A red-light district is a neighborhood where prostitution is a common part of everyday life. The term was first recorded in the United States and derives from the practice of placing a red light in the window to indicate to customers the nature of the business.
There are several explanations as to why red lights gained this
particular meaning. According to one theory, it is based on the
Biblical story of Rahab, a prostitute in Jericho who aided the spies
of Joshua and identified her house with a scarlet rope.
In the Red Light Districts of Amsterdam you will find, on any given
day, hundreds of girls offering sex for money. Nowhere else on earth
are the women so straightforwardly on display, sitting sparingly
attired on stools behind windows. Nowhere else except in the other
main Dutch cities, because this conspicuous window prostitution
is distinct to the Netherlands, as distinct as the habit that many
of its residents have for living their lives behind open curtained
windows.
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