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TATTOOS have been around for more than 5,000 years, with everyone from the Ancient Egyptians to the Incas dabbling in rudimentary ink.

As it sits just under the skin, body art is often lost as a corpse rots away, but in rare cases it remains perfectly preserved several millennia after death.

 Geometric tattoos found across the body of Ötzi the Iceman
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Geometric tattoos found across the body of Ötzi the IcemanCredit: EURAC/M.Samadelli/M.Melis

These tattooed mummies each give us a unique insight into ancient culture and art. We've summed up some of the best below.

Geometric ink on Ötzi the Iceman

A frozen man found mummified in a glacier in the Alps in 1991 has more than 60 tattoos inked 5,300 years ago.

He is near-perfectly preserved, with much of his skin, clothes and hunting gear still intact.

Since the discovery, Ötzi the Iceman has been examined by multiple teams of scientists, with new chest tattoos among the more recent discoveries.

 Ötzi the Iceman following his discovery in the Alps
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Ötzi the Iceman following his discovery in the AlpsCredit: Getty - Contributor

Scientists have previously organised these tatts into 19 different groups, each of which form a set of horizontal or vertical lines.

To make the Neolithic ink, coal dust was rubbed into small wounds similar to the insertion of acupuncture needles.

This would have been a time-consuming practice requiring considerable skill, according to researchers.

Last year, experts suggested the tattoos may have been inscribed as a primitive form of acupuncture.

They cluster around joints and the lower back – where Ötzi suffered from degeneration.

The Neolithic hunter was 40 or 50 years old when he died, and would have walked dozens of miles on a near-daily basis.

 

 Even Brad Pitt's gotten in on the Otzi action. He's got a tattoo of the Iceman's corpse on his left forearm
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Even Brad Pitt's gotten in on the Otzi action. He's got a tattoo of the Iceman's corpse on his left forearmCredit: Getty - Contributor
 A replica of The Lady of Cao
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A replica of The Lady of CaoCredit: Reuters
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Credit: Brown University

Tattoos on the arm of the Lady of Cao

Spiders and mythical beasts printed on ancient sorceress The Lady of Cao

One Moche woman had spiders, snakes, catfish, crabs and even mythical beasts inked on her skin some 1,600 years ago.

Known as the Lady of Cao, scientists found her mummified corpse in El Brujo, Peru.

She was surrounded by gold ornaments and symbols of power that led scientists to believe she was a woman of high status, possibly a sorceress.

The tattoos were achieved using charcoal pigment prodded beneath the skin with a sharp needle or cactus spine.

The Lady of Cao died in her twenties around 450 AD and ruled over a desert valley in ancient Peru.

Her elaborately tattooed body was wrapped in 20 layers of fabric and buried with weapons and gold trinkets.

 The Moche ruler had spiders, snakes, catfish, crabs and even mythical beasts inked on her skin some 1,600 years ago
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The Moche ruler had spiders, snakes, catfish, crabs and even mythical beasts inked on her skin some 1,600 years agoCredit: .
 Gebelein Man A, who was knifed to death 5,000 years ago, has been on display for a century at the British Museum, but no one spotted his tattoos until 2018
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Gebelein Man A, who was knifed to death 5,000 years ago, has been on display for a century at the British Museum, but no one spotted his tattoos until 2018Credit: The British Museum

Wild bull tattoo on Egyptian mummy Gebelein Man A

Some of the world's oldest tattoos are found on the arm of a 5,000-year-old Egyptian mummy on display at the British Museum.

Gebelein Man A died when he was brutally stabbed in the neck sometime between 3341 and 3017 BC.

CT scans last year revealed that a sooty smudge visible on his arm was overlapping designs of a wild bull - a symbol of virility - and a horned barbary sheep.

Gebelein Man A has the oldest known tattoo of real subjects such as animals.

 An infrared image reveals a soot tattoo depicting a wild bull with a tail and horns, below, and a barbary sheep with curving horns and a humped shoulder
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An infrared image reveals a soot tattoo depicting a wild bull with a tail and horns, below, and a barbary sheep with curving horns and a humped shoulderCredit: The British Museum

Daniel Antoine, the British Museum's curator of physical anthropology, said: "We are very confident that this is tattooing and not painted or decorated.

"It would have been carried out with some type of needle made from bone or copper.

The ink-redible ancient history of body art

Scientists have discovered the world's oldest tattoos on the arm of a 5,000-year-old Egyptian mummy on display at the British Museum.

The mummy, known as Gebelein Man A, pushes back evidence of figurative tattoos by 1,000 years.

The oldest tattoos were once thought to belong to a South American Chinchorro mummy who had a moustache-like design inked on his face.

It was initially thought he died in 4,000BC but in 2015 researchers found he is in fact younger than 5,200-year-old frozen mummy Ötzi the Iceman.

Ötzi was found by walkers preserved in a glacier on the Italy-Austria border in 1991.

Imaging using various wavelengths revealed a total of 61 tattoos: Geometric designs of dots, crosses and parallel lines.

Ötzi would have done lots of walking im the Alps and it is thought the tattoos may have been a kind of acupuncture to ease joint pains.

There is evidence of tattooing on mummies found in the Taklamakan Desert in China dating from 1,200 BC.

Modern tattoos of the kind sported by David Beckham are thought to have developed in Polynesian cultures over centuries.

The name comes from the phrase tatatau, meaning to hit or strike, which the British sailor James Cook heard when he reached Tahiti in 1769.

"Incredibly, at over 5,000 years of age, they push back the evidence for tattooing in Africa by a millennium."

It is also the first evidence that Ancient Egyptian men were tattooed as well as women.

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Credit: .

Princess Ukok died in Siberia some 2,500 years ago. Pictured is her corpse, with tattoos clearly visible down her arm

Ancient warrior Princess Ukok's animal tattoos

The ancient corpse of a pot-smoking princess found in Siberia boasts what could be the most well-preserved tattoos ever found.

The ancient royal has been dubbed Princess Ukok, which is the name of the frozen plateau where her body was discovered.

She was a Scythian – an ancient group known for their love of tatts – who died of breast cancer around 2,500 years ago.

Her heavily inked body was buried alongside six horses, coriander seeds and a small pouch of cannabis, indicating her royal status.

The Princess had a unique sense of style, sporting a shaved head and inked images of animals.

Ukok is thought to have ruled a kingdom in the Altai Mountains, a remote area where the borders of modern day Russia, China, Mongolia and Kazakhstan now meet.

 The pot-smoking princess boasts some of the best-preserved tattoos ever found
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The pot-smoking princess boasts some of the best-preserved tattoos ever foundCredit: .
 The Beauty of Loulan
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The Beauty of LoulanCredit: Eric Feng/Flickr

Lunar goddess tatts on the Beauty of Loulan

The Beauty of Loulan was found perfectly preserved in China’s Tarim Basin when she died 3,800 years ago.

The woman’s face is so well preserved from the arid, salty climate that her delicate features remain intact even today.

Her remains sport smooth skin, full lips, dark eyelashes, and a host of tattoos.

They include moons and ovals tattooed on her face.

They suggest Goddess worship in many cultures and must have been important to her to display them so prominently.

Ancient Egyptian mummies removed from coffins spark ‘Curse of the Pharaohs’ fears

You can read more about Ötzi's mystery tattoos here.

And in other tattoo news, this weird soundwave body art can play a dog’s bark, a child’s laugh or even your favourite song from your smartphone.

Last year, a mega Fortnite fan got a huge tattoo of his favourite character.

Why do you think the Ancient Egyptians got inked? Let us know in the comments!


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