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Tayu were high-class courtesans in Japan. Cultural aspects of tayu traditions continue to be preserved to this day. The Tayu arose in the Edo period, 1600 - 1868. At this time, laws were passed restricting brothels to walled districts set some distance from the city center. In the major cities these were the Shimabara in Kyoto, the Shimmachi in Osaka, and in Edo (present-day Tokyo), the Yoshiwara. These rapidly grew into large, self-contained "Pleasure Quarters" offering all manner of entertainments. Within, a courtesan's birth rank held no distinction but there arose a strict hieirarchy according to beauty, character, educational attainments and artistic skills. Tayu were the highest rank of courtesan or prostitute, and were considered suitable for the daimyo. Only the wealthiest and highest ranking could hope to patronise them. The Edo period (æ±æ¸æä»£, Edo-jidai) is a division of Japanese history running from 1600 to 1867. ...
Shimabara is a district of Kyoto. ...
This page is about the city Kyoto. ...
Osaka Castle Location in Japan Osaka Aquarium (Kaiyukan) Osaka railway station View from Osaka Castle. ...
Edo (Japanese: æ±æ¸, literally: bay-door, estuary), once also spelled Yedo or Yeddo, is the former name of the Japanese capital Tokyo. ...
This movie set in Kyoto recreates the appearance of a red-light district such as Yoshiwara. ...
To entertain their clients, Tayu practiced the arts of dance, music, poetry and calligraphy, and an educated wit was considered essential to sophisticated conversation. The isolation within the closed districts resulted in the Tayu becoming highly ritualised in many ways and increasingly removed from the changing society. Strict etiquette ruled the standards of appropriate behavior. Their speech preserved the formal court standards rather than the common language. A casual visitor would not be accepted; their clients would summon them with a formal invitation, and the Tayu would pass through the streets in a formal procession with a retinue of servants. The costumes worn became more and more ornate and complex, culminating in a style with 8 or more pins and combs in the hair, and many prescribed layers of highly ornamented garments derived from those of the earliest Tayu from the early Edo period. Similarly, the entertainments offered also were derived from those of the original Tayu generations before. Ultimately, the culture of the Tayu grew increasingly rarified and remote from everyday life, and their clients dwindled. The rise of the Geisha ended the era of the Tayu. Geisha practiced the common entertainments enjoyed by the people of that time, and were much more accessible to the casual visitor. Their popularity grew rapidly and eclipsed that of the Tayu. The last recorded Tayu was in 1761. The few remaining women still currently practicing the arts of the Tayu do so as a preservation of cultural heritage, rather than as a profession or lifestyle. Women dressed as maiko (apprentice geisha) in Kyoto, Japan Geisha (è¸è
person of the arts) are traditional Japanese artist-entertainers. ...
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External links
Tayu no Dochu Tayu : A Courtesan Visits Los Angeles Women of the Pleasure Quarters |