East European Travel Writing: A Guide to Orientation
I. Europe in All its Variety (16th–18th centuries)
Words for the Traveller
Bartolomæus Georgius, A phrasebook for captives (1544)
Joannes Sambucus, Against travel (1564)
David Froelich, Instructions for travel: Ars apodemica (1639)
Mihály Nadányi, Paternal advice, 1656
Anonymous Proskynetarion, He who has this book in his home, has a great treasure, 1742
Variations: Pilgrims, Emissaries, Scholars and Adventurers
Nicander Nucius, Journey to the Occident, 1546
Antonius Verantius, A land so foreign to ours, 1553
Anonymous Pole, Pilgrimage diary, 1595
Simeon of Poland, An Armenian pilgrimage to Rome, 1611
Márton Szepsi Csombor, Europe’s Diversity: England (1620)
Daniel Strejc Vetter, Iceland (1638)
Osman-aga of Temesvar, Escape from the infidels, 1724
Vasyl' Hryhorovych-Bars'kyi, A defence of pilgrimage, 1724
Marco Antonio Cazzaiti, A Venetian Greek in the Ottoman Balkans, 1742
Partenii Pavlovich, Sinful sufferings, 1749
Constantin Hurmuzaki, Faking exile on a Greek island, 1764
Juwenalis Charkiewicz, A Franciscan’s journey from Lithuania to Spain, 1768
Ruggiero Boscovich, An ‘Astronomical Voyage’ through the Apennines (1770)
Mauritius Benyowsky, Exile to Siberia (1790)
II. Voyages of Discovery (18th-mid-19th centuries)
On Travel Writing
Leopold Berchtold, The Inquiries of Patriotic Travellers (1789)
Milota Polák, Reasons for travel writing (1821)
Krystyn Lach Szyrma, ‘Miraculous and absurd’ accounts of the Sclavonians (1823)
Polyxena Wesselényi, Writing as a woman (1842)
Lorinc Tóth, Up off your cushions! (1844)
Dragutin Galac, On (domestic) travel (1846)
Discoveries in Europe
Greeks: from the Latin West to Europe
Ioannis Pringos, Amsterdam Chronicle, 1760s-70s
Stamates Petrou, Letters from Amsterdam, 1770s
Adamantios Korais, Letter from Paris to Smyrna, 1788
South Slav travellers: Light and darkness, East and West
Dositej Obradovic, Educational pilgrimages (1788)
Gerasim Zelic, A representative of Orthodox Dalmatia (1823)
From Moldavia and Wallachia:
Dinicu Golescu, Learning from Enlightened Europe (1826)
Nicolas Soutzo, Geography or class? 1820s
Hungarian reformers:
István Széchenyi, Three things to be learned in England, 1815
Sándor Bölöni Farkas, Questions about Hungary, 1830
Bertalan Szemere, ‘Images of Hungary and the Hungarians’ (1840)
From Poland, before and after partition:
Stanislaw August Poniatowski, English education, 1775
August Moszynski, The further we go, the worse things get, 1784-85
Zygmunt Krasinski, London and Messina, 1839
Lucja Rautenstrachowa, Industrial civilization (1841)
Domopis: Travel at Home
Alecu Russo, ‘Fragment from a Journey in Upper Moldavia in 1839’, 1839
Ivan Trnski, Our travellers vs. foreign ones (1839)
Ljubomir Nenadovic, Travelling at home, German-style, 1845
Janko Buor, A nationalist pilgrimage (1846)
Emanuel Arnold, On the run in Bohemia, 1849
Gheorghe Sion, Frontier ambivalence (1857)
Domopis: Slav Travels
Jan Potocki, Travels in Search of Slavic Antiquities (1795)
Ján Kollár, Daughters of Slava (1843)
Antun Nemcic, Travel Trifles (1845)
Václav Stanek, Railways and Slavs (1846)
Anton Aškerc, Equal to the Russians (1903)
Karel Drož, The idea and practice of a Slavonic travelogue (1907)
Franjo Ksaverski Horvat-Kiš, Sokol excursion (1911)
Václav Karel Krofta, The sea! The sea! (1923)
Variations: Three Women
Dragojla Jarnevic, My sphere of activity is too narrow…, 1839–1840
Polyxena Wesselényi, Travels in Italy and Switzerland (1842)
Dora D’Istria, The women of Greece (1863)
III. On the Tourist Track (mid-19th century–1940s)
Tourists and Travel Writing
Albert Pákh, The Hungarian tourist (1855)
Miltiades Vratsanos, The Greek tourist, 1861
Nicolae Filimon, Real Magyars: the complacent tourist (1863)
Ion Codru Dragusanu, The Transylvanian Pilgrim; the patriotic tourist (1865)
Nicolae Iorga, Recollections from Italy: the anti-tourist (1890)
Ion Caragiale, Letter from Berlin: the ironic tourist, 1905
The European ....