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Whether it's divers exploring underwater wrecks or magnificent cathedrals built to protect against disasters, accidents and catastrophic mysteries, there's more to the tourism scene than we think.
Firstly, many tourists associate it with historical events: remember the catacombs under the San Francisco Basilica and Monastery in Lima or Jack the Ripper tours in London.
Creepy or dark tourist destinations often make headlines (like trips to environmental disaster sites), and this is nothing new. Professor J. John Lennon, professor of tourism at Caledonian University in Glasgow, coined the term "dark tourism" in 1996, believing it dates back to public hangings in 16th century London and continues with people who believe what they say they were witnesses. The Battle of Waterloo in 1815 from horse-drawn carriages.
However, many of our afterlife travel routes are lined with buildings that remind people of past calamities, even if they didn't know it.
In the early 19th century, cholera hit the Mediterranean city of Marseille so devastatingly that city planners spent ten years building canals and tunnels to supply the population with drinking water, most notably the impressive aqueduct of Roquevavre. Situated in the center of Marseille, the castle-like Palais Longchamp (opened in 1869) marks the end of the canal and is now one of the first stops on any visitor's itinerary.
The Vienna Plague Column was built to commemorate the outbreak of the bubonic plague in 1679 that killed 12,000 people, and during the last epidemic it became a shrine again, a common way to remember loved ones by lighting a candle in their place. base.
Similarly, the Basilica of Santa Maria della Salute, one of the most visited buildings in Venice, was built to protect against the plague that devastated the Italian city in 1631.
The Basilica in Venice and the Plague Column in Vienna are just two examples of the many monuments built around the world to commemorate the people who died during epidemics.
Tourism is shaped not only by natural disasters. People often head to places with rather strange customs, many of which foreign visitors find creepy or slightly creepy.
Nagoro is a small town in Japan with a population of only 27 (50 in total). As each person died or passed away, a local resident reshaped them into life-size dolls, and there are now 350 of them, which can be found in banks, offices and shops throughout the city.
Similarly, Xochimilco in Mexico may be a UNESCO World Heritage Site due to the famous canal system built by the Aztecs, but there are many tourists willing to try renting a boat to see Isla de las Muñecas, where a small island is adorned. . With dolls and doll parts hanging from every tree. It was once the home of a man (now deceased) who used to hang dolls to ward off evil spirits after the body of a young girl was found nearby.
In Sagada, Philippines, it's a village-wide custom that attracts tourists who come to admire the hanging coffins, part of a centuries-old tradition of making your own coffin and then sticking local stones into it to live out your life after death. .
By far, this is one of the oldest natural disaster sites and perhaps the most famous. It has continued to attract visitors since the Italian city of Pompeii erupted in AD 79. Part of the enduring charm is that the local population was well enough preserved due to the volcanic ash during their recent activity that archaeologists were able to draw up perfect populations of the local population during what is one of the most powerful eruption. . visit the past. through historical events.
I tried to contact the Royal Guard, and it was a big mistake.
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