Abstract

The Slovak Republic is a country of a deeply rooted Catholic religion and rich cultural, religious and craft tradition. The authors, in their own research, primarily focus on a group of pilgrims, believers, mostly Roman Catholic and Greek Catholic, who are inhabitants of the Slovak Republic (not necessarily the region in which the object of interest is located). The research is based on geographic and sociological selection. The authors define the research object as cultural and historical secular monuments—museums, castles, chateaux, and the like—located in the centre attractive for this group of tourists, that is to say, in places connected with pilgrimage sites, cathedrals, historically important objects from the point of view of religious belief in individual regions of the Slovak Republic. The aim of the authors is to provide the management of these objects with valuable recommendations reasonably justified by the result of their research, in the context of attracting the target group to visit a selected cultural object not directly related to the tourist activity of the target group, but located in the region of which the target group expresses a strong interest, solely for reasons of religious belief and pilgrimage. The primary research phase target of the authors was to solve the problem of the existence of a specific spectrum of common dominant motivation factors of pilgrimage tourist participation as a target group of exploration of activities and an offer of secular objects in the region (see Materials and Methods, H1). We analysed the results of our research through the SPSS program. We used the factor analysis method to extract the key motivation factors, and we have extracted key factors using principal component analysis and VARIMAX rotation in the right-angle system (rotated solution), clusters, assuming that each corresponds to one of the expected motivation factors. Detailed research conception and methodology as well as the results are described in the article.

Highlights

  • The World Tourism Organization considers humanity’s culture and common heritage an inexhaustible resource to which tourism has certain rights and obligations (UN WTO 2005)

  • I tis important to understand that religious lifestyles are how people work out a combination of personal, familial, social, and similar relationships in regard to belonging, consumption, style, or persona more or less in a public or private way, but without obligation; that is, the privatization of religious life such that within wide bounds religious life is capable of being socially ignored, yet personally meaningful, with or without perceivable consequences beyond the individual) according to Religions 2019, 10, 560; doi:10.3390/rel10100560

  • The main aim of the authors’ research was to define the motivational factors for the participation of the target group defined as “pilgrimage participants” from the point of view of the visit to the cultural secular object located in this attractive tourist region for the group, i.e., the region defined by the existence of pilgrimage offer

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The World Tourism Organization considers humanity’s culture and common heritage an inexhaustible resource to which tourism has certain rights and obligations (UN WTO 2005). Culture can be perceived in two key directions, the inner being the tradition and the cultural core, that is, what people do or create in the cultural field both in the past and now. The outward direction is a way of life (faith, gastronomy, traditions, etc.) as well as creative thinking (fashion, style, design, film, industry, etc.). I tis important to understand that religious lifestyles are how people work out a combination of personal, familial, social, and similar relationships in regard to belonging, consumption, style, or persona more or less in a public or private way, but without obligation; that is, the privatization of religious life such that within wide bounds religious life is capable of being socially ignored, yet personally meaningful, with or without perceivable consequences beyond the individual) according to Religions 2019, 10, 560; doi:10.3390/rel10100560 www.mdpi.com/journal/religions. The relationship between cultural heritage and cultural tourism can be characterized as a dynamic interaction that should take the form of cooperation and cooperation between all stakeholders involved in the development of tourism (Lenovský 2008; Bačuvčík and Harantová 2016; Timothy and Boyd 2003; Horváthová and Chmielewska 2016; Tittelbachová and Tyslová 2016; Abrhám and Lžičař 2018; Rubáček 2017)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call