- Description: Mária Fáy, known by her married name Béláné Mocsáry, was a Hungarian geographer, traveler, and writer - one of the first women in Hungary to extensively document her journeys. Widowed in 1890, she embarked on remarkable travels, alone or with her sister, throughout the Balkans, the Middle East (Greece, Turkey, Palestine, Egypt, Nubia), India, Sri Lanka, North America (including Alaska), Mexico, and South America. Between 1899 and 1905, she published several travelogues illustrated with her own photographs: India and Ceylon’s Notes (1899, expanded version in 1901), My Journey on the West Coast of North America (1902), and My Journey to Mexico: Travel Notes (1905)
- Alias-Pseudonimo-Pseudonyme: Mária Mocsáry
- Nationality-Nazionalità-Nationalité: Hungary, Ungheria, Hongrie
- Birth/death-Nascita/morte-Naissance/mort: 1845-1917
- Means of transport-Mezzo di trasporto-Moyen de transport: Various, Diversi, Différents
- Geographical description-Riferimento geografico-Référence géographique: Various, Diversi, Différents
- Internet: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%C3%A9l%C3%A1n%C3%A9_Mocs%C3%A1ry
- Wikidata: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q34223407
- Additional references-Riferimenti complementari-Références complémentaires: Fáy Mária [Béláné Mocsáry]. India and Ceylon’s Notes. Budapest, 1899.
- Description: George Moore was an Irish writer known for his cosmopolitan life and extensive travels between the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Born into an aristocratic family, he left Ireland early and settled in Paris, where he mingled with bohemian circles and impressionist painters. Initially drawn to painting, it was his encounter with French literary circles that set him on the path to writing. His journeys continued through Italy, Spain, Egypt, and back to Ireland, always combining geographic exploration with intellectual introspection. Works like Confessions of a Young Man and The Untilled Field reflect his restless mind and critical, often provocative, outlook
- Alias-Pseudonimo-Pseudonyme: -
- Nationality-Nazionalità-Nationalité: UK, Inglese, Anglais
- Birth/death-Nascita/morte-Naissance/mort: 1852–1933
- Means of transport-Mezzo di trasporto-Moyen de transport: Various, Diversi, Différents
- Geographical description-Riferimento geografico-Référence géographique: Europe, Europa
- Internet: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Moore_(novelist)
- Wikidata: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q965927
- Additional references-Riferimenti complementari-Références complémentaires: George Moore, Impressions and Opinions, 1891.
A man travels the world in search of what he needs and returns home to find it.
George Moore, Impressions and Opinions, 1891
- Description: Albert Desjardins and Mougin Félix are two disabled globetrotters who undertook a tour of France
- Alias-Pseudonimo-Pseudonyme: -
- Nationality-Nazionalità-Nationalité: France, Francia
- Birth/death-Nascita/morte-Naissance/mort: -
- Means of transport-Mezzo di trasporto-Moyen de transport: On foot, A piedi, A pied
- Geographical description-Riferimento geografico-Référence géographique: France, Francia
- Inscriptions-Iscrizioni-Inscriptions: Unis par le malheur, Albert Desjardins, victime du devoir, père de famille, tour de France à pied, au nom des camarades français, Mougin Félix, aveugle
- Description: Susanna Moodie (née Strickland) was born in Suffolk, England, in 1803 and emigrated to Upper Canada with her family in 1832. Settling near Peterborough, Ontario, she chronicled her settler experience in Roughing It in the Bush (1852), a candid and often witty account that became a pioneer’s guide for British emigrants. Its sequel Life in the Clearings Versus the Bush (1853) reflects on moving into settlement towns, combining realism with introspection and critique
- Alias-Pseudonimo-Pseudonyme: -
- Nationality-Nazionalità-Nationalité: UK, Inglese, Anglais
- Birth/death-Nascita/morte-Naissance/mort: 1803–1885
- Means of transport-Mezzo di trasporto-Moyen de transport: Various, Diversi, Différents
- Geographical description-Riferimento geografico-Référence géographique: Americas, Americhe, Amérique
- Internet: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susanna_Moodie
- Wikidata: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q1396169
- Additional references-Riferimenti complementari-Références complémentaires: Moodie, Susanna Strickland, Roughing It in the Bush; or, Life in Canada, London 1852. Moodie, Susanna Strickland, Life in the Clearings Versus the Bush, 1853.
