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Question: When did prostitution start!?
When was it first seen and where at!?Www@QuestionHome@Com


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Prostitution is referred to as the oldest profession!. It goes back to the beginning of time!. For women that were not married or were widowed, there was often no way to earn a living!. Women were often not allowed to own property or learn a trade!. There was not such thing as social assistance, it was every person for themselves!. So, since men have always been at the mercy of their urges, women learned they could sell the use of their bodies to get food, shelter and clothing!. In some places it was even considered an honest trade!.

In modern society that survival necessity has been largely removed!. At least in the western world there's really no reason someone has to do this to survive!. However, men are still pigs and will pay!. So now it's become a way for quick cash for addicts or women that have no real belief in their ability to earn a decent living legitimately!.Www@QuestionHome@Com

In ancient times and before the time of Christianity it was a noble calling, a needed function and not thought of as evil & foul or the butt of too easy jokes and snickers on late night talk shows!. Before Christianity took rtoot people thought it was o-k to have sex!. Now only sex w/ guilt shame & remorse is accepted!.
Prostitution started in ancient times and for historical purposes was first noted by the Phoenicians and then the Greeks!. Quite honestly it was thought better than 'horny' men go worship (a) God in a temple and have sex with a prostitute rather than that man raping a woman now in civilized Christian Nations rape is acceptable while prostitution is not!.
http://atheism!.about!.com/od/ancientmytho!.!.!.
"""Sacred prostitutes were probably an established Phoenician institution for millennia - and the Phoenicians weren't the only culture to have them!. Sacred prostitution is most closely associated with the cult of Astarte, which is probably one of the most important reasons why worship of Astarte was opposed so vehemently by the ancient Israelites!. Moreover, sacred prostitution was not an exclusively female occupation: Phoenician inscriptions on Cyprus from the 5th century BCE lists the names of both male and female prostitutes employed in Astarte's temple there!.
It is presumed that sacred temple prostitution involved young, unmarried virgins who offered themselves as representatives of Astarte in fulfillment of a religious vow!. According to Roman records, ritual prostitution was very prominent in several mainland Phoenician cities, including Byblos, Baalbek, and Beirut, suggesting that the practice stems from a very early date!. ""
http://www!.thesmartset!.com/article/artic!.!.!.
"""Nothing gets a classical scholar’s heart pumping like the sacred prostitutes of Corinth, the Greek port that is depicted as the free-living “Amsterdam of the ancient world!.” After landing at the Corinthian docks, sailors would apparently wheeze up the thousand-odd steps to the top of a stunning crag of rock called the Acrocorinth, which offered 360-degree vistas of the sparkling Mediterranean!. There they would pass beneath the marble columns of the Temple of Aphrodite, goddess of Beauty and Love, within whose incense-filled, candlelit confines 1,000 comely girls supposedly worked around the clock gathering funds for their deity!. Since the Renaissance, this idea had gripped antiquarians, who liked to imagine that congress with one of Aphrodite’s servants offered a mystical union with the goddess herself — uninhibited pagans coupling in ecstasy before her statue in the perpetual twilight of the temple!.


In fact, this lusty vision of Corinth was created entirely from a three-line report by the Greek geographer Strabo, who writes around 20 AD:


The temple of Aphrodite was once so rich that it had acquired more than a thousand prostitutes, donated by both men and women to the service of the goddess!. And because of them, the city used to be jam-packed and became wealthy!. The ship-captains would spend fortunes there, and so the proverb says: "The voyage to Corinth isn’t for just any man!." """

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No definitite start, however when the Europeans were coming to America a lot of the women who came over were prositutes looking for a better life!. Then on the Oregon trail, unless the women were in the families the other women were almost all prostitutesWww@QuestionHome@Com

Prostitution has been mentioned in the Old Testament of the Bible!. I am going to give my opinion that it started as early as the first men and women on earth!. Men wanted sex, women wanted something so they traded!. It's been around forever!.Www@QuestionHome@Com

7000 years ago was the earliest written proof I found:

http://www!.google!.com/search!?q=Sumerian+!.!.!.

http://en!.allexperts!.com/q/Ancient-Class!.!.!.

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When the Europeans arrived they used prostitution for those who traded at trading posts!.Www@QuestionHome@Com

A big "boom" you could say in the business was during the victorian era of england!.Www@QuestionHome@Com

There's no written record because it's been around since prehistorical timesWww@QuestionHome@Com

Prehistoric Era!. Www@QuestionHome@Com

since sex was invented, in tribal humanity women were property!.Www@QuestionHome@Com

In the biblical time, mary MagdaleneWww@QuestionHome@Com

In some way, since the beginning of time!!!Www@QuestionHome@Com

The Garden of Eden Adam and EveWww@QuestionHome@Com

5th and main!. on a tuesday!. Www@QuestionHome@Com