In this issue on European journeys, we figured it would be a good idea to trace our fascination with the continent back to the Grand Tour, a phenomenon that ushered in organised travel for those who could afford it. From about the late 17th century till the advent of large-scale rail networks in the middle of the 19th century, English men and women of means, usually those with an Oxbridge education and keen to see first-hand the antiquities of the Levant, would travel slowly across the continent, moving from France to Switzerland to Italy and then Greece, soaking up the culture and picking up European tastes and refinements along the way. A flamboyant figure like Lord Byron was the epitome of this trend.