Sex Brothel

Sex Brothel




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Sex Brothel
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Whorehouse" redirects here. For the TV cartoon episode, see Whorehouse (Beavis and Butt-Head episode) .
For the 2008 film, see Brothel (film) . For other uses, see Brothel (disambiguation) .

^ Frasch, Timo (June 8, 2006). "Die Welt zu Gast bei Freundinnen" . Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). Archived from the original on November 1, 2007 . Retrieved August 18, 2021 .

^ "Reading Times from Reading, Pennsylvania on October 8, 1883 · Page 1" . Newspapers.com . Retrieved 2020-01-31 .

^ "Definition of BROTHEL" . www.merriam-webster.com . Retrieved 2017-03-02 .

^ Carroll 2015 , p. 492.

^ General Assembly resolution 317(IV)

^ "United Nations Treaty Collection" . Archived from the original on 7 September 2015 . Retrieved 29 September 2016 .

^ Decriminalisation integral to the fight against HIV Archived 2014-04-09 at the Wayback Machine , Michael Kirby & Michael Wong, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 13 JULY 2012

^ U.N. Commission Calls for Legalizing Prostitution Worldwide , Amanda Swysgood, CNS News, July 23, 2012

^ Risks, Rights & Health Archived 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine , GLOBAL COMMISSION ON HIV AND THE LAW, UNDP, HIV/AIDS Group, , July 2012, page 43 ("Recommendation"): "Repeal laws that prohibit consenting adults to buy or sell sex, as well as laws that otherwise prohibit commercial sex, such as laws against "immoral" earnings, "living off the earnings" of prostitution and brothel-keeping."

^ "AIDS used as reason to legalize prostitutes" . The Washington Times . Retrieved 2017-03-02 .

^ "European Women's Lobby Européen des femmes: Prostitution in Europe: 60 Years of Reluctance" . Womenslobby.eu . Retrieved 2013-09-03 .

^ "Punish the client, not the prostitute | News | European Parliament" . News | European Parliament . 2014-02-26 . Retrieved 2017-03-02 .

^ "NSW papers urged to cut brothel ads, ABC news" . ABC News (in Bulgarian). Abc.net.au. 2009-05-18 . Retrieved 2011-12-10 .

^ "Entertainment Agency by RideWorks" . rideworks.com . Archived from the original on 2017-02-13 . Retrieved 2017-03-02 .

^ "Queensland sex industry still largely illegitimate, Brisbane Times" . Brisbanetimes.com.au. 2009-08-16 . Retrieved 2011-12-10 .

^ "Prostitution Act 1999" . Queensland Legislation—Queensland Government . Brisbane, Queensland, Australia: Office of the Queensland Parliamentary Counsel. 2017-06-30 . Retrieved 2018-11-06 .

^ "Uruguay and marijuana: a guide to the world's most libertarian countries" . Telegraph.co.uk . Retrieved 2017-03-02 .

^ Koster, Katherine (2015-08-26). "Legal in Theory: Germany's Sex Trade Laws and Why They Have Nothing to Do With Amnesty Sex Work Proposal" . The Huffington Post . Retrieved 2017-03-02 .

^ Murphy 1983 .

^ Roman dead baby 'brothel' mystery deepens , BBC

^ "Historical Timeline--Prostitution" . Should prostitution be legal? . ProCon.org . Retrieved 23 November 2011 .

^ Heckel, N.M. "Sex, Society, and Medieval Women" . River Campus Libraries. Archived from the original on November 2, 2011 . Retrieved 23 November 2011 .

^ Bennett 1989 , pp. 100–134.

^ Karras 1996 , pp. 32–47.

^ "A Brief History of Brothels" . The Independent Newspaper. 21 January 2006 . Retrieved 23 July 2017 . [ dead link ]

^ Walford 1878 , pp. 29–44.

^ Die Sphinx im Freudenhaus, Süddeutsche Zeitung , 17 August 1996. (in German)

^ Roberts, Genevieve (6 November 2009). "Sin city: show celebrates the Paris brothel that was loved by Cary Grant" . The Independent . Retrieved 30 January 2011 .

^ Jackson 2009 , p. 29.

^ Moore, Matthew (1 May 2009). "French brothels 'flourished during the Nazi occupation' " . Daily Telegraph . Retrieved 27 May 2020 .

^ Regan 1992 , p. 37.

^ Levy 2007 , pp. 833–858.

^ "The 8 Famous Prostitutes in Chinese History" . 14 April 2013 . Retrieved 29 September 2016 .

