List of EuroCity services
A list of EuroCity services, past and present. Routes are described from north-west to south-east. Unnamed services are listed alongside named services on similar routes, but the table is sortable.
- This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Key
Former TEE service | |
EC | EuroCity service still active |
EC | Service no longer active, but the journey can still be made on separate EuroCity trains. |
Service no longer active, but a direct train still operates the same route. | |
† | Service still active, but name no longer in use. |
List of services
Name | Route | # | Countries | Rolling stock | Period of operation | Current service |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Absalon | Copenhagen – Rødby – Puttgarden – Hamburg | 230/231 | Denmark Germany |
DSB | 2001–2007 | EC/ICE |
232/233 | 2003–2007 | |||||
Admiraal de Ruijter | Amsterdam – Rotterdam – Hoek van Holland – Harwich – London[1] | 66/67 | Netherlands United Kingdom |
NS/BR | 1987–1988 | Dutchflyer |
Albert Einstein | Prague – Furth im Wald – Munich – Lindau – Bregenz – Zürich – Bern – Interlaken | 166/167 | Czech Republic Germany Austria Switzerland |
SBB | 1993–1999 | Ex, EC, IC |
Prague – Furth im Wald – Munich | Czech Republic Germany |
ČD | 2000–2002 | Ex | ||
Munich – Lindau – Bregenz – Zürich | 196/197 | Germany Austria Switzerland |
SBB | EC | ||
Agram | Salzburg – Villach – Ljubljana – Zagreb | 314/315 | Austria Slovenia Croatia |
SŽ | 2002–? | EC |
Albert Schweitzer | Lyon – Strasbourg – Karlsruhe – Mannheim – Frankfurt | 277/278 | France Germany |
DB | 2001–2002 | TGV |
Lyon – Strasbourg – Karlsruhe – Stuttgart | 166/169 | France Germany |
DB | 2004 | TGV | |
Alfred Nobel | Oslo/Stockholm – Copenhagen – Rødby – Puttgarden – Hamburg | 390/391 | Norway Sweden Denmark Germany |
DB | 1987–1990 | |
289/290 | 1990–1991 | |||||
Alexander von Humboldt | Berlin – Hannover – Dortmund – Düsseldorf – Cologne – Aachen – Liège – Brussels | 46/47 | Germany Belgium |
DB | 1993–1997 | ICE |
Cologne – Aachen – Liège – Brussels | 1997–1998 | ICE/Thalys | ||||
Alexandre Dumas | Paris – Turin – Milan | 9242/9247 | France Italy |
SNCF (TGV) | 1996–2009 | |
Alois Negrelli | Hamburg – Berlin – Dresden – Prague | 174/175 | Germany Czech Republic |
ČD | 2000–2002 | EC |
Aarhus – Flensburg – Hamburg – Berlin – Dresden – Prague | Denmark Germany Czech Republic |
2003–2004 | EC | |||
370/371 | 2005–2006 | |||||
Aarhus – Flensburg – Hamburg – Berlin – Dresden – Prague – Brno – Vienna | Denmark Germany Czech Republic Austria |
2007 | ||||
Ostseebad Binz – Stralsund – Berlin – Dresden – Prague – Brno – Vienna[2] | Germany Czech Republic Austria |
2008–2012 | EC | |||
Ostseebad Binz – Stralsund – Berlin – Dresden – Prague – Bratislava[3] | Germany Czech Republic Slovakia |
2013– | EC | |||
Aarhus – Flensburg – Hamburg | 274/275 | Denmark Germany |
DSB | 2003–2004 | EC | |
386/387 | 2005– | EC | ||||
Andreas Hofer | Dortmund – Düsseldorf – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck | 18/19 | Germany Austria |
DB | 1991–2002 | EC |
Angelika Kauffmann | Munich – Lindau – Bregenz – Zürich | 92/93 | Germany Austria Switzerland |
SBB | 1994–2002 | EC |
