy was found to have tattoos depicting a wild bull

and a Barbary sheep on its upper arm, while a female has linear

and S-shaped motifs on its upper arm and shoulder.

The artworks appeared as dark smudges in natural light but

researchers at the British Museum and Oxford University's

Faculty of Oriental Studies found the tattoos in 2017 with

infrared photography.

"It's actually providing completely new insights into the

use of tattooing," Daniel Antoine, curator of physical

anthropology at the British Museum, told Reuters.

"The location of these tattoos suggests they were designed

to be highly visible on the upper arm and the shoulder," he

said, adding that the discoveries push back by 1,000 years

evidence for tattooing in Africa.

An infrared image of the male mummy known as 'Gebelein Man' can be seen in this photograph issued by The British Museum in London. Picture: Reuters

An infrared image of the female mummy known as 'Gebelein Woman' can be seen in this photograph issued by The British Museum in London. Picture: Reuters

An infrared image of the male mummy known as 'Gebelein Man' can be seen in this photograph issued by The British Museum in London. Picture: Reuters

The mummies were unearthed 100 years ago in the Egyptian

town of Gebelein, around 40km south of modern-day

Luxor. They date to 3351 to 3017 BC, which is the Predynatic

period before Egypt was unified by the first Pharaoh.

Researchers said the female tattoos may have denoted status,

bravery or magical knowledge, while the male's were likely

symbols of virility and strength.

Prior to the discovery, archaeologists believed tattooing in

Egypt was only performed on women, as tattoos were only depicted

on female figurines of the period.

The oldest surviving tattoos are geometric designs on a

mummified corpse known as Otzi, who lived around 5,300 years ago

and was discovered preserved in the Italian Alps in 1991.

The research, lead by Antoine and Oxford University's Renee

Friedman, was published in the Journal of Archaeological Science

on March 1. 

Reuters

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