^ Tambe, Ashwini (19 February 2005). "The Elusive Ingenue:A transnational Feminist Analysis of European Prostitution in Colonial Bombay". Gender and Society . 19 (2): 160–79. doi : 10.1177/0891243204272781 . S2CID 144250345 .

^ "Horrors of India's brothels documented" . BBC News . 2013-11-23 . Retrieved 2020-04-02 .

^ Bhandari, Sudhanshu (June 19, 2010). "Prostitution in Colonial India" . Mainstream Weekly . XLVIII (26) . Retrieved October 13, 2012 .

^ "5 Interesting Effects of Poor Market Conditions on Indian Escort Industry—LifeSide" . www.escortgirlgurgaon.com . 2017-07-22 . Retrieved 2017-07-27 .

^ Jump up to: a b Rege, Sharmila (2002). "Conceptualising Popular Culture: 'Lavani' and 'Powada' in Maharashtra". Economic and Political Weekly . 37 (11): 1038–1047. ISSN 0012-9976 . JSTOR 4411876 .

^ Jump up to: a b "The linked caste slavery of the Kolhatis and the Bedias | Savari" . 2014-04-28 . Retrieved 2020-04-02 .

^ Woolston 1969 , p. 38.

^ Woolston 1969 , p. 39.

^ Kneeland & Davis 1913 .

^ McKell 2009 , p. 5.

^ Walkoitz 1982 .

^ Jump up to: a b Rosen 1983 .

^ McKell 2009 , p. 4.

^ Fernando 1963 , p. 254.

^ Webb 2004 , p. 26.

^ Milner Associates , Appendix II.

^ Milner Associates , pp. 111–197.

^ Rosen 1983 , p. 86.

^ Johnson 1911 , p. 98.

^ Jump up to: a b McKell 2009 , p. 6.

^ McKell 2009 , p. 19.

^ McKell 2009 , p. 8.

^ Webb 2004 , pp. 24–33.

^ Jones 2006 , pp. 19–23.

^ Rosen 1983 , p. 87.

^ World Association of International Studies article retrieved on March 10, 2007 Archived June 12, 2007, at the Wayback Machine

^ Windrow 2004 .

^ Japan's 'Comfort Women': It's time for the truth , The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus , March 8, 2007, archived from the original on January 9, 2009 , retrieved 2008-12-15

^ Herbermann 2000 , p. 33–34.

^ Kristof, Nicholas (1995-10-27). "Fearing G.I. Occupiers, Japan Urged Women into Brothels" . New York Times . Retrieved 2013-05-18 .

^ Clough & Halley 2007 , p. 163; Cho 2008 , p. 104.

^ Ghosh, Palash (2013-04-29). "South Korea: A Thriving Sex Industry In A Powerful, Wealthy Super-State" . International Business Times . Retrieved 2013-05-18 .

^ "[EDITORIALS]Deliver them from 'hell' " . Joongang Daily . 2002-10-19. Archived from the original on 2013-06-13 . Retrieved 2013-04-08 .

^ "Filipinas forced into prostitution on the rise in S.Korea" . Hankyoreh . 2009-12-01 . Retrieved 2013-05-18 .

^ Rabiroff, Jon (September 26, 2009). "Philippine Embassy has 'watch list' of suspect bars in South Korea" . Stars and Stripes . Retrieved 2013-05-18 .

^ Rabiroff, Jon (June 18, 2010). "Report on human trafficking cites South Korean juicy bars" . Stars and Stripes . Retrieved 2013-05-18 .

^ "Inside Germany's first sex doll brothel" . 13 January 2018.

^ "Toronto councillor says new sex doll brothel breaks city bylaws" . CBC News. 28 August 2018.

^ "Sex Toy Carmen" . Pryana Rose Brisbane Brothel . Archived from the original on 2018-12-05 . Retrieved 2018-12-05 .

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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Brothel .
Wikiquote has quotations related to Brothel .
A brothel , bordello , ranch , [2] or whorehouse is a place where people engage in sexual activity with prostitutes. [3] However, for legal or cultural reasons, establishments often describe themselves as massage parlors , bars, strip clubs , body rub parlours, studios, or by some other description. Sex work in a brothel is considered safer than street prostitution . [4]

Around the world, attitudes towards prostitution and how and if it should be regulated vary considerably, and have varied over time. Part of the discussion impacts on whether the operation of brothels should be legal, and if so, to what sort of regulations they should be subjected.

