Germany
Train Name | Train Number | Railroad | Train Endpoints | Operated |
---|---|---|---|---|
Allersberg-Express | DB Regio | Nuremberg (Hauptbahnhof) – Allersberg | 2006–present | |
Bavaria | DB, SBB-CFF-FFS | Munich (Hauptbahnhof) – Zurich (Hauptbahnhof) | 1969–2002 | |
Blauer Enzian | DB, ÖBB | Hamburg-Altona – Klagenfurt | 1965–present (unnamed since the 1990s) | |
CNL Copernicus | CNL 457/455 | CityNightLine AG, | Amsterdam Centraal – Prague | present |
Helvetia | DB, SBB-CFF-FFS | Hamburg-Altona – Zurich | 1957–1979 | |
Hungaria | Budapest (Nyugati) – Hamburg (Hauptbahnhof) | present | ||
Karel Čapek | R 350 / 353 | Nuremberg (Central) – Prague Praha-Holešovice railway station | present | |
Franz Kafka | R 354 / 357 | Munich (Hauptbahnhof) – Prague Praha-Holešovice railway station | present | |
Karwendel | Berlin (Hauptbahnhof) – Garmisch-Partenkirchen | present | ||
TEE Merkur | TEE 34/35 | DB, DSB | København – Stuttgart | 1974–1978 |
EC Merkur | EC 30/31 | DB, DSB | København – Frankfurt | 1987–1991 |
München-Nürnberg-Express | DB Regio | Munich (Hauptbahnhof) – Nuremberg (Hauptbahnhof) | 2006–present | |
Norddeich Mole | DB | Luxembourg – Norddeich Mole | present | |
Rheingold | DRG, DB | Basel – Hook of Holland/Amsterdam | 1928–1987 | |
TEE Rheinpfeil | TEE 21/22 | DB | Dortmund – Köln (Cologne) – München | 1965–1971 |
IC Rheinpfeil | IC 106/107 | DB | Hannover – Köln (Cologne) – München. After May 1979: Hamburg/Hannover – Köln (Cologne) – Basel | 1971–1987 |
EC Rheinpfeil | EC 8/9 | DB | Hannover – Köln (Cologne) – Chur | 1987–1991 |
Sibirjak | DB, PKP, BŽD, RŽD, KTŽ | Berlin (Hauptbahnhof) – Adler Berlin (Hauptbahnhof) – Astana Berlin (Hauptbahnhof) – Chelyabinsk Berlin (Hauptbahnhof) – Kazan Berlin (Hauptbahnhof) – Moscow (Belorussky) Berlin (Hauptbahnhof) – Novosibirsk Berlin (Hauptbahnhof) – St. Petersburg (Vitebsky) Berlin (Hauptbahnhof) – Ufa |
present | |
Vindobona | DR (1957 - 1990) DB (since 1990), ÖBB, ČSD | Hamburg-Altona – Praha – Wien – Villach | 1957–present |
Read more about this topic: List Of Named Passenger Trains Of Europe
Famous quotes containing the word germany:
“We are fighting in the quarrel of civilization against barbarism, of liberty against tyranny. Germany has become a menace to the whole world. She is the most dangerous enemy of liberty now existing.”
—Theodore Roosevelt (18581919)
“By an application of the theory of relativity to the taste of readers, to-day in Germany I am called a German man of science, and in England I am represented as a Swiss Jew. If I come to be regarded as a bête noire the descriptions will be reversed, and I shall become a Swiss Jew for the Germans and a German man of science for the English!”
—Albert Einstein (18791955)