Latino Tattoos (Spanish Latino Tattoos, (Latin Latina, English lettering tattooed Latino style, is a term that is historically denoted relation to the ancient Latina tattoo tribe, who were an ancient Italic people who migrated to central Italy, in the 2nd millennium B.C and spread the body art language in Europe and then a special tattoo language in the Americas. Most usage, the word Latino Tattoos, it is the literal translation of the English word for Latin and are interchangable with eachother.
 Most often it refers to inhabitants of Latin America, and their descendants in the United States or relating to the language that developed from Latin, such as Italian, French, Spanish, and Portuguese, or to the peoples that speak them. . It is the abbreviated use of 'Latin-American'; Francophone Canadians are not normally referred to as Latino Tattoos, even though they speak a Romance language. The concept of "Famous Latinos Tattooed in America" was coined by the French in the 1800s as a means of legitimizing French influence over the Spanish-speaking countries of the Americas; compare Latin Europe. Napoleon III, cited Amérique Latine and Indochine as goals for expansion during his reign. He proposed the Monarchy in Mexico headed by the Austrian Archduke Maximillian or Maximilian I of Mexico. The term emphasized a common culture and history of the Romance language-speaking countries, as opposed to the Germanic language-speaking countries of "Anglo-America".
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