Wednesday 2 October 2013

Inside Hand Tattoos For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing

Inside Hand Tattoos Biography

Source:- Google.com.pk


There seems to have been no widely distributed tattoo design among Eskimo women, although chin stripes (tamlughun) were more commonly found than any other. Chin stripes served multiple purposes in social contexts. Most notably, they were tattooed on the chin as part of the ritual of social maturity, a signal to men that a woman had reached puberty. Chin stripes also served to protect women during enemy raids. Traditionally, fighting among the Siberians and St. Lawrence Islanders took place in close quarters, namely in various forms of semi-subterranean dwellings called nenglu. Raiding parties usually attacked in the early morning hours, at or before first light, hoping to catch their enemies while asleep. Women, valued as important "commodities" during these times, were highly prized for their many abilities. Not being distinguishable from the men by their clothing in the dim light of the nenglu, their chin stripes made them more recognizable as females and their lives would be spared. Once captured, however, they were bartered off as slaves.

More generally, the chin stripe aesthetic was important to the Diomede Islanders living in Bering Strait. Ideally, thin lines tattooed onto the chin were valuable indicators for choosing a wife, according to anthropologist Sergei Bogojavlensky:

"It was believed that a girl who smiled and laughed too much would cause the lines to spread and get thick. A girl with a full set of lines on the chin, all of them thin, was considered to be a good prospect as a wife, for she was clearly serious and hard working."

Veghaq or fluke tails, Indian Point, Siberia, 1901A full set of lines was not only a powerful physical statement of the ability to endure great pain but also an attestation to a woman's powers of "animal" attraction. In the St. Lawrence and Chaplino Yupik area of the early 20th century, women painted and tattooed their faces in ritual ceremonies in order to imitate, venerate, honor, and/or attract those animals that "will bring good fortune" to the family. Waldemar Bogoras noted, "[i]t is a mistake to think that women are weaker then men in hunting-pursuits," since as a man wanders in vain about the wilderness, searching, women "that sit by the lamp are really string, for they know how to call the game to the shore."

Bering Strait Eskimo myths tell that the spirit and life force of the whale is a young woman: "Her home is the inside of the whale, her burning lamp its heart. As the young woman moves in and out of the house doorway, so the giant creature breathes."

Tattoos assured a kind of spiritual permanency: they lured into the house a part of the sea, and along with that, part of its animal and spiritual life. Not surprisingly, an unusual event, such as the capture of a whale by a young woman's father, was commemorated on her cheek(s) by fluke tails, which advertised her father's prowess to members of Asiatic Eskimo society.

Inside Hand Tattoos For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Inside Hand Tattoos For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Inside Hand Tattoos For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Inside Hand Tattoos For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Inside Hand Tattoos For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Inside Hand Tattoos For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Inside Hand Tattoos For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Inside Hand Tattoos For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Inside Hand Tattoos For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Inside Hand Tattoos For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Inside Hand Tattoos For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing

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