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  1. 14 cze 2019 · It is possible that tattoos also appeared in the Roman army. For example, probably all legionaries and some auxiliary troops (auxilia) who served on Hadrian’s wall had tattoos. Such a thesis was made by antiquity expert Lindsay Allason-Jones.

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  2. 7 kwi 2022 · Roman soldiers did either get a tattoo or a brand on their hand. That permanent mark identified them as soldiers even when they were not wearing armor and made deserting much harder. Apart from these normal tattoos, there were also special tattoos that marked dishonorably discharged soldiers.

  3. 12 lis 2002 · Of the free Roman citizenry, by far the largest group to sport tattoos were the soldiers. Like the gladiators, many soldiers tattooed religious or protective images on their faces. Soldiers also used tattoos as a permanent means of depicting rank or affiliation.

  4. 17 sie 2016 · Roman soldiers were tattooed with permanent dots—the mark of SPQR, or Senatus Populusque Romanus—and used as a means of identification and membership in a certain unit. The Greek word Stizein meant tattoo, and it evolved into the Latin word Stigma meaning a mark or brand.

  5. The tattoos of Roman soldiers served as a means of identification and membership in a particular unit. The permanent dots with SPQR, or Senatus Populusque Romanus, were used to signify the entirety of the Roman state by referencing its two component parts: Rome’s Senate and her people.

  6. 31 mar 2023 · In fact, there is evidence that tattoos in Rome go back even further than that. The first recorded instance of a Roman tattoo comes from the 4th century BC, when a Roman soldier named Publius Decius Mus was tattooed with the words “MOST BELOVED OF THE GODS” on his chest.

  7. 13 cze 2004 · Has anybody here heard or read anything about the use of tattoos in the Roman Empire? Who had them (soldiers, slaves, senators)? What technique was used? What did the tattoos look like (Legion symbols, "SPQR")? Martijn

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