ABSTRACT

The history of the tattoo in Western civilization has received sporadic and incomplete scholarly attention going back as far as the first century ad, according to some sources. Writing in 1869, the French naval surgeon Ernest Berchon cites a number of early works on methods of tattoo removal, of which Archigenes (ad 97) appears the earliest. 1 Indeed, if it were not for the researches of medical professionals and criminologists from the mid-nineteenth century onwards, the history of tattooing in Europe and North America during this period would be considerably more opaque. 2 The sudden effusion of publications in medical, military and criminological journals from c. 1850 into the early twentieth century reveals the emergence of strong scholarly interest in tattooing. These studies focused predominantly upon typically segregated social milieux — the hospital, barracks and prison — contexts that provided ample opportunity for research to be carried out amongst isolated populations. Occasionally, they also analysed tattoos of colonized peoples. But they mainly concerned tattoos of soldiers or sailors, or else of social 'deviants' — prostitutes, criminals or those whose reckless behaviour led them to a clinic for treatment.