List of Named Passenger Trains of Europe - Spain

Spain

Train Name Train Number Railroad Train Endpoints Operated
Al Andalus Expreso RENFE Granada – Ronda – Jerez de la Frontera present
Altaria Triana RENFE Barcelona (Sants) – Cádiz present
Catalán Talgo Elipsos Montpellier (Saint-Roch) – Barcelona (Estació de França) 1969–present
El Transcantábrico FEVE Ferrol – León – Bilbao/Santiago de Compostela present
Limón Exprés FGV Benidorm – Gata de Gorgos (Altea) 1971–2006
2008–present
Picasso RENFE Bilbao (Abando) – Málaga present
Sud Express CP, RENFE, SNCF Paris (Montparnasse) – Hendaye – Irun – Lisbon (Santa Apolónia)
Hendaye – Irun – Lisbon (Santa Apolónia)
1896–1990
1990 – present
Talgo Covadonga RENFE Barcelona (Sants) – Gijón present
Talgo Finisterre RENFE Barcelona (Sants) – A Coruña/Vigo present
Talgo Mare Nostrum Elipsos Montpellier (Saint-Roch) – Valencia – Lorca 1970s – present
Talgo Miguel de Unamuno RENFE Barcelona (Sants) – Irun/Bilbao (Abando)/Salamanca present
Tren de los Alpes Elipsos Madrid (Chamartín) – Bourg-Saint-Maurice winter season
Trenhotel Antonio Machado 946/947 RENFE Barcelona (Sants) – Cádiz -2010
Trenhotel Francisco de Goya 406/407/408/409 Elipsos Madrid (Chamartín) – Paris (d'Austerlitz) present
Trenhotel Gibralfaro RENFE Barcelona (Sants) – Granada/Málaga present
Trenhotel Joan Miró 474/477 Elipsos Barcelona (Estació de França) – Paris (d'Austerlitz) present
Trenhotel Lusitania RENFE, CP Madrid (Atocha) – Lisbon (Santa Apolónia) present
Trenhotel Pau Casals 272/273/274/275 Elipsos Barcelona (Estació de França) – Zürich (Hauptbahnhof) present
Trenhotel Rías Gallegas RENFE Madrid – A Coruña/Vigo present
Trenhotel Salvador Dalí 11273/11274 Elipsos Barcelona (Estació de França) – Milan (Central) present
There have been up to 125 named trains in Spain.

Read more about this topic:  List Of Named Passenger Trains Of Europe

Famous quotes containing the word spain:

    England and France, Spain and Portugal, Gold Coast and Slave Coast, all front on this private sea; but no bark from them has ventured out of sight of land, though it is without doubt the direct way to India.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    Heroic ages are not and never were sentimental and those daring conquistadores who conquered entire worlds for their Spain or Portugal received lamentably little thanks from their kings.
    Stefan Zweig (18811942)