Anton Bruckner | Hamburg – Bremen – Dortmund – Wuppertal – Cologne – Koblenz – Frankfurt – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Linz | 128/129 | Germany Austria |
DB | 1991–1993 | ICE |
Antonín Dvořák | Prague – Vienna | 8/9 | Czech Republic Austria |
1992–? | EC | |
70/71 | ČD | ?–2010 | ||||
76/77 | 2010– | EC | ||||
Arbalète | Paris – Basel – Zürich | 114/115 | France Switzerland |
SNCF | 1987–1997 | TGV Lyria |
Avala | Belgrade – Niš – Sofia | 293/294 | Serbia Bulgaria |
|||
Budapest – Kelebia – Belgrade | 344/345 | Czech Republic Slovakia Hungary Serbia |
||||
Barcelona Talgo | Paris – Toulouse – Barcelona | 475/477 | France Spain |
RENFE | 1987–1993 | |
Barbarossa | Stuttgart – Schaffhausen – Zürich – Chiasso – Milan | 84/85 | Germany Switzerland Italy |
SBB | 1987–1988 | IC, EC |
Bavaria | Munich – Lindau – Bregenz – Zürich | 98/99 | Germany Austria Switzerland |
SBB | 1987–2002 | EC |
190/191 | 2003– | EC | ||||
192/193 | ||||||
194/195 | ||||||
196/197 | ||||||
Bela Bartok | Munich – Salzburg – Linz – Vienna – Budapest | 62/63 | Germany Austria Hungary |
MÁV | 1991–2008 | Railjet |
Benjamin Britten | Amsterdam – Rotterdam – Hoek van Holland – Harwich – London[1] | 62/63 | Netherlands United Kingdom |
NS/BR | 1987–1988 | Dutchflyer |
Beograd | Vienna – Budapest – Novi Sad – Belgrade | 340/341 342/343 |
Austria Hungary Serbia |
|||
Berlin-Warszawa-Express | Berlin – Frankfurt (Oder) – Poznań – Warsaw | 40/41 | Germany Poland |
DB/PKP | 2002– | EC |
42/43 | 2011– | |||||
44/45 | 2002– | |||||
46/47 | ||||||
Berlin – Frankfurt (Oder) – Poznań | 48/49 | 2002–2004 2008 |
EC | |||
Berlin-Gdynia-Express | Berlin – Frankfurt (Oder) – Poznań – Gdańsk – Gdynia | 54/55 | Germany Poland |
PKP | 2012– | EC |
Berner Oberland | Amsterdam – Utrecht – Oberhausen – Düsseldorf – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Bern – Interlaken | 100/101 | Netherlands Germany Switzerland |
SBB | 1991–2002 | ICE |
2/3 | 2003 | |||||
Hamburg – Bremen – Dortmund – Düsseldorf – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Bern – Interlaken | 100/101 | 2004 | ||||
Berolina | Berlin – Frankfurt (Oder) – Poznań – Warsaw | 42/43 | Germany Poland |
PKP | 1992–1997 | EC |
46/47 | 1997–2002 | |||||
Bertel Thorvaldsen | Copenhagen – Rødby – Puttgarden – Hamburg | 188/189 | Denmark Germany |
DB | 1992–1994 | EC/ICE |
184/185 | DSB | 1994–1998 | ||||
34/35 | 1998–2008 | |||||
Blauer Enzian | Dortmund – Wuppertal – Cologne – Koblenz – Frankfurt – Würzburg – Munich – Salzburg – Villach – Klagenfurt | 20/21 | Germany Austria |
DB | 1987–1989 | ICE, EC |
Dortmund – Wuppertal – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Munich – Salzburg – Villach – Klagenfurt | 12/13 | 1989–1991 | EC | |||
114/115 | 1991–2002 | |||||
Bonifacius | Amsterdam – Utrecht – Oberhausen – Düsseldorf – Cologne | 141/152 | Netherlands Germany |
DB | 1991–2000 | ICE |
Borromeo | Paris – Geneva – Lausanne – Brig – Milan | 123/124 | France Switzerland Italy |
SNCF | TGV, EC | |
Brabant | Brussels – Paris | 83/86 | Belgium France |
SNCF | 1987–1993 | Thalys/TGV |
Brianza | Bellinzona – Chiasso – Milan | 197/198 | Switzerland Italy |
CIS | EC | |
Canaletto | Schaffhausen – Zürich – Chiasso – Milan – Venice | 382/283 | Switzerland Italy |
CIS | 2004–? | IC, EC |
Caravaggio | Paris – Turin – Milan | 9240/9249 | France Italy |
SNCF (TGV) | 2003–? | |
