(Redirected from Red-light districts)

The earliest known mention of a red light district, from an 1894 newspaper.
'A' 'red-light district' is a neighborhood where
prostitution and other businesses in the
sex industry flourish. The term "red-light district" was first recorded in the United States in 1894, in an article in ''The Sentinel'', a newspaper in Milwaukee. Other mentions from the 1890s are numerous, and located all over the United States.
[1]
Some say the origin of the red light comes from the red lanterns carried by
railway workers, which were left outside brothels when the workers entered, so that they could be quickly located for any needed train movement. Others speculate that the origin comes from the red
paper lanterns that were hung outside brothels in ancient China to identify them as such. It was said that the lights were thought to be sensual. The color red has been associated with prostitution for millennia: in the Biblical story of
Rahab, a prostitute in
Jericho aided the spies of Joshua and identified her house with a scarlet rope.
In more recent years the red-light district term has its name from the red lights that hang from the district's brothels.
One of the many terms used for a red-light district in
Japanese is , literally meaning "red-line", apparently of independent origins from the English term. Japanese police drew a red line on maps to indicate the boundaries of legal red-light districts. They also have a term , meaning "blue-line", for a non-legal district. In different cultures red-light districts are identified differently, the most common being "district of prostitutes" (e.g., in Hindi - ''Randi Guli'' or Street of Prostitutes; in Bengali - ''Khanki Para'' or Neighbourhood of Prostitutes.)
See also
★
List of red-light districts
★
Sex tourism
★
Gropecunt Lane
References
1. Red Light District 1894
★ Barbara Mikkelson, "Red Light District", http://www.snopes.com/language/colors/redlight.htm, 12 March 1998