- Description: George Ernest Morrison was an Australian doctor, adventurer, and journalist. After studying in Melbourne and Scotland, he walked across large parts of Australia and Asia, undertaking journeys such as the 1894 trek from Shanghai to Rangoon: about 5,150 km (3,200 miles) covered in six months. His reports, published in The Times of London, brought him fame and the position of China correspondent. He settled in Beijing during the final years of the Qing dynasty, becoming a political adviser and privileged observer of Chinese affairs
- Alias-Pseudonimo-Pseudonyme: Chinese Morrison
- Nationality-Nazionalità-Nationalité: Australia
- Birth/death-Nascita/morte-Naissance/mort: 1862-1920
- Means of transport-Mezzo di trasporto-Moyen de transport: Various, Diversi, Différents
- Geographical description-Riferimento geografico-Référence géographique: Asia
- Internet: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Ernest_Morrison
- Wikidata: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q842116
- Additional references-Riferimenti complementari-Références complémentaires: Morrison, George Ernest. An Australian in China: Being the Narrative of a Quiet Journey across China to Burma. London: Horace Cox, 1895. Lo, Kate. Morrison of Peking. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Press, 1967. Fitzherbert, Tim. Chinese Morrison: The Life and Times of George Ernest Morrison, 1862–1920. London: Faber & Faber, 2007.
- Description: John Muir, a renowned American naturalist and conservationist, undertook numerous journeys that took him through vast regions of the United States and the world. Throughout his life, Muir explored the Sierra Nevada in California, visited Alaska, traveled to Africa, South America, and various places in Europe. Among his most significant journeys was his over 1'000-mile walk through the Sierra Nevada in 1868, which allowed him to deeply understand the unique ecosystem of this region. Throughout his life, Muir actively promoted nature conservation and was one of the founders of the United States' National Park System
- Alias-Pseudonimo-Pseudonyme: -
- Nationality-Nazionalità-Nationalité: Scottish, Scozzese, Ecossais
- Birth/death-Nascita/morte-Naissance/mort: 1838-1914
- Means of transport-Mezzo di trasporto-Moyen de transport: On foot, A piedi, A pied
- Geographical description-Riferimento geografico-Référence géographique: Americas, Americhe, Amérique
- Internet: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Muir
- Wikidata: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q379580
- Additional references-Riferimenti complementari-Références complémentaires: Muir, John. A Thousand-Mile Walk to the Gulf. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1916.
John Muir, Earth-planet, Universe. These words are written on the inside cover of the notebook from which the contents of this volume have been taken. They reflect the mood in which the late author and explorer undertook his thousand-mile walk to the Gulf of Mexico a half-century ago. No less does this refreshingly cosmopolitan address, which might have startled any finder of the book, reveal the temper and the comprehensiveness of Mr. Muir s mind. He never was and never could be a parochial student of nature. Even at the early age of twenty-nine his eager interest in every aspect of the natural world had made him a citizen of the universe.
- Description: In 1913, Inez Moore Banghart walked the road between Chicago and New York. In 1915, on the occasion of the Panama Pacific Exposition, she decided to embark on a cross-country journey from New York to San Francisco
- Alias-Pseudonimo-Pseudonyme: -
- Nationality-Nazionalità-Nationalité: USA
- Birth/death-Nascita/morte-Naissance/mort: -
- Means of transport-Mezzo di trasporto-Moyen de transport: On foot, A piedi, A pied
- Geographical description-Riferimento geografico-Référence géographique: USA
Miss Inez Moore Banghart, the girl who walked from Chicago to New,York last year, is planning to walk from New York to the Panama exposition. She will make her cross-country hike unaccompagned.
- Description: Walk around the world by a French globetrotter
- Alias-Pseudonimo-Pseudonyme: -
- Nationality-Nazionalità-Nationalité: France, Francia
- Birth/death-Nascita/morte-Naissance/mort: -
- Means of transport-Mezzo di trasporto-Moyen de transport: On foot, A piedi, A pied
- Geographical description-Riferimento geografico-Référence géographique: Around the World, Giro del mondo, Tour du monde
- Additional references-Riferimenti complementari-Références complémentaires: Wanganui Chronicle, Volume L, Issue 12143, September 17, 1907, Page 3.
