3. When a woman leaves, the office must be informed of the fact in writing, and her new abode pointed out.
4. The landlord or landlady must particularly impress upon the lodgers not to have connection with men having a contagious malady.
5. When a woman discovers herself to be infected she must intimate the circumstance to her landlord, and abstain from practising her avocation, under pain of severe punishment.
6. The employer who makes the lodger infringe this regulation subjects himself to imprisonment and the pillory.
11. The landlord must look carefully after the health of his lodgers, who must submit to a surgical examination by the municipal physician every fifteen days, and follow his advice punctiliously.
17. Landlords are forbidden to attract foreign women by false promises who have not yet been debauched.
18. The same penalties are inflicted by the law upon a brothel-keeper who prevents a repentant woman from leaving her course of living.
19. Intoxicated men are not to be robbed, but to pay simply the charge put down in the general tariff.
A short time afterwards the French occupied the city, when this edict was repealed and another substituted in its place in the year 1811.
In 1834 the position of women and brothels was regulated, an account of which may be seen in the blue book.