Tourism regarding Japanese royalty doesn't even hit the scale, at least in my ventures in reading. I'm a history buff, and I'll admit I'm an anglophile (as well as a francophile & russophile) but when I read recently that 'even the (little) Japanese princess was bullied at school'
as bullying is big as a topic here in the the U.S. presently
I was surprised that I didn't even think of the Japanese royalty even though I indeed was aware there was still Japanese royalty.
I don't know why. Perhaps we in the former colonies are more aware of the connections between the UK & us, but IMHO more probably perhaps because Japan isn't known (again, at least in the West) as having such structures as royal castles & estates, The Tower, etc.
Could you give me links regarding the draw and income between U.K. & France tourism, especially regarding a regular vacation (i.e. just to see Paris or the South of France for example) vs. the impetus for the vacation to actually visit royal/post-royal structures or to watch ancient history still practiced today such as the opening of Parliament, the changing of the guard, etc.? I'm sure Versailles and the Tuileries (sp?) have healthy draws but the number of royal estates between the two countries alone seems to me to belie those stats.
Additionally, anyone I've talked to have never gone to France expressly to visit Versailles, etc. just for their royal history -- art, yes; whereas most everyone I've talked to in my travels, parties, meetings, etc. who have vacationed in Britain have preplanned and availed themselves of visiting royal structures/estates/artifacts; even if their trip was primarily, let's say as a few have done, gone mainly to experience Brighton or Wales or the moors...
Of course that's only been my experience, but in my experience it is without exception. Nobody I've known have gone to France to visit Versailles or Malmaison because of their (past) 'royals' alone (although to be sure there have been some); but in Britain, and mostly at least in part for the present royals and the living history -- yes.
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