Before we think about citizenship or passport, a state which issues these papers must exist. A citizenship or passport not possible without existence of a state.

For most of human prehistory, the concept of state did not exist. The history of the state is only less than 6,000 years old, evidence found in ancient Mesopotamia from around 3700 BC. Evidence suggests a state emerged from stateless communities of large population

Evolution of Citizenship

Citizenship comes from the Latin word for ‘city’, because in the earlier days, people identified themselves as belonging to cities more than countries.

The Concept of Citizenship first originated in Ancient Greece roughly 1000 years before Romans expanded use of citizenship to all roman inhabitants with free movement within the empire, equivalent to modern day Schengen area.

The beginning of citizenship also dates back to the ancient Israelites, who preserved their identity as a people, despite moving to different lands or enslaved by neighboring civilizations and this preservation of ethnic identity has been linked to the development of citizenship

Where did the word Passport come from?

Passports first of all are ‘travel` documents. The most important benefit of passport is international travel and protection.

By 15th century, Passport came from two french words ‘passer’ + ‘port’  meaning “to pass through a port”, because those days most international travel was by sailing ships. In those days, travelers were also checked by guards at city gates.

History of Passports

Since Early times, passports have existed in many forms, not just paper, as royal seals, face masks  and tatoos (known to have existed since 3100 BC.

Passport masks were made by every culture in West Africa. It was simple and effective way to identify. Face Masks worn by same tribe were identified, allowed to travel and trade.

Tattoo’s were known to exist since neolithic period, direct evidence from mummified skin used before 3500 BC. The ancient Greeks used secret tattoos with invisible ink to communicate among spies. The Romans marked criminals and slaves with tattoos.

Evolution of Passport

Let us take a look how passports have evolved from just a basic identification document over the course of history.

Ancient

One of the earliest known references to paperwork that served in a role similar to that of a passport is found in the Hebrew Bible. Nehemiah 2:7–9, dating from approximately 450 BC, states that Nehemiah, an official serving King Artaxerxes I of Persia, asked permission to travel to Judea; the king granted leave and gave him a letter “to the governors beyond the river” requesting safe passage for him as he traveled through their lands.

This is the earliest safe conduct, a form of identity document which laid foundations for a passport.

Arthashastra, a hindu treaty in sanskrit from India, composed between 2nd century BCE and 3rd century CE mentions the first passport and passbooks in world history

The Roman diplomas were the earliest known ‘military passports’ were known to have appeared since AD 52 (about 2000 years ago). The most common way of identifying a person in Ancient Rome was ‘diploma. A Roman military diploma was a document inscribed in metal tablet in bronze certifying that the holder was honorably discharged from the Roman armed forces and/or had received the grant of Roman citizenship from the emperor as reward for service. It is a full roman citizenship given after 25 years of military service.

Medieval

The Earliest identity document inscribed into law was introduced by King Henry V of England with the Safe Conducts Act 1414. It was not for the next 500 years until World War I, most people did not have or need for an identity document.

King Louis XIV of France issued personally signed documents dubbed “passe port,” literally meaning “to pass through a port,” because most international travel was by sailing ships.  Hence the term “passe port”

Passports in medieval europe, were only issued to foreign travelers by authorities, instead of local citizens, which contained the list of cities and towns permitted for the bearer can pass through. Passports were checked for travelers coming inland from sea ports

Modern

Today passports exist in booklet paper format as e-passports with biometric chip. It is only a matter of time, paper passports become extinct, go fully digital or even further, everyone will be carrying a nano passport embedded in a body.

Europe

It was only after first world war, passports were in widely used in Europe due to rapid expansion of wealth, rail travel, and immigration. Passports for entire family one sheet of paper were quite common. Prior to World War I, passports were not required, for travel within Europe

United Kingdom

In 1540, granting travel documents in England became a role of the Privy Council of England, and it was around this time that the term “passport” was used.