Carl Maria von Weber † | Hamburg – Berlin – Dresden – Prague | 178/179 | Germany Czech Republic |
ČD | 1994 2001–2002 2006 |
EC |
Berlin – Dresden – Prague | 1995–1997 2008–2010 2013– |
EC | ||||
Westerland – Hamburg – Berlin – Dresden – Prague | 1997–1999 2003–2005 |
IC, EC | ||||
Kiel – Hamburg – Berlin – Dresden – Prague | 2000 | |||||
Szczecin – Berlin – Dresden – Prague | Poland Germany Czech Republic |
2011–2012 | RE, EC | |||
Carlo Magno | Dortmund – Düsseldorf – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Luzern – Chiasso – Milan – Sestri Levante | 4/5 | Germany Switzerland Italy |
DB | 1987–1991 | |
6/7 | 1991–1992 | |||||
Casanova | Venice – Ljubljana | 50/51 | Italy Slovenia |
SŽ | 2003–2008 | |
Catalan Talgo | Geneva – Grenoble – Avignon – Nimes – Perpignan – Barcelona | 70/71 | France Spain |
RENFE | 1987–2010 | |
Champs Elysees | Paris – Lausanne | 22/29 | France Switzerland |
SNCF | 1987–? | TGV |
Christian Morgenstern | Copenhagen – Rødby – Puttgarden – Hamburg | 180/181 | Denmark Germany |
DSB | 1992–1998 | EC/ICE |
31/32 | 1998–2000 | |||||
33/34 | 2001–2007 | |||||
Cinque Terre | Schaffhausen – Zürich – Chiasso – Milan – Genoa – Livorno | 354/355 | Switzerland Italy |
CIS | 2004–2008 | |
Cisalpin | Paris – Geneva – Lausanne – Brig – Milan | 23/26 | France Switzerland Italy |
SNCF | 1987–? | TGV, EC |
Cisalpino Teodolina | Zürich – Chiasso – Milan | 171/178 | Switzerland Italy |
CIS | EC | |
Geneva – Lausanne – Brig – Milan | 32/39 | Switzerland Italy |
SBB | EC | ||
34/35 | ||||||
36/41 | ||||||
Citadella | Ljubljana – Budapest | 246/247 | Slovenia Hungary |
|||
Colosseum | Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Luzern – Chiasso – Milan – Rome | 70/71 | Germany Switzerland Italy |
DB | 1989–1991 | |
Comenius | Berlin – Dresden – Prague | 170/171 | Germany Czech Republic |
MÁV | 1993–1997 | EC |
Hamburg – Berlin – Dresden – Prague – Bratislava – Budapest | 174/175 | Germany Czech Republic Slovakia Hungary |
1997–1999 | |||
Kraków – Prague | 108/109 | Poland Czech Republic |
2006– | EC | ||
Croatia | Vienna – Graz – Zagreb | 156/157 | Austria Croatia |
EC | ||
Csárdás | Vienna – Budapest | 964/965 | Austria Hungary |
Railjet | ||
DB-ÖBB Eurocity | Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck | 80/189 | Germany Austria |
DB | 2009 | EC |
188/189 | 2010 | |||||
82/189 | ÖBB | 2012– | EC | |||
Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck – Bolzano | 80/81 | Germany Austria Italy |
DB | 2010 | EC | |
82/189 | ÖBB | 2011 | ||||
Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck – Bolzano – Verona | 82/83 | DB | 2010 | EC | ||
80/81 | ÖBB | 2011– | EC | |||
83/188 | ||||||
88/89 | 2013– | |||||
Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck – Verona – Bologna | 84/85 | 2010– | ||||
Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck – Verona – Venice | 86/87 | 2011– | ||||
Detvan | Ostrava – Bratislava | 220/221 | Czech Republic Slovakia |
ČD | 2006– | EC |
Drava | Venice – Ljubljana – Zagreb – Budapest | 52/53 | Italy Slovenia Croatia Hungary |
SŽ | ||
Emona | Vienna – Graz – Ljubljana | 150/151 | Austria Croatia |
ÖBB | EC | |
Vienna – Graz – Maribor | 253/256 | Austria Croatia |
ÖBB | |||
