Purulent and Marquesan tattoo: Difference between pages

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(Created page with "<html><div class="mw-content-ltr" dir="ltr" id="mw-content-text" lang="en"><p><b>Pus</b> is a whitish-yellow or yellow substance produced during <a href="/index.php?title=Inflammation" title="Inflammation">inflammatory</a> responses of the body that can be found in regions of pyogenic bacterial infections. An accumulation of pus in an enclosed tissue space is known as an abscess. A visible collection of pus within or beneath the epidermis, on the other hand, is known as...")
 
(Page conversion via llm-mediawiki-rev -jwm)
 
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<html><div class="mw-content-ltr" dir="ltr" id="mw-content-text" lang="en"><p><b>Pus</b> is a whitish-yellow or yellow substance produced during <a href="/index.php?title=Inflammation" title="Inflammation">inflammatory</a> responses of the body that can be found in regions of pyogenic bacterial infections. An accumulation of pus in an enclosed tissue space is known as an abscess. A visible collection of pus within or beneath the epidermis, on the other hand, is known as a pustule or pimple.
<div style="float:right;">[[File:Ka%27ava-1.gif|311px|alt=Ka'ava-1.gif]]</div>
</p><p>Pus consists of a thin, protein-rich fluid known as liquor puris and dead neutrophils, which are part of the body's innate immune response. Neutrophils are stored in bone marrow and are released when the need to fight <a href="/index.php?title=Infection" title="Infection">infection</a> arises, usually triggered by cytokine release from macrophages that sense invading organisms. They then travel to the infected tissue, engulfing and killing <a href="/index.php?title=Bacteria" title="Bacteria">bacteria</a>. After it has killed a bacterium, the neutrophil dies. These dead cells are then phagocytosed by macrophages, which break them down further. Pus, therefore, is the creamy material composed of these dead neutrophils.
</p><p>Neutrophils are the most abundant type of leukocyte in human blood, for anywhere from 40% to 75% of leukocytes.
</p><p>When seen in a wound or dry skin, pus indicates it is infected, and should be cleaned with antiseptic.
</p><p>Something that creates pus is called suppurative, pyogenic, or purulent. If it creates mucus as well as pus, it is called "Mucopurulent".
</p><p>Despite normally being of a whitish-yellow hue, changes in the color of pus can be observed under certain circumstances. Blue pus is found in certain infections of Pseudomonas aeruginosa as a result of the pyocyanin bacterial pigment it produces; amebic abscesses of the liver, meanwhile, produce brownish pus.
</p>
<h2> <span class="mw-headline" id="See_Also">See Also</span></h2>
<ul><li><a href="/index.php?title=Boil" title="Boil">Boil</a>
</li><li><a href="/index.php?title=Infection" title="Infection">Infection</a>
</li><li><a href="/index.php?title=Bacteria" title="Bacteria">Bacteria</a>
</li><li><a href="/index.php?title=Lymph" title="Lymph">Lymph</a>
</li></ul>


The '''Marquesas Islands''' are an island group in French Polynesia. The islands are approximately 1,000 miles (1,600 km) northeast of [[Tahiti]], and were first settled almost 2000 years ago by the Polynesians.


</div></html>
The islands deserve a mention here as the '''Marquesan tattoo'''ing tradition has had a great influence on today's artists.
 
==Contents==
 
# [[#Marquesan_Tattoo_Tradition|Marquesan Tattoo Tradition]]
# [[#Hand_Tattoos|Hand Tattoos]]
# [[#Marquesan_Motifs|Marquesan Motifs]]
# [[#Ear_Tattooing|Ear Tattooing]]
# [[#Other_Tattoo_Traditions|Other Tattoo Traditions]]
# [[#Related_Articles|Related Articles]]
# [[#External_Links|External Links]]
 
== Marquesan Tattoo Tradition ==
Boys received their first tattoos in their teens in a ritual setting, and by old age often had tattoos all over their bodies. Women were also tattooed, but nowhere near as extensively as the men.
 
The designs share many symbolic motifs, but were never copied entirely; every individual's tattoos were different and signified his position in the family.
 
The sailors on board the ships of Captain [[James Cook]] and other explorers from the West brought tattooing back with them, influenced by the designs they had seen on the inhabitants of these islands. These early tattoos, on the bodies of sailors, began the reintroduction of tattooing to the West.
 
While tattooing is still performed on the Marquesas Islands, the images no longer carry their former significance, and are generally done with a [[Tattoo Machine|tattoo machine]] rather than by the traditional method.
 
== Hand Tattoos ==
'''Hand tattooing''' is an important part of Marquesan tattooing, containing both specific iconography and individualized application. While some designs are male or female oriented, there is some interchange between the two.
 
{| class="wikitable"
|[[File:Marquesan_hand_tattoo-1.gif|200px]]
|Male hand tattoos
|-
|[[File:Marquesan_hand_tattoo-2.gif|150px]]
|Female hand tattoos.
|}
 
== Marquesan Motifs ==
 
The following are a few examples on hands of '''Marquesan tattoo motifs''':
 
