, limestone grave marker (?), 610-550 BC The Iron Age Daunian material culture persisted quite different from their
Italic neighbours until the region was encompassed into the
Roman Republic in the 3rd century BC. This cultural distinction was due in part because of their geographical area, which was distant from the Ancient Greek centres of
Magna Graecia, and in part because of their close relations with the peoples on the other coast of the
Adriatic Sea with whom they retained direct contacts across the sea.
Tattooing The custom of tattooing among Daunians can be detected in
Daunian stelae and in matt-painted
ollae. It can also be conceivably identified on the wall of a late 4th-century tomb chamber from
Arpi, in which a painting shows tattoos on the arms of the 'priestess' riding a
quadriga. The tattooing practice is most often found in preliterate tribal communities, with women playing the chief role, both performing the ritual of applying tattoos and wear them. Among other things the tattoos may have been a symbol of sexual maturity, ancestry and tribal affiliations, as well as religious beliefs. Forearms were the most common tattooed parts of the body among Daunians. In the
Graeco-Roman world, tattooing was conceived as a barbaric custom that was used exclusively for punitive or ownership purposes, but the Daunian perception of tattooing was different, as it was a deep and long-standing cultural embodiment distinguishing them from other cultures, as occurred among
Illyrians and
Thracians. The writings of ancient authors like
Herodotus (5th century BC) and
Strabo (1st century BC) show that, in the Balkans, tattooing was in the purview of the elites; iconographic and literary sources reveal in particular that it was restricted to the female members of society. In the western Balkans, isolated from outside influences, the practice of tattooing continued until the early 20th century in
Albania and
Bosnia, regions that in antiquity were part of the area of
Illyria, where Daunian groups conceivably originated from. Besides of religious beliefs, the accounts of the early 20th century reveal that the tattooing custom in the Balkans was originally connected with a fertility rite, being associated with the beginning of
menstruation, thus proving that a girl had become a woman. == See also ==