Erasmus | Amsterdam – Utrecht – Oberhausen – Düsseldorf – Cologne – Koblenz – Frankfurt – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck | 24/25 | Netherlands Germany Austria |
DB | 1987–1991 | ICE, EC |
Amsterdam – Utrecht – Oberhausen – Düsseldorf – Cologne | 143/150 | Netherlands Germany |
1991–2000 | ICE | ||
Étoile du Nord | Amsterdam – Rotterdam – Antwerpen – Brussels – Paris | 82/87 | Netherlands Belgium France |
SNCF | 1987–1995 | Thalys |
Fatra | Prague – Ostrava – Zilina | 126/127 | Czech Republic Slovakia |
|||
Felix Timmermans | Cologne – Aachen – Liège – Brussels | 36/37 | Germany Belgium |
DB | 1993–1997 | ICE/Thalys |
Frans Hals | Amsterdam – Utrecht – Oberhausen – Düsseldorf – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck | 26/27 | Netherlands Germany Austria |
DB | 1987–1991 | ICE, EC |
Amsterdam – Utrecht – Oberhausen – Düsseldorf – Cologne | 145/148 | Netherlands Germany |
1991–2000 | ICE | ||
Fransz Liszt | Dortmund – Düsseldorf – Cologne – Koblenz – Frankfurt – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Linz – Vienna – Budapest | 20/21 | Germany Austria Hungary |
DB | 1989–1991 | ICE, Railjet |
24/25 | 1991–2002 | |||||
ÖBB | 2003–2007 | |||||
Franz Schubert | Zürich – Innsbruck – Salzburg – Linz – Vienna | 165/151 | Switzerland Austria |
ÖBB | 1987–2010 | Railjet |
Frejus | Lyon – Turin | 144/145 | France Italy |
FS | 1996–2003 | |
146/147 | ||||||
Galilei | Paris – Geneva – Lausanne – Brig – Milan – Venice / Florence | 21/24 | France Switzerland Italy |
SNCF | 1987–1993 | |
Garda | Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck – Verona – Milan | 80/81 | Germany Austria Italy |
FS | 1991–2008 | |
Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck – Verona | 83/188 | 2009 | EC | |||
Goethe | Paris – Metz – Saarbrücken – Kaiserslautern – Mannheim – Frankfurt | 56/57 | France Germany |
DB | 1987–1991 2000–2007 |
ICE |
58/59 | SNCF | 1991–1993 | ||||
Paris – Metz – Saarbrücken – Kaiserslautern – Mannheim – Frankfurt – Erfurt – Leipzig – Dresden – Prague | 56/57 | France Germany Czech Republic |
DB | 1997–1999 | ICE, EC | |
Gottardo | Zürich – Chiasso – Milan | 57/58 | Switzerland Italy |
SBB | 1988–1994 | EC |
12/13 | 2009– | EC | ||||
14/15 | ||||||
16/17 | ||||||
18/19 | 2009–2011 | EC | ||||
20/21 | 2009– | EC | ||||
22/23 | ||||||
24/25 | ||||||
113/114 | ||||||
Gottfried Keller | Munich – Lindau – Bregenz – Zürich | 96/97 | Germany Austria Switzerland |
SBB | 1987–1991 | EC |
94/95 | 1993–2002 | |||||
Munich – Lindau – Bregenz – Zürich – Bern | 96/97 | 1991–1993 | ||||
Gustav Klimt | Prague – Vienna – Graz | 78/79 | Czech Republic Austria |
EC | ||
Gustav Mahler | Prague – Vienna | 70/71 | Czech Republic Austria |
ČD | 2010– | EC |
Gustave Eiffel | Cologne – Aachen – Liège – Paris | 42/43 | Germany Belgium France |
DB | 1987–1988 | Thalys |
Paris – Metz – Saarbrücken – Kaiserslautern – Mannheim – Frankfurt | 54/55 | France Germany |
SNCF | 1988–2007 | ICE | |
Hamlet | Copenhagen – Rødby – Puttgarden – Hamburg | 194/195 | Denmark Germany |
DB | 1991–1992 | EC/ICE |
192/193 | 1992–1994 | |||||
188/189 | DSB | 1994–1998 | ||||
38/39 | 1998–1999 2003–2010 | |||||
Malmö – Copenhagen – Rødby – Puttgarden – Hamburg[4] | Sweden Denmark Germany |
2000–2002 | ||||
Hansa | Copenhagen – Rødby – Puttgarden – Hamburg | 34/35 | Denmark Germany |
