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:
“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)
“The tears I have cried over Germany have dried. I have washed my face.”
—Marlene Dietrich (19041992)
“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)