In 1794, issuing British passports became the job of the Office of the Secretary of State. The Privy Council, which advises the monarch, granted British passports from at least 1540

The oldest British passport still in existence was issued on 18 June 1641 and signed by Charles I

Until 1778 passports were written in English and Latin. After this date, issued in French

Queen Elizabeth II does not have a passport when traveling abroad, making it superfluous for her to hold one, as British passports are issued in the name of Her Majesty. All other members of the Royal Family have passports.https://www.royal.uk/passports 

This British Queen’s Messenger passport issued to couriers who carry secret and important documents to British Embassies and consulates around the world.  The first recorded King’s Messenger was John Norman, appointed in 1485 by King Richard III to hand-deliver secret documents

China

Passports were an important part of the Chinese bureaucracy as early as the Western Han, if not in the Qin Dynasty. They required such details as age, height, and bodily features. These passports (zhuan) determined a person’s ability to move throughout imperial counties and through points of control. Even children needed passports

United States

The first US passport was issued in 1775. In 1856 Congress decided to give to the Department of State the sole authority to issue passports. The earliest passport act in 1783 signed by Benjamin Franklin in 1783 to grant safe passage to ships and vessels

Passport photos only introduced in the US in 1916 by President Wilson’s executive order of December 15 to prevent fraud

American passports had green covers from 1941 until 1976 and also during a brief period from April 1993 until March 1994. Green passport behind the navy blue passport in the picture.

All US presidents are given diplomatic passports for diplomatic trips abroad. The US President even when out of his office, gets to keep his diplomatic passport for life.

Canada

First Canadian passports were issued in 1862 following the outbreak of the American Civil War, when the US demanded a secure identification from Canadians crossing the border

In 1862, Governor General Viscount Monck introduced a centralized system for issuing Canadian passports

Italy

Roman diplomas were the equivalent earliest military passports, appeared first from AD 52, under emperor Claudius, who regularised the practice of granting Roman citizenship to non-citizen auxiliaries after 25 years of military service.

Passport was introduced first time in Italy by Napoleon (1796-1815).  After Napoleon was defeated in 1815, the passport was substituted with relocation permits issued by local authorities

It was not until italian unification in 1870, passports became requirement.

Citizenship to allies and the conquered lands was a vital step in the process of Romanization. Romanization was the most important reason for the success of Rome

Switzerland

The first Swiss passports were issued on 10 December 1915. The Red Swiss passport color was created in 1959.
Today, the Swiss passports issued in 5 languages: German, French, Italian, Romansh and English.

Japan

The first travel documents in #Japan were issued in 1866. These were letter of request papers permitting overseas travel for business and education

Passport was formally introduced into the Japanese language in 1878

Below is the japanese #passport issued in 1866

France

King Louis XIV of France issued personally signed documents dubbed “passe port,” literally meaning “to pass through a port,” because most international travel was by sailing ships.

Hence the term “passe port”

Although French nationality and citizenship well existed before French revolution, it was only in 1804, France first introduced #naturalization through Civil code laws.

Australia

Before 1901, Australia was of six separate British colonies. Passport usage was not common, and if required British or other national passports were used. In 1901, the six colonies joined to form the Commonwealth of Australia.

Soon after British passports issued in Australia

India

One of the earliest mentions of #passport can be traced back to India, where Arthashastra a hindu sanskrit treatise  mentions the first passport and passbooks in world history.  According to the text, the superintendent of passports must issue sealed passes before one could enter or leave the countryside

Passports introduced to British India after the First World War. The British Indian passport issued to British subjects of British Indian Empire which was valid for travel only in British Empire, Italy, Switzerland, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Germany, France, Spain, Norway, Sweden,Holland

Brazil

In Brazil, ‘Passport’ was first inserted into the Old Republic Constitution of Brazil in 1891. There are records of travel documents being checked at Brazilian ports of entry from as early as 1530’s

Arab World

Tax receipts were once used as basic passports during the Islamic caliphate period 1400 yeas ago in-order to travel to different regions of the Caliphate.

