Although the culture of vacationing at the beach only really got started in the late 1700s in Europe, as improved transportation made it easier to reach the sea, there is evidence that ancient Greeks indeed did enjoy the country's sandy shores.
People Also Ask
Actually, common thought says that human beings started going to the beach about 50,000 years ago but not for a pleasure outing. Back then, it was all about survival, and humankind realized that besides the land, there was food to be had in the oceans.
In the 1600s, doctors in Great Britain began to prescribe both drinking and bathing in seawater--cold seawater--as being good for one's health. Beach-going soon became the rage for affluent Europeans from the English Channel to the Baltic Sea. But the upper classes didn't swim, they merely took a quick plunge.