
Brief History of Travel & Tourism
Intro & types of Tourism
Ancient Egypt
Other ancient cultures
16th-19th C
19th Century Boom
20th Century Mass Tourism
21st Century trends
Case Study : History Australian Tourism
Invaluable information was researched in the following publications
John Richardson : A History of Australian Travel & Tourism
O’Gorman, The Origins of Hospitality and Tourism
Towner, An Historical Geography of Recreation and Tourism in the Western World 1540-1940
Withey, Grand Tours and Cooks’ Tours,
Refer Bibliography
for full details
Intro & types of tourism
Tourism can be defined as the the activities of visitors travelling to
& staying overnight in places outside of their usual environment for at least a day
and for any purpose other than employment [ABS]
It has been a fundamental human activity across all ancient and
modern cultures and societies for thousands of years and continues today as
“the greatest continuing mass movement of peoples in human history” [Richardson]
The industry is one of the largest & fastest growing (following the Covid epidemic) with
Global Market size U$ 8.6 trillion
[US$ 9.2 trillion in 2019 before Covid]
330 million employees (10.3% of global)
Ancient Egypt
One of the earliest forms of tourism was trade between Egypt and the Mediterranean
evident from as early as 4000 BC with caravan routes & ships dealing in a vast range of products
Lapis Lazuli from Kush & Bactria
Cedar & corn from Lebanon & Byblos
Ivory, ostrich feathers & leopard skins from Africa
Gold from Nubia
Turquoise, agate & carnelian from Persia & Arabia
Incense, myrrh & fragrant woods from Punt
Copper & tin from Anatolia
Pottery & building materials from Canaan
Obsidian from Ethiopia
Chickens from India
Silk from China
Vegetable oils, paints & cosmetics from Iran & Afghanistan
Sulphur from Syria
Pearls from the Red Sea
Egypt was also the major specialist exporter to other countries which
would have required accommodation for Egyptian exporters
Grains
Papyrus
Linen
Dates
Weapons
Jewelry
Mirrors
Stone Artifacts
Other forms of travel & Tourism included
[Baines & Malek; Shafer; Riggs; Giddy; Tyldesley]
Religious & pilgrimage
To sacred sites (Abydos, Karnak, and Philae)
Opet Festival in Thebes
Heritage & Monument Tourism
Pyramids & royal tombhs
as evidenced by graffiti
Leisure Tourism for elites
Nile Cruises
Oases Resorts
Nile Delta fishing
Educational & Cultural
Scribes & Scholarly officials
Foreign curiosity (eg Herodotus)
Other Ancient cultures
The ancient Greek Olympics festival attracted thousands of spectators and competitors who spent
2-3 weeks getting there with many attending a month-long pre-games training camp, and others
visiting for cultural activities.[Crowther] Romans travelled extensively for festivals made possible by
obligatory general holidays accounting for more than half the year. [Sigaux]
Tourism as religious pilgrimage has been practiced by Chinese visiting Mount Taishan for over 3000 years,
which evolved from the 2nd C BC into an official imperial ceremony attended by 71 Emperors. [ICOMOS]
The great age of pilgrimage to Rome, Spain, Palestine & Jerusalem started in the 10th C [Sigaux]
and monastic orders including the Franciscans from the early 13th century provided hospitality
for travellers, whilst travel for study increased as secular literacy improved [O’Gorman]
The Book of Marco Polo about his trips between Venice & Peking along the silk road
from 1256, was one of tthe first to describe Tibet, India, Sri Lanka,
Burma, Japan, Indo-China & Java to Europeans [Richardson]
16th – 19th Centuries
From the 16th century, travel in Europe for religious conviction gradually evolved
into travel for secular curiosity [Towner]
Travel for pleasure in Britain increased [Moir] and the Grand Tour emerged involving a 2-3 years circuit of
western Europe by wealthy young aristocrats seeking culture, education, health & pleasure.
The classics, antiquities, fashionable society, art & architecture
were the main areas of interest for the Grand Tourists.
The discoveries at Herculaneum in 1738 & Pompeii in 1748 attracted many new tourists [Towner]
19th Century Boom
20th Century Mass Tourism
The advent of affordable transport by rail, sea & air during the 20th C produced
spectacular growth in travel which became an explosion of “mass” tourism demand
after WW2 as peace, prosperity & the expansion of global trade fostered more disposable income.