Vatican State

The Vatican smallest state in the world issues 2 types of passport

1. Ordinary passport issued by Vatican state
2. Holy See issues diplomatic/service passports.

Holy See is headquartered in Vatican overlooks diplomatic relations with 172 states. Vatican has 800 residents, over 450 have citizenship.

Mongolia

Between 1167-1227 in Mongolia, Genghis Khan introduced concept of passports known as ‘Paiza’ to protect diplomats, merchants, messengers in silk route. Mongols invented the worlds first diplomatic passport known as Paiza/Paizi to protect diplomats, merchants, messengers traveling in silk route

Paiza were metal tablets inscribed in gold, silver, bronze with safe passage statement. Marco Polo is said to have carried a foot long gold paiza issued by Kublai Khan

Korea

The first English language passports of the Korean Empire were issued in 1902 by the People’s Comfort Agency to Koreans migrating to Hawaii.  After the 1910 Japanese rule in Korea, Koreans began having to use Japanese passports. Korean empire passports are quite rare to find.

Passport Standardisation

Passports and visas became necessary travel documents only after World War I.

Before that passports and visas were usually the same type of travel documents. Today, visas have become separate secondary travel documents, with passports acting as the primary travel document.

The 1920 League of Nations meeting in France laid the foundations for passport standards. During the meeting 42 nations implemented common size, layout, and design of passport as 32 page booklet. Passports issued for only single trip valid for 2 yrs.https://biblio-archive.unog.ch/Dateien/CouncilMSD/C-641-M-230-1925-VIII_EN.pdf 

Passport standardization came about in 1980, under International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) which introduced machine readable passports https://www.icao.int/publications/Documents/9303_p1_cons_en.pdf 

The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) issues passport standards which are treated as recommendations to national governments. These passports are made only in 3 colors (Red, Green, Blue)

Photos in Passport

Photo identification first appeared in 1876.

It was not become widely used until the early 20th century to strengthen the security of passports and ID docs

Australia and Great Britain introduced requirement for a photographic passport in 1915 after Lody spy scandal

Pet Passports

On 1 Oct 2001, member states introduced the EU Pet passport to freely travel between member states through approved carriers. Brexit also affects free movement of Pets

Sea Passports

Sea Passports were issued to American ships in 1786 and 1836 provided protection from attack by ships in Mediterranean sea.

Honorary citizenship

Honorary citizenship awarded to distinguished individuals
Honorary citizenship is not “real” citizenship as it does not offer full citizenship rights including passport
Honorary passports are not valid travel documents

Some exceptions are Irish hon citizenship offers full rights with passport

What is the Difference  between Visa, Safe Conduct  and Passport?

The answer lies in the diplomacy

  • A Safe Conduct document is different from a passport or visa
  • A passport given to the citizens of the country
  • A visa issued whose country maintains neutral or friendly diplomatic relations
  • A safe conduct issued to visit a country without a diplomatic relationship or enemy state. A safe conduct is a document issued during conflict or war, authorizes security for enemy aliens to traverse within territory without harassment, body harm, or fear of death

Diplomatic Passports

First understand what is diplomacy before moving to passports!

Diplomacy is the art and practice of conducting negotiations between two states.

Diplomatic passport is passport used by diplomats for traveling on official government duty, given immunity. The immunity is not automatically conferred to the diplomatic passport holder, as the host country assigns it to certain grades of officers.

Where are the origins of diplomacy and immunity?

Earliest known diplomatic records, exist as stone tablet showing first international peace treaty signed between pharaoh of Egypt and the ruler of the Hittite Empire known as Egyptian–Hittite peace treaty 1274 BC

Ancient origins of diplomatic immunity can be found in Indian epics Ramayana and Mahabharata before 2000 BC, where messengers and diplomats were given immunity from capital punishment. This painting depicts Lord Krishna mediating peace to avert Kurukshetra War of Mahabharata

Diplomatic immunity and rights were established during mid-17th century in Europe, later spread throughout the world, until it was formalized by the 1961 Vienna convention.

Read the entire history with pictures  download pdf from our passport museum website.