{| class="wikitable"
|[[File:Fanaua-1.gif|150px]]
|''Fanaua is a kind of evil spirit
|-
|[[File:Nutu_Kaha-1.gif|147px]]
|''Nutu Kaha symbolizes a mouth or muzzle, and has a number of different versions.
|-
|[[File:Piaotiu-1.gif|150px]]
|''Piaotiu means "to fold or to make into bundles."
|-
|[[File:Pohu-1.gif|150px]]
|''Pohu is a legendary character.
|-
|[[File:Poka%27a-1.gif|150px]]
|''Poka'a symbolizes a wooden sholder rest used for carrying a pole
|-
|[[File:Ka%27ava-1.gif|150px]]
|''Ka'ava, meaning "ridge pole," often running centrally down the hand.
|-
|[[File:Ka%27ake-1.gif|150px]]
|''Ka'ake represents the armpit, but it is not tattooed on the armpit per se
|-
|[[File:Kea-1.gif|150px]]
|''Kea can represent the woodlouse, the tortoise or a carved plaque of a tortoise shell and has a number of variations.
|-
|[[File:Koua%27ehi-1.gif|150px]]
|''Koua'ehi represents coconut leaves.
|-
|[[File:Po%27i%27i-1.gif|150px]]
|''Poi'i represents a coiled shellfish and has many versions.
|-
|[[File:Hei_ta%27vahna-1.gif|60px]]
|''Hei ta'vahna representing a crown of cock's feathers, sometimes tattooed across the palm.
|-
|[[File:Mata-1.gif|150px]]
|''Mata represents eyes and has many variations.
|}
 
== Ear Tattooing ==
 
Tattooing of the ear (puaina) was usually, but certainly not always, limited to women.
 
{| class="wikitable"
|[[File:Marquesan_ear_tattoo-1.gif|664px]]
|Common ear tattoo motifs
|-
|[[File:Omuo_puaina-1.gif|126px]]
|Omuo Piana is similar to a carved bone earring.
|}
 
== Other Tattoo Traditions ==
* Shoulders were commonly tattooed in Marquesan culture. This particular one is a band across the arm, just below the fall of the shoulder, on a woman of Tai-Pi Vai, Nuku Hiva.
 
[[File:Marquesan_shoulder_tattoo-1.gif|188px|(based on a sketch by E. S. Handy)]]
 
* Traditionally some Marquesan women tatttoed their lips, also called koniho.
 
[[File:Koniho.jpg|431px|]]
 
== Related Articles ==
* [[Tribal]]
* [[Polynesia]]
 
== External Links ==
* [http://www.airtahitimagazine.com/us_version/tahiti_mag.asp?num=24&art=2 Marquesan Tattooing - Air Tahiti magazine article]

Latest revision as of 07:52, 17 September 2023

Ka'ava-1.gif

The Marquesas Islands are an island group in French Polynesia. The islands are approximately 1,000 miles (1,600 km) northeast of Tahiti, and were first settled almost 2000 years ago by the Polynesians.

The islands deserve a mention here as the Marquesan tattooing tradition has had a great influence on today's artists.

Contents

  1. Marquesan Tattoo Tradition
  2. Hand Tattoos
  3. Marquesan Motifs
  4. Ear Tattooing
  5. Other Tattoo Traditions
  6. Related Articles
  7. External Links

Marquesan Tattoo Tradition

Boys received their first tattoos in their teens in a ritual setting, and by old age often had tattoos all over their bodies. Women were also tattooed, but nowhere near as extensively as the men.

The designs share many symbolic motifs, but were never copied entirely; every individual's tattoos were different and signified his position in the family.

The sailors on board the ships of Captain James Cook and other explorers from the West brought tattooing back with them, influenced by the designs they had seen on the inhabitants of these islands. These early tattoos, on the bodies of sailors, began the reintroduction of tattooing to the West.

While tattooing is still performed on the Marquesas Islands, the images no longer carry their former significance, and are generally done with a tattoo machine rather than by the traditional method.

Hand Tattoos

Hand tattooing is an important part of Marquesan tattooing, containing both specific iconography and individualized application. While some designs are male or female oriented, there is some interchange between the two.

Marquesan hand tattoo-1.gif Male hand tattoos
Marquesan hand tattoo-2.gif Female hand tattoos.

Marquesan Motifs

The following are a few examples on hands of Marquesan tattoo motifs:

Fanaua-1.gif Fanaua is a kind of evil spirit
Nutu Kaha-1.gif Nutu Kaha symbolizes a mouth or muzzle, and has a number of different versions.
Piaotiu-1.gif Piaotiu means "to fold or to make into bundles."
Pohu-1.gif Pohu is a legendary character.
Poka'a-1.gif Poka'a symbolizes a wooden sholder rest used for carrying a pole
Ka'ava-1.gif Ka'ava, meaning "ridge pole," often running centrally down the hand.
Ka'ake-1.gif Ka'ake represents the armpit, but it is not tattooed on the armpit per se
Kea-1.gif Kea can represent the woodlouse, the tortoise or a carved plaque of a tortoise shell and has a number of variations.
Koua'ehi-1.gif Koua'ehi represents coconut leaves.
Po'i'i-1.gif Poi'i represents a coiled shellfish and has many versions.
Hei ta'vahna-1.gif Hei ta'vahna representing a crown of cock's feathers, sometimes tattooed across the palm.
Mata-1.gif Mata represents eyes and has many variations.

Ear Tattooing

Tattooing of the ear (puaina) was usually, but certainly not always, limited to women.

Marquesan ear tattoo-1.gif Common ear tattoo motifs
Omuo puaina-1.gif Omuo Piana is similar to a carved bone earring.

Other Tattoo Traditions

  • Shoulders were commonly tattooed in Marquesan culture. This particular one is a band across the arm, just below the fall of the shoulder, on a woman of Tai-Pi Vai, Nuku Hiva.

(based on a sketch by E. S. Handy)

  • Traditionally some Marquesan women tatttoed their lips, also called koniho.

Koniho.jpg

Related Articles

External Links