The advent of affordable air travel and the extraordinary economic growth
of China, India, South Korea and other Asian countries in the
late 20th and early 21st C led to the continued strong growth of tourism globally.
21st Century Trends
The 21st C has witnessed a series of events with profound impacts on the world,
although Tourism has remained remarkably resilient .
Sept 11 2001 in NYC, the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) in 2008, and
the Covid Pandemic from 2020, all slowed global travel considerably.
But by 2025, the travel industry had largely returned to pre-covid levels.
Many popular destinations have reacted negatively to “over-tourism”
as evidenced by Venice restricting or banning large crush ships
like the one in the photo above….
The aspirations of many tourists have changed dramatically over the
last 25 years, with travelers prioritising –
Authenticity
Privacy
Experiences
Sustainability
Exclusivity
Meaning
Uniqueness
Value
We believe that Accommodari helps to satisfy
these objectives
Case Study : History Australian Tourism
Part 1 : Colonial & Early
Trade & government dealings between Sydney & other early colonies were the first forms of tourism,
following thefoundation of Hobart (1803), Albany WA (1826), Swan River Colony (1829) and Melbourne (1835).
During the 1820s & 30s convicts built a network of “great roads” from Sydney which made travel manageable,
and the first regular mail coach service between Sydney & Melbourne started via Berrima in 1838 [Richardson]
“Prospecting” tourism emerged in Australia with the discovery of gold in Victoria in 1851 which boosted
commercial trade with Sydney.[Richardson] P&O first came to Australia in 1852 after securing the mail contract
from Singapore [Davidson & Spearritt] whilst Cobb & Co started their coach services in 1853. [Richardson]
1855 saw the first steam-locomotive service in NSW and by 1868 TSN had 8 steam ships
serving Sydney, Melbourne, Hobart, Launceston & the Snowy River goldfields [Richardson]
“Scenic” tourism started when the Great Western Railway reached Mt Victoria
in 1868 and the Blue Mountains were opened up. [Davidson and Spearritt]
Sydney mirrored Europe & America with major international exhibitions in 1879-80 which attracted
1.1 m visitors and in the same year Australia’s first National Park south of Sydney was declared
(2nd only in the world next to Yellowstone), although conservation attitudes were so weak that
grazing, mining & quarrying were allowed [Davidson & Spearritt]
The centenary of the First Fleet’s arrival in 1888 attracted many country & inter-colonial visitors to
Sydney, and Sydney’s Royal Easter Show which started in 1889 was also a great attraction.
Australia was part of the international transport revolution, with the Melbourne to Adelaide rail line
completed in 1887, and the Sydney to Brisbane line in 1889 [Richardson]
During the 1890s, “mountain” tourism was preferred over the seaside, which benefitted the
Blue Mountains & Jenolan Caves close to Sydney [Richardson] Thomas Cook
started world tours to Australia & NZ in 1898. [Withey]
In the early 20th C, harbourside baths & beach tourism became popular in Sydney when Manly and Bondi
beaches established surf clubs. Cars were rapidly growing in popularity and motoring organisations
such as the Sydney Automobile Club (1903) were created. [Richardson] Sydney’s famous Taronga Park Zoo
was established in 1916 [State Library of NSW] which became a major tourist attraction.
Qantas was formed in 1922 as one of 2 companies to have a mail contract with the Government but with
little passenger traffic until the 1930s. British Royal visits in 1921 & 1927 attracted patriotic crowds
of locals & tourists. The Sydney Harbour Bridge opened in 1932, and immediately became
a Sydney icon, but did not become a real tourist attraction in its own right until
Paul Cave created Bridge Climb in 1998. [Richardson]
Sydney’s Luna Park opened in 1935, and in 1938, Sydney had both the Sesquicentennial
(celebrating 150 years since the first fleet) and the British Empire Games [Davidson & Spearritt]
During the 1930s, Sydney’s ocean surf beaches such as Coogee & Bondi
started to overtake harbor resorts in popularity. [Richardson]
Case Study : History Australian Tourism
Part 2 : Post WW2
In 1946, the Australian Commonwealth Government set up Trans Australia Airlines (TAA) and
Qantas was operating a weekly service from London by 1947. From 1950 until 1971,
there were more International arrivals than Australian departures.
In 1952, the federal government dictated that domestic mail & government business were to be
shared equally between 2 airlines [Richardson] which effectively subsidized domestic tourist travel.
