Also called dreads, it is a style created by allowing the hair to matt into locks.
Although
popular myth gives Rastafarians credit for inventing the style, it is almost as old as humanity itself. Dreadlocks or similarly matted styles have been worn from Africa all the way to India,
Australia, and even Papua New Guinea.
Indians call them "jata", and they are generally worn by adherents of Shiva.
Some Austro Aboriginies call them "goonut" or "goonat". It was a
popular style around the area now known as Botany Bay in
pre colonial times.
The term "dreadlocks" being used for this style, however, did originate with the Rastafarian movement. To them it symbolizes many things including the rejection of conventional western mainstream beauty standards, and the dread some
may feel when confronted with the
true natural self.
There is some debate as to whether matted locks that are "well manicured" should be called dreadlocks, since they are not
natty and often require consistent maintenance and a higher degree of perceived vanity.