Guaita Tower
the Alhambra
Ha'Penny Bridge in Dublin
a gondola in Venice
the Eiffel Tower
the Basilica di Santa Maria del Fiore
Trevi Fountain in Rome
Barcelona
Jean Sibelius monument
El Escorial in Madrid
the Chain Bridge
St. Charles Church
Kosovo
Big Ben in London
Copenhagen
Charles Bridge in Prague
a bridge in Bosnia
Bratislava Castle
the Norrmalm district
Estonia, Tallinn
the Vatican
Porto
St. Mary's Basilica
Amsterdam
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San Marino, San MarinoThe Guaita fortress is the oldest of the three towers constructed on Monte Titano that overlooks the capital of San Marino.
Photograph by Xinhua News Agency, Redux

25 Iconic European Cities to Explore

The historic Grand Tour still influences travel today.

ByChristine Bednarz
April 25, 2018
3 min read

Trendy young aristocrats in the 16th century took a whirlwind tour of European cities to visit architectural wonders, admire fine art firsthand, and collect plenty of souvenirs to show off back home. Considered the finale of a classical education, the idea of a Grand Tour–bouncing through cities like London then Paris to Amsterdam and Rome–still informs the places people visit today.

During the Grand Tour time–from around 1660–1820–travel was costly and difficult, and accessible only for the privileged. Mostly from the United Kingdom, Scandinavia, and North America, the typical Grand Tourist was a young man that recently graduated from university, with proper training in Greek and Latin literature and some interest in the history of art. He had unlimited funds–and a chaperone.

Getting away helped young people cut apron strings and build character, explains Rosemary Sweet, professor of Urban History who researches the topic: "The endurance required for early rising, hunger, and long hours in the saddle, ensured that the youth was separated from the comfort and ease of home, where female influence prevailed, and developed the fortitude to withstand personal discomfort and danger with courage and without complaint.”

Related: Must-See Museums

the roof at the Design Museum in Kensington, United Kingdom
the Design Museum Holon in Israel
the Museum of Tomorrow in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Dongdaemun Design Plaza in Seoul Korea
the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, DC
a sculpture in The Zeitz Museum of Contemporary African Art in Cape Town, South Africa
Cite du Vin Museum in Bordeaux, France
the Foyer at Ragnarock Museum in Denmark
the Tate Modern Museum in London, United Kingdom
the Arts & Sciences Museum in Valencia, Spain
the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in San Francisco
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London, EnglandDownload design history at the Design Museum; the “Designer Maker User” exhibit displays hundreds of items spanning various disciplines, from fashion to architecture, Vespas to robots.
Photograph Courtesy Gravity Road

On the arduous journey, top stops included London for starters, then of course Paris. Many visited Amsterdam, while fewer made it to Zurich, Berlin, Athens, or Istanbul. The essential country to visit, however, was Italy, for ancient ruins, fountains, and churches.

Few museums existed in Europe before the beginning of the 19th century. Grand Tourists usually checked out paintings and sculptures in private collections, then felt eager to purchase Greco-Roman and Italian art of their own, setting styles at home. Travelers also wrote about their experiences and left a legacy of travel literature and journals.

The rite of passage changed greatly with arrival of large-scale rail transport in the 1840s, making once-inaccessible tourism cheaper, easier, and safer. Cities increasingly become better connected. Emerging favorites join the classics, but many of the European destinations explored during those Grand Tours remain the top cities visited today.