Tattooing for spiritual and decorative purposes in Japan is thought to extend back to at least the Jōmon or paleolithic  period (approximately 10,000 BC). Some scholars have suggested that the  distinctive cord-marked patterns observed on the faces and bodies of  figures dated to that period represent tattoos, but this claim is by no  means unanimous. There are similarities, however, between such markings  and the tattoo traditions observed in other contemporaneous cultures.
 In the following Yayoi period  (c. 300 BC–300 AD) tattoo designs were observed and remarked upon by  Chinese visitors. Such designs were thought to have spiritual  significance as well as functioning as a status symbol.Starting in the Kofun period  (300–600 AD) tattoos began to assume negative connotations. Instead of  being used for ritual or status purposes, tattooed marks began to be  placed on criminals as a punishment (this was mirrored in ancient Rome, where slaves were known to have been tattooed with mottoes such as "I am a slave who has run away from his master").
 
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