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Tribal Tattoo Designs are prominent in this painting Pict Warriors Preparing for Battle by Jeane Granada CouttsCeltic-like tattoo designs identify these Pict warriors preparing for battle. Oil painting on canvas 30" x 40" (762mm x 1016mm) The Picts were fierce fighters often taking on the Romans. Both men and women fought side by side and naked displaying the tribal tattoos that decorated their bodies. Read our brief introduction to the Picts, the Tattooed Tribes of Scotland
Jeane herself is of Scotts decent, and in celebration of her heritage, researched the aborigines of Scotland, known as the Picts. Her research turned up some surprises about this extremely strong, hardy, and artistic people. (Read our brief introduction to the Picts below)
A brief introduction to the Picts, the Aborigines of ScotlandThe Picts were the tattooed tribal nations of the north of Britain, the area now known as Scotland. In 600 AD, Isadore of Seville makes reference that the Picts took their name from the fact that their bodies had designs pricked into their skin by needles. The Picts were known to have existed from about 7000BC until about the year 845 A.D. An interesting feature of Pict society was that the crown was passed using a matrileal basis; that is to say the crown was passed through the mother, and Pictish kings were not succeeded by their sons, but by their brothers or nephews or male cousins traced through the female line. Historians have traced a complicated series of intermarriages
by seven Pict royal houses. The end of the Pict royal bloodline came when the
crown of Alba and the title "Rex Pictorum", King of the Picts, passed to a
Celtic Scot by the name of Kenneth MacAlpin, a son of a Pictish princess. The Picts were fiercely anti-Roman, and a constant thorn in
the side of occupying Rome. Although Rome engaged the Picts in constant battles,
Rome never succeeded in subjugating either them or their land. The famous
Hadrian's Wall, built by Emperor Hadrian was itself an ultimately futile attempt
to keep the Picts from their frequent forays against the Romans in the south of
Britain. The wall stretched 70 miles from east to west coasts, and extensions
made to it by subsequent Roman leaders were all to no avail |
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