Passports are a hot topic at the moment politically, and they’ve got a
fascinating history as explored in the recent Radio 4 documentary
Passports Please. To some they are treasured and hard-won documents that
open doors to travel and explore the world; to others they are a barrier
to movement for citizens of the world, but who doesn't get a little bit
excited when they get another stamp from some exotic destination? Here
are some amazing facts about passports that will make you appreciate
them in a whole new way.
1. The Queen does not have a passport
The Queen does not have to worry about taking a passport. As she is the
one granting permission to the rest of us, she doesn’t actually need one
herself. However, the Queen’s Messengers deliver secret documents around
the world. These documents get a passport of their own and there are
allegedly only 15 of these passports in existence.
2. Get a new passport before six months of expiry
Don't take a gamble on the expiry date of your passport before you make
a trip. Some countries ask that your passport should be valid for 90
days AFTER entry, including most European countries, but to play it safe
you should go for six months, the length of time required by China,
Indonesia, Russia, Saudi Arabia and other countries. This is to avoid
you being stuck in that country without means to get home.
3. You need a passport for Queensland
Queensland can only be entered by the residents of nine coastal villages
in Papua New Guinea without passports, as part of a treaty when Papua
New Guinea gained independence.
4. The Vatican has no immigration control
The Vatican doesn’t have any immigration controls but the Pope carries
Vatican Passport No. 1.
5. Many Americans do not have a passport at all
According to the Department of State, there are around 121,512,341
passports for around 321,362,789 American citizens.
6. Lost weight? Get a new passport
In the US, you need to update your passport photo if you gain or lose a
lot of weight, have facial surgery or trauma or if you have added or
removed large facial tattoos or piercings.
7. Finnish and Slovenian passports act like
flicker-books
If you flip a Finnish or Slovenian passport forwards, images along the
bottom of the page create a moving picture.
8. Family passport photos were acceptable
In the early days of passport photographs, you could send in any
photograph you liked and even family groups were accepted.
9. The Nicaraguan passport is the least forgeable
The Nicaraguan passport has 89 separate security features including
holograms and watermarks and is reported to be the least forgeable
document in the world.
10. Tonga sold passports
Tonga used to sell passports for $20k a throw.
11. The first passport was in the Bible
In the book of Nehemiah, King Artaxerxes I of Persia gave a letter to an
official granting him safe passage on his travels through Judea.
12. Passports only needed photographs after the
First World War
Photographs were only a requirement after the start of the First World
War after a Germany spy en-tered Britain on a fake US passport.
13. The Northern Lights appear on Scandinavian
passports
If you shine Scandinavian passports under UV light, the Northern Lights
appear as irridescent trails on the paper.
There we are. Passports, the ultimate ticket to ride, ease our path
around the world. Whatever colour they are, whatever stamps they have,
they all tell a story. |