DB | 1987–1991 | EC/ICE |
Havelland | Berlin – Braunschweig – Kassel – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Zürich | 74/75 | Germany Switzerland |
DB | 1992–1993 | ICE |
Heinrich Heine | Paris – Metz – Saarbrücken – Kaiserslautern – Mannheim – Frankfurt | 58/59 | France Germany |
SNCF | 1989–1991 | ICE |
56/57 | 1991–1993 | |||||
Paris – Metz – Saarbrücken – Kaiserslautern – Mannheim – Frankfurt – Erfurt – Leipzig – Dresden | DB | 1993–1995 | ICE | |||
Paris – Metz – Saarbrücken – Kaiserslautern – Mannheim – Frankfurt – Erfurt – Leipzig – Dresden – Prague | France Germany Czech Republic |
1995–1997 | ICE, EC | |||
Helvetia | Hamburg – Hannover – Kassel – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Zürich | 78/79 | Germany Switzerland |
DB | 1987–1991 | ICE |
70/71 | 1991–1993 | |||||
Henri Dunant | Paris – Geneva | 974/977 | France Switzerland |
SNCF (TGV) | 1987–? | TGV |
Hermann Hesse | Stuttgart – Schaffhausen – Zürich – Chiasso – Milan | 82/83 | Germany Switzerland Italy |
SBB | 1987–1989 | IC, EC |
Hieronymus Bosch | Amsterdam – Utrecht – Oberhausen – Düsseldorf – Cologne | 140/153 | Netherlands Germany |
DB | 1991–2000 | ICE |
Hornád | Košice – Miskolc – Bratislava | 536/537 | Slovakia Hungary |
MÁV | ||
Hugo von Hofmannsthal | Stuttgart – Munich – Salzburg – Villach – Klagenfurt | 110/111 | Germany Austria |
DB | 1991–1993 | EC |
Munich – Salzburg – Linz – Vienna | 190/191 | ÖBB | 1997–1998 | Railjet | ||
Hungaria | Hamburg – Berlin – Dresden – Prague – Bratislava – Budapest | 174/175 | Germany Czech Republic Slovakia Hungary |
MÁV | 1993–1996 | EC |
Berlin – Dresden – Prague – Bratislava – Budapest | 1996–1997 | |||||
170/171 | 1997– | EC | ||||
Île de France | Brussels – Paris | 80/85 | Belgium France |
SNCB/SNCF | 1987–1993 | Thalys/TGV |
Insubria | Zürich – Chiasso – Milan | 179 | Switzerland Italy |
CIS | EC | |
Iris | Brussels – Luxembourg – Metz – Strasbourg – Basel – Zürich – Chur | 96/97 | Belgium Luxembourg France Switzerland |
SBB | 1987– | EC |
J.J. Rousseau | Paris – Geneva | 972/979 | France Switzerland |
SNCF (TGV) | 1987–? | TGV |
Jan Hus | Dresden – Prague | 168/169 | Germany Czech Republic |
DB | 2000 | EC |
Jan Jesenius | Hamburg – Berlin – Dresden – Prague – Bratislava – Budapest | 174/175 | Germany Czech Republic Slovakia Hungary |
MÁV | 2005– | EC |
Jan Perner | Prague – Ostrava – Zilina | 148/149 | Czech Republic Slovakia |
|||
Jan Pietersz Sweelinck | Amsterdam – Utrecht – Oberhausen – Düsseldorf – Cologne | 142/151 | Netherlands Germany |
DB | 1991–2000 | ICE |
Jaroslav Hasek | Prague – Brno – Bratislava – Budapest | 272/273 | Czech Republic Slovakia Hungary |
|||
Jean Monnet | Brussels – Luxembourg – Metz – Strasbourg – Basel | 295/296 | Belgium Luxembourg France Switzerland |
SNCB/SBB | 1988–2007 | EC |
Johann Gregor Mendel | Prague – Vienna | 78/79 | Czech Republic Austria |
ČD | 2011– | EC |
Johann Strauss | Cologne – Koblenz – Frankfurt – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Linz – Vienna | 28/29 | Germany Austria |
ÖBB | 1987–1991 | ICE |
22/23 | 1991–2003 | |||||
Dortmund – Wuppertal – Cologne – Koblenz – Frankfurt – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Linz – Vienna | DB | 2004–2005 2007 | ||||
