Sicanje or bocanje was a widespread custom mostly among Roman Catholic Croat teenage girls and boys of the central regions of Bosnia and Herzegovina, as well as the Dalmatia region of Croatia.[1] [2] The practice, which has been widespread among Albanians (see Albanian traditional tattooing) and also Vlach women, native populations of the western Balkans, predates the Slavic migration to the Balkans, and consequently Christianity itself, tracing back to Illyrian times, but scholars documented it in the early 20th century.
Tattooing of young girls and boys in Bosnia and Herzegovina is colloquially called sicanje or bocanje, and it was a widespread custom mostly among Roman Catholic Croats in the central regions.[3] The custom is thought to predate the Slavic migration to the Balkans and even Christianity.[4] [5] In the 1st century BC, the Greek historian Strabo wrote of tattooing among inhabitants of this area, namely Illyrians and Thracians,[6] [7] along with other customs.[8] Until the 20th century, Albanians – Southern and Northern, Catholics and Muslims, males and females – practiced tattooing, a tradition considered to have been handed down from their Illyrian ancestors.[9] [10] Also Vlach women from Greece, Macedonia and Herzegovina also utilized tattoos.[11] Archaeologist Ćiro Truhelka researched these types of tattoos in the late 19th century, becoming one of the first to write about them and to illustrate them.[12] [13] In 1894, a Bosnia-based doctor named Leopold Glück published an article in Vienna titled German: Die Tätowirung der Haut bei den Katholiken Bosniens und der Herzegowina (The Tattooing of Skin Among the Catholics of Bosnia and Herzegovina) detailing the tattoos observed among the locals.[14]
Women in some parts of the country tattooed their hands and other visible parts of the body (such as brow, cheeks, wrist, or below the neck) with Christian symbols and stećak ornaments. Boys were also tattooed with the same symbols mostly above the elbow on the right arm, chest, forehead, and pointer finger. This can be seen today, not only in Bosnia and Herzegovina, but among ethnic Croats from Bosnia and Herzegovina living abroad.[15] [16] Children were tattooed from as early as the age of six, usually during the period between the feast of Saint Joseph in March to the feast of Saint John the Baptist in June.[17]
The most common symbols tattooed were the cross, bracelet, fence, and branches or twigs .[18] The cross had numerous variations, with one of the most common ones included small branch-like lines called "" or "" (pine tree). Bracelet-like designs were sometimes tattooed around the women's wrists, either with crosses or a fence-like motif. There were many non-Christian, or pagan symbols used, the most common consisting of circles believed to be connected to the traditional circle ("") dances of the villages.[19] The pagan and Christian symbols were mixed together indiscriminately, with the first originating from nature and family in Illyrian times, and the other with later adapted Christian meaning. The most common areas to tattoo were the arms and hands (including fingers), and on the chest and forehead.
The custom of tattooing young girls and boys died out after World War II with the establishment of the FPR Yugoslavia, and tattoos done by the traditional method are now only seen on old women.[20] [21] Today, there is a growing trend of modern tattoo artists utilising the traditional designs with contemporary tattooing methods in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina.[22]
In 2013, a documentary titled Sicanje, bocanje, tetoviranje aired on Croatian television channel HRT 3.[23] In 2011, Vice published an article titled The Croatian Tattooed Grandma Cult about the phenomena.[24] Furthermore, Vice Serbia released a story and short film titled Tetovirane bake (Tattooed Grandmas), where they interview various Bosnian Croat women about their tattoos.[25]