The ''yuna'' were officially banned by the [[Tokugawa shogunate]] in [[1648]], but this did not put an end to the phenomenon. It was only in 1657, due to pressure from the Yoshiwara in an effort to eliminate the competition, that the ''yuna'' disappeared. Many came to work within the Yoshiwara as teahouse waitresses, called ''[[sancha]]''. | The ''yuna'' were officially banned by the [[Tokugawa shogunate]] in [[1648]], but this did not put an end to the phenomenon. It was only in 1657, due to pressure from the Yoshiwara in an effort to eliminate the competition, that the ''yuna'' disappeared. Many came to work within the Yoshiwara as teahouse waitresses, called ''[[sancha]]''. |