Queen Elizabeth II’s 1954 tour of Australia [Wishart] and the 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games [Reeves]
boosted domestic tourism and international awareness.
1964 was the first year to have more than 100,000 International visitors which more than
doubled within 5 years. The Sydney to Melbourne rail-line gauge was finally standardised in 1962, with
Sydney to Perth in 1969 [Davidson & Spearritt] which made travel quicker & more convenient.
During the 1960s, conventions were recognized as a high-yielding part of the tourism industry and
in response, the Sydney Convention & Visitors Bureau was formed in 1969. [Richardson]
The 18th & 19th C buildings of the Rocks were saved from wholesale demolition in the 1960s & 70s
by the combined efforts of the National Trust and the BLF’s Green bans and
today are a priceless part of Sydney’s heritage & tourism scene. [Davidson & Spearritt]
The Festival of Sydney started in 1977 which has been an enduring tourism legacy. [Davidson & Spearritt]
There were less International arrivals than Australian departures between 1972-1987 with a consequential
negative balance of trade. [Richardson] During the 1970s, an increasing awareness and
appreciation of heritage led to recreations of heritage towns such as Old Sydney Town
from 1975 whilst many existing heritage towns such as Berrima were being revitalized.
Following a modest start in 1978, Sydney’s Gay & Lesbian Mardi Gras had
become a major event by the early 1980s [Davidson & Spearritt]
Richardson notes that the 1980s were
“… a watershed for Australian travel and tourism… [when] international tourism became big business
in the second half of the decade… accompanied by unprecedented investment in hotels and resorts ….
[which] raised as never before the public consciousness of tourism as an economic engine” [Richardson]
The 1980s witnessed the increased global awareness of the environment, sustainability & cultural authenticity,
which created a more sophisticated and demanding marketplace of tourists who preferred more individual
& authentic experiences and led to the rise of eco, nature and indigenous tourism. [Davidson & Spearritt]
Sydney also experienced the fluctuating fortunes of tourism during the late 1980s, with the 1988 Bicentennial
celebrations and the opening of Darling Harbour, followed by the crippling 9-month airline pilots dispute
from Aug 1989. The airlines industry continued its transformation with
the end of the “two airline policy” in 1990 [Richardson]
In 1994 the Australian Stock Exchange (ASX) introduced the Tourism & Leisure Index which attracted
strong investor interest, and in 1996 there were 3 major floats of tourism assets on the ASX.
However, by 1998, institutional investors were again suffering after the Asian financial crash
impacted tourism & hotel business. [Richardson]
Sydney was announced as the winner of the 2000 Olympics in 1993 and in the lead up to the millennium event,
the Royal Easter Show was moved to the new Olympic site at Homebush, and the old showgrounds site
was developed as Fox Studios, all further expanding Sydney’s tourism attractions.
In 1997, the NSW Government introduced the Accommodation Levy Act, as a revenue generating source
commonly known as the Sydney bed tax leading up to the Olympics which imposed a 10% surcharge
on room rates for hotels, motels, serviced apartments and B&B.
This however prompted rearrangement of itineraries which resulted in less time spent in the city [Richardson]
Ihalanayake contends that tourism tax increases can “cause a considerable reduction in international tourism
consumption both in the short-term and long-term….. which led to substantial output contractions in
tourism-related sectors … [and] can have broader, negative economy-wide effects in the short-term such as
reductions in real GDP and aggregate employment”. [Ihalanayake]
The 2000 Sydney Olympics were the biggest event ever held in Australia with 199 countries and almost
11,000 athletes participating. Australia had 4.93 million inbound tourists during 2000
which was a 10.6% increase from the previous year. [CBoC&S]
The euphoria of the Olympics was followed by slower growth of tourists for 5 years due partly to
global anxieties after 11th Sept 2001 (911). The “Asian Tsunami” of 2004 likely enhanced Australia’s attractiveness,
due to some source markets like Japan & Korea being less likely to visit affected parts of Asia [Kondraschow[
Since 2005 and despite the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) of 2008 and the Covid epidemic of the 2020s,
Australia’s tourism has performed strongly due largely to extraordinary growth in visitors from China,
and also Australia’s reputation as a safe, peaceful and attractive destination.
Innovative events such as the Vivid festival and Opera on Sydney Harbour
have continued to add to the appeal of Sydney city as a global destination.