On 2 December 1949, the United Nations General Assembly approved the Convention for the Suppression of the Traffic in Persons and of the Exploitation of the Prostitution of Others . [5] The Convention came into effect on 25 July 1951 and by December 2013 had been ratified by 82 states. [6] The Convention seeks to combat prostitution, which it regards as "incompatible with the dignity and worth of the human person." Parties to the Convention agreed to abolish regulation of individual prostitutes, and to ban brothels and procuring . Some countries not parties to the convention also ban prostitution or the operation of brothels. Various United Nations commissions, however, have differing positions on the issue. For example, in 2012, a Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) convened by Ban Ki-moon and backed by United Nations Development Programme and UNAIDS, recommended decriminalization of brothels and procuring. [7] [8] [9] [10]

In the European Union , there is no uniform policy and no consensus on the issue; and laws vary widely from country to country. Netherlands and Germany have the most liberal policies; in Sweden (and in Norway and Iceland outside the EU) the buying, but not selling, of sex, is illegal; in most former Communist countries the laws target the prostitutes; while in countries such as the UK (except Northern Ireland), Italy, and Spain the act of prostitution is not itself illegal, but soliciting, pimping and brothels are, making it difficult to engage in prostitution without breaking any law. The European Women's Lobby condemns prostitution as "an intolerable form of male violence" and supports the "Swedish model". [11]

In February 2014, the members of the European Parliament voted in a non-binding resolution, (adopted by 343 votes to 139; with 105 abstentions), in favor of the "Swedish Model" of criminalizing the buying, but not the selling, of sex. [12]

Prostitution and the operation of brothels is illegal in many countries, though known illegal brothels may be tolerated or laws not strictly enforced. Such situations exist in many parts of the world, but the region most often associated with these policies is Asia . When brothels are illegal they may nevertheless operate in the guise of a legitimate business, such as massage parlors, saunas or spas.

In a few countries, prostitution and operating a brothel is legal and regulated. The degree of regulation varies widely by country. Most of these countries allow brothels, at least in theory, as they are considered to be less problematic than street prostitution . In parts of Australia, brothels are legal and regulated. Regulation includes planning controls and licensing and registration requirements, and there may be other restrictions. However, the existence of licensed brothels does not stop illegal brothels from operating. According to a report in the Australian Daily Telegraph , illegal brothels in Sydney in 2009 outnumbered licensed operations by four to one; [13] [14] while in Queensland only 10% of prostitution happens in licensed brothels, with the rest being either independent sex workers (which is legal) or illegal operations. [15]

The introduction of legal brothels in Queensland was to help improve the safety of sex workers, punters (customers of prostitution), and the community at large and reduce crime. This may have been successful in many ways in Queensland, with The Viper Room being one of the most well known, clean, safe and most highly regarded brothels in Brisbane and Queensland. [16]
The Netherlands has one of the most liberal prostitution policies in the world, and attracts sex tourists from many other countries. [17] Amsterdam is well known for its red-light district and is a destination for sex tourism . Germany also has very liberal prostitution laws. [18] The largest brothel in Europe is the Pascha in Cologne . Although the Dumas Hotel in Butte, Montana operated legally from 1890 until 1982, brothels are currently illegal throughout the United States , except in rural Nevada ; prostitution outside these licensed brothels is illegal throughout the state. All forms of prostitution are illegal in Clark County , which contains the Las Vegas–Paradise metropolitan area .

The earliest recorded mention of prostitution as an occupation appears in Sumerian records from ca. 2400 BCE and describes a temple-bordello operated by Sumerian priests in the city of Uruk. The 'kakum' or temple was dedicated to the goddess Ishtar and housed three grades of women. The first group performed only in the temple sex-rites; the second group had the run of the grounds and catered to its visitors as well, and the third and lowest class lived on the temple grounds but were free to seek out customers in the streets. In later years, sacred prostitution and similar classifications of females were known to have existed in Greece, Rome, India, China, and Japan. [19]

State brothels/bordellos with regulated prices existed in ancient Athens , created by the legendary lawmaker Solon . These brothels catered for a predominantly male clientele, with women of all ages and young men providing sexual services (see Prostitution in ancient Greece ). In ancient Rome female slaves provided sexual services for soldiers, with brothels being located close to barracks and city walls. Brothels existed everywhere. The custom was to display lit candles to signal that they were open.

