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An interesting fact about history from my region

So my grandma has tattoos, but not the usual ones (if I told her I want to get one she would freak out). She has one cross on each arm right above her hand, but they are barely visible. She did them with other girls from the village when she was a child (6-7 years old) with coal from the train and needles. Her older sister even has her name on one arm. I asked her how did they even think of doing that and she said most of the elderly women back then had them. Some even had intricate designs on their hands. And there was one with designs on her forehead too. That seemed weird to me because I've never seen any photo of tattooed women from here or learned about this "trend". She said it's probably from the Turks. I'm not sure as I don't know their traditions, I think they also used henna in Turkey like for weddings. But I've also read about some Balkan traditional tattoos that were usually for girls to show they are Christians back when the Ottomans would abduct them. It was both for protection to make them "undesirable" and to remind them of their real ancestry. I'm wondering if they also did that for the same reasons here, especially the crosses.
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ElRengo · 70-79, M
I´ve seen that and other kind of tattoos at various Near East and some fewer East Europe cultures, mostly in older women.
HannibalAteMeOut · 22-25, F
@ElRengo interesting, did you personally meet these women? Especially in Europe it seems like now it's a forgotten thing.
ElRengo · 70-79, M
@HannibalAteMeOut
Yes.
The field side of my work sent me sometimes to places where old cultural behaviours and even dialects are still seen / heard.
And also yes, they mostly remain in older people and forgotten for newer generations.
One of my grandmothers had some of them.
Her explanation about when I was a kid (but I barely remember it) was that such "signs" were more in the domain of the domestic tradditional "medicine".
Their own older ones (mostly women) draw them with a finger over scars and wounded areas (once the external seemed healed) to promote recovery and prevent remaining effects.
Of course I have no way to know if her memories about are representative of what they meant for wider populations / cutures. But the ones I´ve seen looked simmilar.
HannibalAteMeOut · 22-25, F
@ElRengo that's fascinating, the way they were even used for healing purposes! I hope it's written down somewhere, it would be a shame if it all gets lost.
ElRengo · 70-79, M
@HannibalAteMeOut
A whole domain of knowledge, the domestic, the implicit is or was kept / coded but also hidden in small signs / gestures, use of side / double meaning of words and dialect variations.
The consolidation / filtering on texts and legends (to become their cannonical versions) conspired to make them unseen. Also and same the long transition from oral to written cultures.
And that a lot of all that was keeped by common people and not by / about the "higher" ones that "made history".
I know told by friends that there is a relatively new domain and interest about the domestic culture in archeology and anthropology. That will perhaps help.
HannibalAteMeOut · 22-25, F
@ElRengo it's always interesting to learn about the every day life of people in the past, politics and wars are a big part of history too of course, but the little habits is what's more touching to learn about.
ElRengo · 70-79, M
@HannibalAteMeOut
And perhaps even more significative for their deep culture than the Big Narratives.