Sin City

Sin City

Eighteenth century London evokes images of fine Georgian buildings, many of which are still standing, and fine art. But in reality, it more of was a modern day Sodom, the biblical city synonymous with sexual depravity, and from which English gets the word sodomy to North Americans, the eighteenth century is ancient history, but to the British it is relatively recent. It was a city of depravity and vileness (as for it high crime and murder rate, and the brutal methods of punishment, that’s another story.


It is thought that there were almost 63,000 prostitutes in London in the 1700s and that a staggering one in five of London’s women were harlots. In fact, London’s prostitutes generated an estimated gross turnover of around £20 million (£1.5 billion in today’s money). This was big business. 

Famous prostitutes became the celebrities of their time in Britain, including Lady Hamilton, the mistress of Lord Nelson. The fictional Moll Flanders is reputedly based on the real life Moll King. One of her customers was the author of Moll Flanders, Daniel Defoe. 

Grotesquely though, remember, only to the eyes of someone in the 21st Century child prostitutes also plied their trade in London, some as young as eight. The British even believed that sexual intercourse with a child cured venerial diseases and, of course, venerial diseases were rife, such as syphilis and gonorrhoea.… in truth one in five women were prostitutes. Teeming with prostitutes from lowly street walkers offering a threepenny upright to high class courtesans retained by dukes Georgian London was a city built on the sex trade.

Cruickshank describes Georgian London as ‘a vast, hostile, soulless, wicked all devouring but also fatally attractive place that makes and breaks, that tempts, inflames, satisfies, yet corrupts and ultimately kills’. 

Khloe: Where ever you roam there is a sin city

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