Ghost of Paris
paris-ghost.bsky.social
Ghost of Paris
@paris-ghost.bsky.social
"Quis amat valeat. Pereat qui nescit amare. Bis tanti pereat quisquis amare vetat!"
Dame Emma Hamilton was a courtesan, dancer and model in Georgian London. She married the Ambassador to Naples (uncle of a client), and became immensely influential at the Neapolitan court-and all that was before her celebrated affair with Admiral Nelson, the great hero of the age
December 7, 2024 at 2:47 PM
"Sex workers are called 'meretrix' because they earn ['mereatur'] the price of pleasure...likewise soldiers, because they accept pay, are called 'mereri'"

Isidore, Etymologiae 10.182 (c. 600 AD)
December 1, 2024 at 2:31 AM
No one:

Absolutely no one:

Buffalo: "Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo."
November 30, 2024 at 2:05 AM
Grace Elliot was a Scottish courtesan in Paris during the Reign of Terror. She spied for the British, hid fleeing aristocrats, and was imprisoned but escaped the guillotine. Her memoir, Journal of My Life During the French Revolution, is the leading English account of the Terror.
November 25, 2024 at 2:34 PM
I knew a courtesan of Rome named Isabella de Luna who took up this sort of friendship another courtesan named Pandora. Now Isabella kept her, and I have oft heard her say that she caused her to give her husbands more horns than all the wild fellows she ever had

Brantôme, c. 1600
November 22, 2024 at 2:28 AM
Sirens have been interpreted both as "meretrices" (sex workers) (Isidore 11.30) and as goddesses "charming in poetry and prose" (Pausanias 1.21) Elements of both can, perhaps, be seen in this painting - and in the Goethe poem that inspired it

Fisherman and the Syren, F. Leighton
November 20, 2024 at 2:21 PM
"Without realizing it, you give me praise
for qualities based upon goodness and virtue.
And though you call me 'prostitute'...
As much goodness prostitutes may have
as much grace and nobility of soul
the sound of your word assigns to me."

Veronica Franco, courtesan & poet (1575)
November 19, 2024 at 2:35 AM
While the popular image of Mary Magdalene as a prostitute lacks biblical foundation, it has greatly affected her portrayal in art. Medieval paintings often depicted her reading, as courtesans were among the few literate women in that era.

Maria Magdalena, Piero di Cosimo (1510)
November 18, 2024 at 5:43 AM