Monday, 18 May 2015
History of Tourism
Tourism can be recognized as long as people
have travelled; the narrative of Marco Polo in
the 13th century; the "grand tour" of the British
aristocracy to Europe in the 18th century; and
the journeys of David Livingstone through
Africa in the 19th century are all examples of
early tourism. Thomas Cook is popularly
regarded as the founder of inclusive tours with
his use of a chartered train in 1841 to transport
tourists from Loughborough to Leicester.
Before the 1950s, tourism in Europe was mainly
a domestic activity with some international
travel between countries, mainly within
continental Europe. In the period of recovery
following World War II, a combination of
circumstances provided an impetus to
international travel. Among the important
contributing factors were the growing number
of people in employment, the increase in real
disposable incomes and available leisure time,
and changing social attitudes towards leisure
and work. These factors combined to stimulate
the latent demand for foreign travel and
holidays. The emergence of specialist tour
operators who organized inclusive holidays by
purchasing transport, accommodation, and
related services and selling these at a single
price, brought foreign holidays within the price-
range of a new and growing group of
consumers.
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Really nice. Keep it up. 👏👍
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