[Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine by George M. Gould]@TWC D-Link book
Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine

CHAPTER XIV
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The Polynesians have carried this dermal art to an extent which is unequaled by any other people, and it is universally practiced among them.

Quoted by Burke, Sullivan states that the custom of tattooing continued in England and Ireland down to the seventh century.

This was the tattooing with the woad.

Fletcher remarks that at one time, about the famous shrine of Our Lady of Loretto, were seen professional tattooers, who for a small sum of money would produce a design commemorative of the pilgrim's visit to the shrine.

A like profitable industry is pursued in Jerusalem.
Universal tattooing in some of the Eastern countries is used as a means of criminal punishment, the survival of the persecuted individual being immaterial to the torturers, as he would be branded for life and ostracized if he recovered.


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