The most common patterns of Albanian traditional tattoos are suns (also stars), moons (also crescents), and crosses. Many of them also appear on Albanian traditional art (graves, jewellery, embroidery, and house carvings). They represent celestial, light, fire and hearth worship, expressing the favor of the light within the
dualistic struggle between light and darkness in
Albanian mythology.
Edith Durham, who extensively studied Balkan traditional tattooing with fieldwork research, was able to fully explain the patterns of traditional tattoos only after asking Albanians of
Thethi–Shala for a description of all the little lines (or twigs) that accompanied a semicircle incised on an old gravestone. They answered that those twigs were "the light coming from the Moon, of course". For Albanians, the twigs or little lines were the traditional way to represent light, emanated from the Sun (
Dielli) and from the Moon (
Hana), which was often represented as a
crescent. So, the patterns of Catholic tattoos in Bosnia, which until then were known as "circles, semicircles, and lines or twigs", eventually were clearly explained as compounds of rayed (emanating light) suns, moons, and crosses, from an expression of Nature-worship and hearth-worship. Furthermore, the crosses (including
swastikas) have been explained by scholars as symbols of the deified Fire (
Zjarri), and in particular of the fire god
Enji, who evidently was the most prominent god of the
Albanian pantheon in Roman times by
interpreting Jupiter, when week-day names were formed in the
Albanian language as Thursday () was dedicated to him. ==Geographic distribution==