The Simple Things

Taking time to live well
  • Home
  • Subscribe
  • SHOP
  • Newsletter
  • About
  • Work with us
  • Home
  • Subscribe
  • SHOP
  • Newsletter
  • About
  • Work with us

Blog

Taking Time to Live Well

  • All
  • Chalkboard
  • Christmas
  • Competition
  • could do
  • Eating
  • Escape
  • Escaping
  • Fresh
  • Fun
  • gardening
  • Gathered
  • Gathering
  • Growing
  • Haikus
  • Interview
  • Living
  • Looking back
  • Magazine
  • magical creatures
  • Making
  • Miscellany
  • My Neighbourhood
  • Nature
  • Nest
  • Nesting
  • outing
  • playlist
  • Reader event
  • Reader offer
  • Shop
  • Sponsored post
  • Sunday Best
  • Think
  • Uncategorized
  • Wellbeing
  • Wisdom

Photography by Getty

Plan | A 'Grand Tour'

Iona Bower February 3, 2024

In the spirit of rich young men (and occasionally women) of centuries gone by, why not spend a winter’s afternoon planning a route for a Grand Tour of Europe? 


Whether it’s simply an idle but enjoyable dream or the first step to making a European trip a reality, planning a big adventure is always time well spent. These days, it’s surprisingly easy to flit from one European city to the next and see a huge amount in just a week or two. Back in the days of Grand Tours it would have been the trip of a lifetime; something that would finish your education and perhaps inform a career. Or a life’s work if you were Canaletto. 

In our February issue, we found out just how easy it is to travel Europe by rail, and, in the spirit of the Grand Tour, we’ve taken it as inspiration for a more modern way to travel, with a contemporary Grand Tour Itinerary. But first, what was the Grand Tour, exactly? 

A rite of passage for many aristocratic young things from the 16th to the 19th centuries, a ‘Grand Tour’ was a way of exploring the art and culture of Europe. The idea was to come home well rounded, better educated and with an intriguing sense of culture about you, having picked up a few charming European habits, which you would crowbar into conversation wherever possible… ‘Ah yes, I started drinking espresso while I was in Venice, actually’... 

Usually, leaving from Dover, often with a tutor (and servants to carry your luggage if you were fortunate), you would first travel to France, taking in Calais and Paris, before moving on through Switzerland. Having crossed the Alps, much of your ‘tour’ would have been spent in Italian cities such as Turin, Florence, Rome, Pompeii and Venice. Usually one would return home through German cities, then Austria (of course stopping at Vienna) and through Flanders and Holland before crossing the sea back to England. 

With the advent of interrailing, the internet and underwear that can be hand washed in a basin and dries within hours, you can spread your wings a little further, of course. Here’s our suggested itinerary for a 2024 Grand Tour via Inter Rail. 


A Modern Grand Tour

There are endless itineraries you could use, but if time and money were no object, this would be our contemporary Grand Tour, taking in some traditional stops and many new ones that we don’t think any European Tour should be complete without. 

1. London

2. Paris

3. Barcelona

4. Nice

5. Monaco

6. Rome

7. Florence

8. Venice

9. Ljubljana

10. Salzburg

11. Budapest

12. Prague

13. Berlin

14. Hamburg

15. Malmo

16. Aarhus

17. Amsterdam

18. London


You could do just three countries at a time for a slower pace, or you can plan your very own itinerary on the Inter Rail website. Now all you have to do is find a tutor and some staff to follow you about carrying your luggage. Bon voyage!

Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

More from our blog…

Featured
Water Boatman.jpg
May 24, 2025
Nature | Pond-Dipping for Grown-ups
May 24, 2025
May 24, 2025
RS2832_iStock-1278591330.jpg
May 23, 2025
Sponsored Post | Get your family active with Youth Sport Trust
May 23, 2025
May 23, 2025
Screenshot 2025-05-21 at 08.52.06.png
May 21, 2025
Playlist | Great Heights
May 21, 2025
May 21, 2025

More inspiration for your travels…

Featured
Getty inter railing.jpg
Feb 3, 2024
Plan | A 'Grand Tour'
Feb 3, 2024
Feb 3, 2024
When in Rome.jpg
Mar 28, 2023
Travel | When in Rome
Mar 28, 2023
Mar 28, 2023
SIM75.OUTING_E4GKJK.png
Sep 23, 2018
Old railway tracks
Sep 23, 2018
Sep 23, 2018
In Escape Tags travel, europe, armchair travel, trains
Comment

Photo: Corine Cumming / EBU

Playlist | Eurovision

David Parker May 8, 2023

It’s Eurovision week! Time for camp costumes and ridiculous sets, at-home score cards and barefaced political voting.To get you in the spirit, our resident Eurovision enthusiast Fiona has put together a playlist of some favourites from over the years. You can have a listen on Spotify here, or see the full track listing below. Have we included your favourites?

Remember, some Eurovision songs should only be experienced in all their bizarre staged glory: see Finland’s monstrous 2006 hit, Hard Rock Hallelujah, Ukraine’s fabulous 2007 drag act Verka Serduchka and Moldova’s ‘epic sax guy’ from 2010.

Download at-home score cards here, or just make your own by scoring Song, Performance, Staging and Surprise factor out of 10.

The Eurovision playlist track listing
DJ: Fiona Hamilton

Nel Blu Dipinto Del Blu by Domenico Modugno
Italy, 1958

Boom Bang A Bang by Lulu
UK, 1969: WINNER!

Puppet On A String by Sandie Shaw
UK, 1967: WINNER!

Waterloo by ABBA
Sweden, 1974: WINNER!

Save Your Kisses For Me by Brotherhood of Man
UK, 1976: WINNER!

Making Your Mind Up by Bucks Fizz
UK, 1981: WINNER!

Love Shine A Light by Katrina & The Waves
UK, 1997: WINNER!

Fly on the Wings of Love by The Olsen Brothers
Denmark, 2000: WINNER!

Divine by Sébastian Tellier
France, 2008

Fairytale by Alexander Rybak
Norway, 2009: WINNER!

Amar Pelos Dois by Salvador Sobrai
Portugal, 2017

Sebi by Zala Kralj & Gašper Šantl
Slovenia, 2019

Think About Things by Daði Freyr
Iceland, 2020: Eurovision cancelled due to Covid

Voilá by Barbara Pravi
France, 2021

Set Me Free by Eden Alene
Israel, 2021

Love Is On My Side by The Black Mamba
Portugal, 2021

Stefania by Kalush Orchestra
Ukraine, 2022: WINNER!

I Wrote A Song by Mae Muller
UK, 2023: WINNER?

In playlist Tags playlist, Eurovision, europe
Comment
Featured
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well
Feb 27, 2025
Feb 27, 2025

Buy, download or subscribe

See the sample of our latest issue here

Buy a copy of our latest anthology: A Year of Celebrations

Buy a copy of Flourish 2, our wellbeing bookazine

Listen to our podcast - Small Ways to Live Well

Feb 27, 2025
Join our Newsletter
Name
Email *

We respect your privacy and won't share your data.

email marketing by activecampaign
facebook-unauth twitter pinterest spotify instagram
  • Subscriber Login
  • Stockists
  • Advertise
  • Contact

The Simple Things is published by Iceberg Press

The Simple Things

Taking time to live well

We celebrate slowing down, enjoying what you have, making the most of where you live, enjoying the company of of friends and family, and feeding them well. We like to grow some of our own vegetables, visit local markets, rummage for vintage finds, and decorate our home with the plunder. We love being outdoors and enjoy the satisfaction that comes with a job well done.

facebook-unauth twitter pinterest spotify instagram