TY - JOUR
T1 - Historical research and tourism analysis
T2 - The case of the tourist-historic city of Jerusalem
AU - Cohen-Hattab, Kobi
PY - 2004/8
Y1 - 2004/8
N2 - Studies of tourist-historic cities often rely upon evolutionary models, which chart the development of tourism in historical towns. Prominent among these models are: Ashworth and Tunbridge's model of the tourist-historic city; models outlining the development of the Central Tourist District; The Tourist Town's Functional Spaces Model; and the Accommodation Service Model. The article seeks to prove that using such models without, at the same time, examining the roots and evolution of tourism in these towns from an historical perspective, will provide only a partial and, occasionally, inaccurate picture of the birth, development and unique character the tourist-historic city. Moreover, given the fact that tourism is a widespread and dynamic phenomenon that touches upon many aspects of the human urban experience - social and political, environmental, economic and so on - probing into the roots and rise of tourism in historical towns may also shed light on various features which, idiosyncratic to historical towns, encouraged their eventual transformation into tourist-historic cities. The article will do all this by tracing the origins and flowering of tourism in Jerusalem - one of the world's most famous tourist-historic cities - during the time of the British mandate (1917-1948).
AB - Studies of tourist-historic cities often rely upon evolutionary models, which chart the development of tourism in historical towns. Prominent among these models are: Ashworth and Tunbridge's model of the tourist-historic city; models outlining the development of the Central Tourist District; The Tourist Town's Functional Spaces Model; and the Accommodation Service Model. The article seeks to prove that using such models without, at the same time, examining the roots and evolution of tourism in these towns from an historical perspective, will provide only a partial and, occasionally, inaccurate picture of the birth, development and unique character the tourist-historic city. Moreover, given the fact that tourism is a widespread and dynamic phenomenon that touches upon many aspects of the human urban experience - social and political, environmental, economic and so on - probing into the roots and rise of tourism in historical towns may also shed light on various features which, idiosyncratic to historical towns, encouraged their eventual transformation into tourist-historic cities. The article will do all this by tracing the origins and flowering of tourism in Jerusalem - one of the world's most famous tourist-historic cities - during the time of the British mandate (1917-1948).
KW - British mandate (1917-1948)
KW - Jerusalem
KW - Models
KW - Tourist-historic city
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/4344588282
U2 - 10.1080/1461668042000249629
DO - 10.1080/1461668042000249629
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AN - SCOPUS:4344588282
SN - 1461-6688
VL - 6
SP - 279
EP - 302
JO - Tourism Geographies
JF - Tourism Geographies
IS - 3
ER -