Archive Note
Nubian tattooing is known mainly from bioarchaeology, and the largest survey is the 2025 study by Anne Austin of the University of Missouri to St. Louis and colleagues, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Her team examined 1,048 mummies from three Sudanese sites, Kulubnarti, Ghazali, and Mis Island, and identified 27 tattooed individuals spanning roughly 350 BCE to 1400 CE, reading the marks through infrared and multispectral imaging that picks up pigment invisible to the naked eye. In the pre-Christian phase the tattoos appear mostly on adult women as small geometric clusters of dots on the hands and forearms. After Nubia converted to Christianity around the sixth century the practice broadened to men, women, and children, including an individual estimated at about eighteen months old, with motifs shifting to crosses, eagles, and Coptic monograms placed on more visible parts of the body. The pattern marks Nubia as its own tattooing culture, and one where Christianity reshaped the custom rather than ending it.