This is a list of notable travelers, consisting of people that are known for their travels or explorations.
Travel is the movement of people between relatively distant geographical locations, and can involve travel by foot, bicycle, automobile, train, boat, airplane, or other means and can be one way or round trip.[1][2] Travel can also include relatively short stays between successive movements.
Bodhisena – Tamil Indian Buddhist scholar and monk who traveled to Japan and established the
Kegon school. He first went to China, and later he traveled to Japan via Cambodia and Vietnam.
Guru Nanak Sahib – the founder of Sikh faith, who was born in the northern part of undivided India in 1469 ad. travelled across all of South Asia (India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan), China and Middle East (Mecca, Iraq, Turkey). He even visited Vatican City (Rome). His goal was to spread the message of peace. He is believed to have received a word directly from God in 1499 after which he embarked on these journeys. He is believed to have travelled more than 28,000 km in five major tours of the world during the period from 1500 to 1524.
Tania Aebi – completed a solo
circumnavigation of the Earth in a 26-foot sailboat between the ages of 18 and 21, starting in May 1985, making her the first American woman and the youngest person (at the time) to sail around the world.[3]
Abu Salim al-Ayyashi – (1628–1679) was a well-known travel writer, poet and scholar from Morocco. He wrote a two volume rihla about his journeys: Ma al-Mawaid (Table Water).
Francis Arundell – toured in exploration of
Asia Minor in March to September 1826, and ventured again in 1833 upon another tour of 1,000 miles through districts the greater part of which had hitherto not been described by any European traveller, when he made an especial study of the ruins of
Antioch in Pisidia. Two volumes describing these discoveries were published in 1834.
Jean Batten – became the best-known New Zealander of the 1930s, internationally, by making a number of record-breaking solo flights across the world. She made the first-ever solo flight from England to New Zealand in 1936.
Ibn Battuta – a medieval Moroccan Muslim traveler and scholar, who is widely recognised as one of the greatest travelers of all time.[4][5] He is known for his extensive travels, accounts of which were published in The Rihla (lit. "Journey").
Benjamin of Tudela – a medieval Jewish traveler who visited Europe, Asia, and Africa in the 12th century. His vivid descriptions of western Asia preceded those of
Marco Polo by a hundred years. With his broad education and vast knowledge of languages, Benjamin of Tudela is a major figure in medieval
geography and
Jewish history.
Nancy Bird Walton – a pioneering Australian
aviator, and was the founder and patron of the Australian Women Pilots' Association
William Eleroy Curtis – an American journalist and diplomat who promoted
Pan-Americanism, publishing many popular novels and articles with his observations of South America, Asia, and Europe.[8]
Zechariah Dhahiri – wrote extensively about his travels and experiences in many travel places, publishing them in a book which he called, Sefer Ha-Mūsar (The Book of Moral Instruction).
Eva Dickson – a Swedish explorer,
rally driver, aviator and travel writer. She was the first woman to have crossed the
Sahara desert by car.
Rose de Freycinet – a Frenchwoman who, in the company of her husband, Louis de Freycinet, sailed around the world between 1817 and 1820 on a French scientific expedition on a military ship, initially disguised as a man.
Isabel Godin des Odonais – an 18th-century woman who became separated from her husband in South America by colonial politics, and was not reunited with him until more than 20 years later. Her long journey, from western Peru to the mouth of the Amazon River, is without equal in the history of South America.
Margaretha Heijkenskjöld – a Swedish traveler and a dress reformer. She attracted a lot of attention from her contemporaries by her journeys.
Gunther Holtorf – a German traveler who, often in company of his wife Christine, journeyed across the world in his
G-WagenMercedes-Benz named "Otto", visiting 179 countries in 26 years.[10]
John Henry Mears – set the record for the fastest trip around the world both in 1913 and 1928. He was also a Broadway producer. On 2 July 1913, he left New York City on the RMS Mauretania, then traveled by a combination of steamers, yachts, and trains to circumnavigate the Earth and reach New York City again on 6 August 1913. He had an elapsed time of 35 days, 21 hours, 35 minutes, 18 and four-fifths seconds.
Alma Maximiliana Karlin – an Austro-Hungarian – Yugoslavian (now Slovene) traveler from Celje, writer, poet, ethnographer, collector, polyglot and
theosophist who travelled the world for 8 years. She started her travel in 24 November 1919 and finished it in January 1928, earning all the money by herself while traveling, by publishing travelogues in newspapers, publishing numerous books (might be more than 22 books published altogether), teaching languages to people, traducing and so on. She mastered 10 languages and she obtained a degree of excellence from 8 foreign languages at Society of Arts in London. She wrote her own dictionary of 10 languages which helped her on her travel around the world.
Waclaw Korabiewicz – a Polish reporter, poet, traveler, collector of ethnographic exhibits
Vyacheslav Krasko – a Russian traveler, manager and professional financier with a PhD Economics.[12] Krasko is a member of the Union of the Russian Around-the-World Travelers.
Lyuba Kutincheva (1910–1998), a female Bulgarian traveler and polyglot who traveled for almost a decade (1929–1938) through the Middle East, Far East, northern Africa and Europe.[13]
Vladimir Lysenko – Between September 1997 and 2002, Lysenko crossed 62 countries by car. He crossed each continent (other than Antarctica) twice, traveling between the most distant points of each continent in both latitude and longitude.
Peter Mundy – a seventeenth-century British merchant trader, traveller and writer. He was the first Briton to record, in his Itinerarium Mundi ('Itinerary of the World'), tasting Chaa (tea) in China and travelled extensively in Asia, Russia and Europe.[15]
Ida Laura Pfeiffer – Austrian explorer, travel writer, and ethnographer. She was one of the first female travelers and her bestselling journals were translated into seven languages.
Jovan Rajić – a Serbian writer, historian, traveller, and pedagogue
Christoph Rehage - walked from Beijing to Urumqi and made
a viral video about it on
YouTube
Matas Šalčius – a Lithuanian traveler, journalist, writer and political figure
Rahul Sankrityayan – a known polymath and polyglot who travelled different parts of the world. He wrote over 100 books on different subjects and had knowledge of about 35 languages.
Sam Sloan – a chess organizer and player who has visited 78 countries in his work
Lady Hester Stanhope – a British socialite, adventurer and traveler. Her archaeological expedition to
Ashkelon in 1815 is considered the first modern excavation in the history of
Holy Land archeology.
Marten Douwes Teenstra – (17 September 1795 – 29 October 1864) Dutch writer and traveller in South Africa and the
Dutch East Indies. The account of his stay at the Cape from 12 March to 7 July 1825, De vruchten mijner werkzaamheden (fruits of my labours), was a thorough description of his trip, rich in interesting detail of the personalities and places he came across, and thoughtful commentary on the social, political and economic life of the
Cape colony.
Barbara Toy – most famous for the series of books she wrote about her pioneering and solitary travels around the world in a
Land Rover, undertaken in the 1950s and 1960s.
Wiebe Wakker – holds the world record for completing the longest ever
electric car trip in the world covering a distance of about 95,000 km and visiting 33 countries.[17]
Xuanzang - 7th-century Chinese monk who made a seventeen year overland journey to India, returning to China with a caravan of Buddhist texts and later wrote an influential and historically significant record of his travels.
^Nehru, Jawaharlal (1989). Glimpses of World History.
Oxford University Press. p. 752.
ISBN0-19-561323-6. After outlining the extensive route of Ibn Battuta's Journey, Nehru notes: "This is a record of travel which is rare enough today with our many conveniences.... In any event, Ibn Battuta must be amongst the great travellers of all time."