The History of Tattoos and Why They've Become so Popular

woman sitting next to window with tattoos on arms

Stocksy

Is it just us or does it feel like tattoos are everywhere these days? Whether it's a celebrity sporting a new dainty design or a friend showing off their fresh flash artwork, it seems that everyone is getting inked, which had us wondering—when did tattoos become popular, anyway? While we don't have an exact date for the first tattoos, Dr. David Lane, who has done extensive research on tattooing, tells us that they have been around for ages, meaning, for at least 5000 years. "The oldest human remains we've recovered have tattoos on them," he says. To find out more, we spoke to Lane who let us in on everything there is to know about the ancient trend of body art.

Meet the Expert

Dr. David Lane is an assistant professor at Illinois State University, a tattoo scholar, and the author of The Other End of the Needle: Continuity and Change among Tattoo Workers.

The Origin of Tattoos

Dating back to the Neolithic period and indigenous tribes, tattooing was originally practiced for myriad reasons, including during religious ceremonies and as a rite of passage.

Funny enough, explorer Captain James Cook is credited for both the words "taboo" and "tattoo." His sailing voyage around the world led him to the Tahitian and Polynesian islands where tattooing was openly practiced. Inscribing the language into his diary, he introduced both words to the English language after his travels in 1769. The word "tattoo," specifically, has been used ever since to define a permanent mark made by either ingraining pigments or creating scars. In modern days, however, "scarification" is used for the latter instead of the word tattoo.

Despite the common narrative, tattoos were not always considered so taboo. According to Lane, "When we think of this stigma, we also have to remember that there's also a long history of 'elites' getting tattooed," pointing out that a tattoo shop existed as early as the late 1800s on Jermyn Street in London, the heart of the high-end fashion district, and that Winston Churchill and his mother were both inked (yes, really).

The Stigma of Tattoos

Different cultures have different dominating ideas around tattooing that influence how body art is perceived. For example, during Japan's Edo Period, tattooing was used almost exclusively for criminals and prisoners, Lane tells us. "It was intentionally designed to mark people as outsiders."

In America, several factors contributed to the stigma against tattoos. According to Lane, the Nazis use of tattoos during World War II to "put numbers on bodies for bureaucratic record-keeping," the dominating force of the Protestant ethic with its ideas about "purity of the body," and the portrayal of tattooed criminals in both scientific research and media all helped influenced the overarching attitude. Fear of disease became another major factor: "In the 1950s we became increasingly medicalized, and this created a couple of tattoo bans in states as well as cities in the United States," says Lane.

Tattoos In Popular Culture

Given the rich history, perhaps it's not surprising that tattoos have become more and more popular once again. In part, this is because they are being worn by public figures such as celebrities, athletes, and people within the fashion industry. But another important aspect to acknowledge is the activism and awareness-building done by the community of tattoo artists.

According to Lane, tattooers with art degrees such as Cliff Raven and Ed Hardy, "were largely responsible for revamping some of the public imagery of tattooing in the '60s and '70s. In fact, initial tattoo conventions were actually about trying to create a kind of professional image."

Later, tattooers would be at the forefront of the movement to legalize tattooing where it had been outlawed decades earlier, pushing for regulation that would make the practice safe once again. "[Tattooers were like] we need licenses, we need this to be a safe practice, we need some oversight. They were key in that conversation as a group of stakeholders, getting it to be legal again."

"The 1970s was really a time period when we started seeing celebrities that were visibly tattooed," Lane says, citing major stars such as Cher, Peter Fonda, and Janis Joplin as among the first to display their ink. "In a sense, I think we were seeing more of it or more different kinds of bodies; NFL players started getting tattooed on their arms, basketball players, baseball players. As a public, we can see more and more kinds of people with them."

What to Consider Before Getting a Tattoo

Planning your next, or even first tattoo is always fun. For some, it's even difficult to look at a tattoo magazine without getting inspired for another design. Since tattoos are so addictive, it's even more important that you have a plan after you start getting tattooed. Otherwise, you may end up with more than you really want, or designs you later regret.

Byrdie Tip

When considering tattoo placement, keep in mind its visibility. Some prospective employers have policies that prohibit employees from having visible tattoos (e.g. hand, face, and neck tattoos).

Final Thoughts

We know now that not everyone who has them is a criminal or someone with a shady moral compass, which unfortunately, used to be a common stereotype. Tattoos are finally being recognized as a form of self-expression, and design styles have expanded from American traditional tattoos to custom Japanese sleeves, to full body works of elaborate art that could tempt even those most wary of the machine into getting tattooed.

When carefully considered, tattoos can be a wonderful tool of self-expression. "We live in a world where when you go from city to city or town to town or state to state, the kind of consumption that's out there is increasingly similar. There's a McDonald's, a Best Buy, a Michael's Arts and Crafts, and so on. Tattooing isn't like that, there aren't big chains of tattooing, and it provides us with an opportunity to create individuality, it's a way to challenge the fact that the places we visit and consume things are increasingly becoming similar," says Lane.

Related Stories