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Criminal tattoo
Australia
The prisoners who were transported from Britain to the penal colonies of Australia between 1787 and 1867 were sometimes tattooed with the intention of the brands means misfortune, for example D for deserter. However, prisoners often modified these tattoos to hide the original design or to express ironic or rebellious messages.
North America
Common tattoos are names of family or gang members, symbols of aggression, advertising tattoos a particular skill, or a religious image. One of the most popular tattoo is the tattoo tear, which usually indicates the wearer has killed.
Africa
Egyptian tattoos
Eye of Horus Protection from enemies / back-stabbers
Anubis Protection of death
Ankh Eternal life
Russia and the former Soviet republics
Main article: Vor v Zakone and Russian mafia
Criminal Tattoos
Russian criminal tattoos have a complex system of symbols that can provide very detailed information on the carrier. Not only do the symbols carry meaning but the area of the body that is also can be significant. The initiation tattoo of a new gang member is usually placed on the chest and may incorporate a rose. A Rose in the chest is also used within the Russian mafia. Use of false or unearned tattoos is punishable in the criminal underworld. Tattoos can be removed voluntarily (for loss of rank, new affiliation, "lifestyle change ", etc) for a dust cloth over the skin surface magnesium, which dissolves the skin with pain signals with caustic soda burns. This powder is obtained by producing "light alloy such as lawn mower housing, and is a commodity jail.
Tattoos performed in a Russian prison have a distinct blue color and usually appear somewhat blurred because of the lack of instruments to draw fine lines. The ink is often created from from burning the heel of a shoe and mixing the soot with urine, and injected into the skin using a sharpened guitar string attached to an electric razor.
In addition to voluntary tattooing, tattoos are used to stigmatize and punish individuals within the criminal society. These can be placed on an individual stops pay debts in card games, or they break the penal code, and often have very blatant sexual images, embarrassing the user. The victim of a tattoo applied force, however, required to pay the tattoo artist of his work.
The tattoos on the forehead usually forcibly applied, and designed for both humiliate the bearer and warn others about him or her. They usually consist of insults on the ethnicity of the bearer, sexual orientation, or perceived collusion with the prison authorities. It may indicate that the bearer is a member of a political group considered offensive by other prisoners (eg Vlasovite), or been convicted for a crime (such as child rape) which is disapproved of by other criminals.
Tattoos that consist of declarations or anti-authoritarian policies known as "smile." They are often tattooed on the stomach of a thief in the law as a means of acquiring status in the criminal community. A Russian criminologist, Yuri Dubyagin, said that during the Soviet era, there was "secret orders" that an anti-government tattoo must be 'destroyed surgically, and that this procedure is usually fatal.
The reasons
The churches, forts, etc, are often tattooed on his chest, back or hand. The number of needles or towers can represent the years a prisoner who has been imprisoned, or the number of times they have been imprisoned. The phrase, "The Church is the House of God," often inscribed beneath a cathedral has the metaphorical meaning, "Prison is home to the thief."
Jesus
Barbed wire; a tattoo on the forehead means a life sentence without possibility of parole.
Spider and spider's web: symbolize drug addiction
Cat: a career as a thief, a single cat carrier worked alone, several cats: the carrier was part of a band
Bird on the horizon, the sense of "I was born free and be free"
Dagger through neck: sex offender
Verdugo: Murder
Nazi insignia
SS: never have confessed to anything
See also
Gangs signal
Irezumi, Japanese tattoo
Russian Mafia
Teardrop Tattoo
Triad (underground societies)
Yakuza
HWDP - Polish Against Police initials
References
Citations
^ "Criminal History of Tattoos and Tattoo meanings." of origin. http://www.getinked.co.uk/criminal-tattoo-history.html. Retrieved on 2009.
^ "About - Criminal Tattoo." of origin. http://www.tattoo-designs.dk/prison-tattoos.html. Retrieved on 2009.
Ab ^ Niyi Awofeso (June 2004). "Prison argot and penal discipline." Journal of Mundane Behavior 5 (1). http://mundanebehavior.org/issues/v5n1/awofeso5-1.htm.
^ Http: / / www.phaseloop.com / foreignprisoners / exp-russian_tats.html
Other sources
Baldaev Russian Criminal Tattoo Encyclopedia Volume I Danzig, ISBN 3-88243-920-3
Russian Criminal Tattoo Encyclopedia Volume II Baldaev Danzig, ISBN 978-0955006128
Russian Criminal Tattoo Encyclopedia Baldaev Voume Danzig III, ISBN 978-0955006197
Russian Prison Tattoos: Codes of authority, domination and Struggle Alix Lambert, ISBN 0-7643-1764-4
The Mark of Cain (2000) movie Russian criminal tattoos, DVD, ASIN B0011UBDV8
Categories: Gangs | TattooingHidden categories: Articles who need in-text citations from February 2009 | All articles with unsourced Text | stubs December 2006 | All articles lacking sources About the Author
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