A walking tour usually refers to either:
Early examples of extended walking tours were undertaken by the Romantic poets, William Wordsworth and John Keats.Hayden, Donald E., Wordsworth's walking tour of 1790. Tulsa, Okla. : University of Tulsa; c1983; Carol Kyros Walker, Walking North with Keats. Edinburgh : Edinburgh University Press. 2021, p. 1. In 1790 Wordsworth set off on an extended tour of France, Switzerland, and Germany, which he describes in his autobiographical poem The Prelude (1850). In 1798 he walked through Wales and he and Coleridge, in 1799, undertook a three-week tour of the Lake District. John Keats, who belonged to the next generation of Romantic poets began, in June 1818, a walking tour of Scotland, Ireland, and the Lake District with his friend Charles Armitage Brown. Walking tours were popular in the 19th century, and a famous example is Robert Louis Stevenson's Travels with a Donkey (1879). Stevenson also published in 1876 the famous essay "Walking Tours". An early American example is naturalist John Muir's A Thousand Mile Walk to the Gulf (1916), which describes a long botanizing walk, undertaken in 1867. Another early type of tour was The Grand Tour, undertaken in Europe in the 17th through 19th centuries, as part of a wealthy young man's education, The Canadian Oxford Dictionary (1998), and New Oxford American Dictionary. this involved a lengthy tour of Europe, with visits to cities, historic and cultural sites, which would involve similar walking tours as those undertaken by modern tourists.Chaney, Edward.; Lassels, Richard. Genève; 1985 The Grand Tour and the Great Rebellion (Geneva: Slatkine, 1985) Modern young people often undertake a similar, though cheaper, form of touring.
There are also , which aid travellers by means of books, maps, pamphlets, and audio material.
Many walking tours involve a payment to the guide, although some operate on a Gratuity system. The "pay what you want" model started around 2004, and can be found in many countries. The UK-based Guild of Registered Tour has criticised the system for not requiring any training or certification of its guides.
These tours are a form of promenade theatre, as well as museum theatre in that it makes use of first person interpretation.
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