Everything about Yoshiwara totally explained
» For the Yoshiwara nightclub in the 1927 Fritz Lang film see Metropolis.
Yoshiwara (吉原) was a famous
Akasen district (
red-light district) in
Edo, present-day
Tōkyō,
Japan.
In the early
17th century, there was widespread male and female
prostitution throughout the cities of Kyoto, Edo, and Osaka. To counter this, an order of
Tokugawa Hidetada of the
Tokugawa shogunate restricted prostitution to designated city districts. These districts were
Shimabara for
Kyōto (
1640),
Shinmachi for
Ōsaka (
1624–
1644
The Yoshiwara was home to some 1,750 women in the 1700s, with records of some 3,000 women from all over Japan at one time. The area had over 9,000 women, many of whom suffered from
syphilis, in 1893. These women were often sold to the brothels by their parents at the age of about seven to twelve. If the young girl was lucky, she'd become an apprentice to a high ranking
courtesan. When the girl was old enough and had completed her training, she'd become a courtesan herself and work her way up the ranks. The girls often had a contract to the brothel for only about five to ten years, but massive
debt often kept them in the brothels their entire life. There were very few ways for a young lady to get out of the brothel due to all of her debt.
One way out of Yoshiwara was for a rich man to buy her contract from the brothel and keep her as his personal
concubine. Another would be if she managed to be successful and clever enough that she was able to buy her own freedom. This didn't occur very often, though.
Social classes were not strictly divided in Yoshiwara. A commoner with enough money would be served as an equal to a
samurai. Though it was discouraged for a samurai to enter the Yoshiwara area, they often did so anyway. The only requirement on them was that all their weapons had to be left at the town's entrance gate. Also by law, the
patrons of the brothels were only allowed to stay for a night and a day at a time.
Yoshiwara also became a strong commercial area. The
fashions in the town changed frequently, creating a great demand for merchants and artisans. Traditionally the prostitutes were supposed to wear only simple blue robes, but this was rarely enforced. The high-ranking ladies often dressed in the highest fashion of the time, with bright colorful silk kimonos and expensive and elaborate hair decorations. Fashion was so important in Yoshiwara that it frequently dictated the fashion trends for the rest of Japan.
The area was damaged by an extensive
fire in
1913, then nearly wiped out by an
earthquake in
1923. It remained in business, however, until prostitution was
abolished by the Japanese government in
1958 after the
Second World War.
Edo is now known as the city of
Tokyo, Japan and prostitution is technically illegal, although this supposed illegality has been accomplished by applying a rather strained definition of the term (for example, the definition of "prostitution" for some reason doesn't extend to a "private agreement" reached between a woman and a man in a brothel). The area known as Yoshiwara, near Minowa station on the
Hibiya Line, is now known as
Senzoku Yon-chō-me and still retains a large number of
soaplands and other
façades for sexual services.
People and services
People involved in ("the water trade") would include hōkan (comedians),
kabuki (popular theatre of the time), dancers, dandies, rakes, tea-shop girls,
Kanō (painters of the official school of painting), courtesans who resided in seirō (green houses) and geisha in their okiya houses.
The courtesans would consist of yūjo (women of pleasure/prostitutes), kamuro (young female students), shinzō (senior female students), hashi-jōro (lower-ranking courtesans), kōshi-jōro (high-ranking courtesans just below tayū), tayū (high-ranking courtesans),
oiran ("castle-topplers", named that way for how quickly they could part a
daimyō (lord) from his money), yarite (older chaperones for an oiran), and the yobidashi who replaced the tayū when they were priced out of the market.
In addition to courtesans, there were also
geisha/geiko, maiko (apprentice geishas), otoko geisha (male geishas), danna (patrons of a geisha), and okâsan (geisha teahouse managers). The lines between geisha and courtesans were sharply drawn, however - a geisha was never to be sexually involved with a customer, though there were exceptions.
Yoshiwara Today
At first glance, Yoshiwara today looks very similar to many other neighborhoods of modern
Tokyo. Still, it does retain legacies to its past as it contains commercial establishments engaged in the sex trade. The street grid pattern and the temples and shrines from times past still exist.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Yoshiwara'.
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