- Inscriptions-Iscrizioni-Inscriptions: 40000 kilomètres à pied. Henri Mosse globe trotter T.C.F. Français
Around the World For a Wager
Hale and tanned, but marked by scars made by cruel fetters in a Russian prison, Henri Mosse arrived in San Francisco recently from the Far East on the French steamer Amiral Juareguiberry en route to Paris striving to win a strange race.
The steamer reached port on a Saturday night, but was held in quarantine until the next morning on account of the presence on board of a large number of Japanese steerage passengers, who were bound for Vancouver, B.C. Mosse and an Englishman now in India are the sole surviving competitors in a race around the world, and both are nearing the end of their long journey. One or the other will win a prize of 50,000 francs by arriving first in Paris.
Mosse was chauffeur in the French capital when the Sportsmen's Club, of London, suggested to the Touring Club, of Paris, that each organisation should furnish four men and send them out on a competitive tour of the world, without funds, except two francs each, the men to travel in pairs, an Englishman with a Frenchman.
The four pairs were to go over different routes. After all preliminaries had been arranged, the start was made on June 14, 1904, and the limit for the world tour was fixed for June 14, 1906. Two of the men started by the way of Africa, two by way of America and the remaining couple by way of Asia Minor. Mosse and his English companion took the Asia Minor route, and got along well together until Constantinople was reached, in July, 1904, when the Englishman, George Moss, succumbed to an attack of fever. The Frenchman, Mosse, came on alone, and had many hairbreadth escapes. At Odessa, on the Black Sea, he was suspected of being a Japanese spy, and for 25 days was kept in chains in a foul prison. His ankles still bear the scars of the irons. Upon being released he passed on afoot and by sea to India, and still later to China.
In the district of Bing Sam, in the interior of China, Mosse was captured by highwaymen and robbed of £4, all the money he had. But he was well treated by the bandits, who offered him a Chinese wife if he should care to remain a while with them.
Mosse chose to keep moving, and he tramped along until he reached the coast, where he took ship for Japan. At Yokohama he joined the Amiral Juareguiberry and worked his way thence to San Francisco. He must leave the vessel there, for it is a condition of the contest that he shall travel overland whenever it is possible. Mosse has been kept posted by the French Club as to his competitors. Letters he has received at various points along his strange course have informed him that the couple going by the African route were murdered by treacherous Abyssinians on the desert, who cut off the heads of the Frenchman and Englishman. The two men who went by way of Australia both took sick and died in the same hospital of a fever. The Frenchman who went by way of America was lost in China, his companion proceeding to India, where he was at last accounts plodding along.
The victory in the long race rests between Mosse and the Englishman in India, the only survivors of the contest. The winner will receive a prize of 50,000 francs, and there is no second prize. That Mosse has visited all the strange places he talks about is proven by the autographs and seals of officials in the countless out-of-the-way places all the way from Paris to Yokohama.
Wanganui Chronicle, Volume L, Issue 12143, 17 September 1907, Page 3.
- Description: Jerome Murif was the first to travel the Adelaide – Darwin route in 1897. Supported by a German bicycle manufacturer, Electra, he crossed the continent motivated by the fact that no man (or woman) had done before him. He described his adventures, which nearly cost him his life, in the book "From Ocean to Ocean"
- Alias-Pseudonimo-Pseudonyme: -
- Nationality-Nazionalità-Nationalité: Australia
- Birth/death-Nascita/morte-Naissance/mort: 1863-1926
- Means of transport-Mezzo di trasporto-Moyen de transport: Bike, Bicicletta, Vélo
- Geographical description-Riferimento geografico-Référence géographique: Australia
- Internet: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerome_J._Murif
- Wikidata: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q30323853
- Additional references-Riferimenti complementari-Références complémentaires: Murif J. J., From ocean to ocean: across a continent on a bicycle, an account of a solitary ride from Adelaide to Port Darwin, Melbourne, George Robertson & Co., 1897.
| Precursori, Forerunners, Précurseurs |
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| Viaggi stravaganti, Weird travels, Voyages insolites |
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| Globetrotter contemporanei, Contemporary globetrotters, Globetrotteurs contemporains |
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| Personaggi fittizi, Fictional character, Personnages de fiction |
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About us
Museum of Travel and Tourism is a virtual museum dedicated to travel and tourism, founded in 2016. It began as a research platform focused on the biographies of women and men travelers from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and has gradually expanded to include contemporary journeys.
Impressum
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Source citation "Museum of Travel and Tourism, museumoftravel.org"
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