Before the appearance of effective contraception , infanticide was common in brothels. Unlike usual infanticide—where historically girls were more likely to be killed at birth— a brothel site at Ashkelon in Israel revealed that nearly all of the babies were boys. [20]

Cities first began setting up municipal brothels between 1350 and 1450 CE. [21] Municipalities often owned, operated, and regulated the legal brothels. Governments would set aside certain streets where a keeper could open a brothel. [22] These separate sections of town were the precursors to the so-called "red light districts". Not only did the towns restrict where a keeper could open a brothel, but they also put constraints on when the brothel could be open. For example, most brothels were forbidden to be open for business on Sundays and religious holidays. The reason for this is not completely clear. Some scholars believe these restrictions were enforced to make the prostitutes go to church but others argue that it was to keep parishioners in church and out of the brothels. Either way, it was a day of no revenue for the keeper.

Although brothels were set up as a sexual outlet for men, not all men were allowed to enter them. Clerics, married men, and Jews were prohibited. [23] Often, foreigners such as sailors and traders were the main source of revenue. Local men who frequented the brothels mainly consisted of single men; laws restricting the patrons were not always enforced. Government officials or police would periodically do searches of the brothels to cut down on the number of unpermitted customers. However, since the government was so closely related to the church, common punishments were minor. These restrictions were put in place to protect the wives of married men from any sort of infection.

Multiple restrictions were placed on the residents of brothels. One limitation prohibited prostitutes from borrowing money from their brothel keeper. Prostitutes paid high prices to the brothel keeper for the basic necessities of life: room and board, food, clothes, and toiletries. Room and board was often a price set by the local government but the price for everything else could add up to a common woman's entire earnings. Prostitutes were sometimes prohibited from having a special lover. Some regulations put on prostitutes were made to protect their clients. A woman was kicked out if she was found to have a sexually transmitted disease. Also, the prostitutes were not allowed to pull men into the brothel by their clothing, harass them in the street, or detain them over unpaid debts. [24] Clothing worn by prostitutes was regulated as well and had to be distinguishable from that of respectable women. In some places, a prostitute had to have a yellow stripe on her clothing while in others red was the differentiating color. Other towns required harlots to don special headdresses or restricted the wardrobe of proper women. All restrictions placed on prostitutes were put in place not only to protect them but nearby citizens as well.

Because of a syphilis epidemic throughout Europe, many brothels were shut down during the end of the Middle Ages. [25] This epidemic had been brought on by Spanish and French military pillages after the return of Christopher Columbus from the newly discovered Americas. The church and citizens alike feared that men who frequented brothels would bring the disease home and infect morally upright people.

From the 12th century, brothels in London were located in a district known as the Liberty of the Clink . This area was traditionally under the authority of the Bishop of Winchester , not the civil authorities. From 1161, the bishop was granted the power to license prostitutes and brothels in the district. This gave rise to the slang term Winchester Goose for a prostitute. Women who worked in these brothels were denied Christian burial and buried in the unconsecrated graveyard known as Cross Bones .

By the 16th century, the area was also home to many theatres, (including the Globe Theatre , associated with William Shakespeare ), but brothels continued to thrive. A famous London brothel of the time was Holland's Leaguer . Patrons supposedly included James I of England and his favourite, George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham . It was located in a street that still bears its name [26] and also inspired the 1631 play, Holland's Leaguer . Charles I of England licensed a number of brothels including the Silver Cross Tavern in London, which retains its license to the modern day because it was never revoked.

The authorities of Medieval Paris followed the same path as those in London and attempted to confine prostitution to a particular district. Louis IX (1226–1270) designated nine streets in the Beaubourg Quartier where it would be permitted. In the early part of the 19th century, state-controlled legal brothels (then known as " maisons de tolérance " or " maisons closes ") started to appear in several French cities. By law, they had to be run by a woman (typically a former prostitute) and their external appearance had to be discreet. The maisons were required to light a red lantern when they were open (from which is derived the term red-light district ) and the prostitutes were only permitted to leave the maisons on certain days and only if accompanied by its head. By 1810, Paris alone had 180 officially approved brothels.

During the first half of the 20th century, some Paris brothels, such as le Chabanais and le Sphinx , were internationally known for the luxury they provided. The French government sometimes included a visit to the Chabanais as part of the program for foreign guests of state, disguising it as a visit with the President of the Senate in the official program. [27] The Hotel Marigny , established in 1917 in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris , was one of several that were well known for catering to gay male clients. [28] Premises suspected of being gay brothels, including the Hotel Marigny were, however, subject to freq
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