Hamburg – Bremen – Dortmund – Wuppertal – Cologne – Koblenz – Frankfurt – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Linz – Vienna | 2006 | |||||
Johannes Kepler | Frankfurt – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Linz | 120/121 | Germany Austria |
ÖBB | 1991–1994 | ICE |
Johannes Vermeer | Amsterdam – Utrecht – Oberhausen – Düsseldorf – Cologne | 144/149 | Netherlands Germany |
DB | 1991–2000 | ICE |
Joseph Haydn | Hamburg – Bremen – Dortmund – Wuppertal – Cologne – Koblenz – Frankfurt – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Linz – Vienna | 26/27 | Germany Austria |
DB | 1991–1999 | ICE |
Magdeburg – Hannover – Dortmund – Düsseldorf – Cologne – Koblenz – Frankfurt – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Linz – Vienna | 28/29 | ÖBB | 1999–2000 | ICE, IC | ||
Dortmund – Wuppertal – Cologne – Koblenz – Frankfurt – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Linz – Vienna | 2001–2002 | ICE | ||||
Jože Plečnik | Prague – České Budějovice – Linz – Leoben – Graz – Ljubljana | 100/101 | Czech Republic Austria Slovenia |
|||
Jozef Bem | Warsaw – Košice – Budapest | 382/383 | Poland Slovakia Hungary |
|||
Karen Blixen | Copenhagen – Rødby – Puttgarden – Hamburg | 192/193 | Denmark Germany |
DB | 1991–1992 | EC/ICE |
190/191 | 1992–1994 | |||||
186/187 | 1994–1998 | |||||
36/37 | DSB | 1998–1999 2003–2009 | ||||
Malmö – Copenhagen – Rødby – Puttgarden – Hamburg[5] | Sweden Denmark Germany |
2000–2002 | ||||
Karlstein | Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Frankfurt – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Prague | 50/51 | Germany Czech Republic |
DB | 1994–2002 | |
Karwendel | Hamburg – Hannover – Kassel – Würzburg – Munich – Garmisch-Partenkirchen – Seefeld | 80/81 | Germany Austria |
DB | 1987–1988 | ICE |
Killesberg | Stuttgart – Schaffhausen – Zürich | 154/155 | Germany Switzerland |
SBB | 1993–1995 | IC |
Komet | Hamburg – Hannover – Kassel – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel[6] | 470/471 | Germany Switzerland |
DB | 1987–1991 | CityNightLine |
Košičan | Prague – Olomouc – Zilina – Košice | 120/121 | Czech Republic Slovakia |
|||
Kysuca | Prague – Ostrava – Zilina | 143/230 | Czech Republic Slovakia |
|||
Lario | Biasca – Chiasso – Milan | 105 | Switzerland Italy |
EC | ||
Le Corbusier | Paris – Basel | 113/116 | France Switzerland |
SNCF | 1987–? | TGV |
Le Genevois | Paris – Geneva | 971/980 | France Switzerland |
SNCF (TGV) | 1987–? | TGV |
Lehár | Vienna – Budapest | 40/41 | Austria Hungary |
MÁV | 1988–2008 | Railjet |
Leonardo da Vinci | Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck – Verona – Milan | 10/11 | Germany Austria Italy |
DB | 1987–1991 | EC |
12/13 | 1995–2000 | |||||
Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck – Verona – Milan | 86/87 | FS | 1991–1995 | |||
88/89 | 2000–2011 | |||||
Ligure | Nice – Monte Carlo – Genoa – Milan | 141/142 | France Monaco Italy |
FS | 2004–2009 | |
147/148 | ||||||
Lötschberg | Hannover – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Bern – Brig | 6/7 | Germany Switzerland |
DB | 1987–1991 | ICE, EC |
Berlin – Hannover – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Bern – Brig | 100/101 | 1996–1997 | ||||
Leipzig – Hannover – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Bern – Brig | 1997–1998 | |||||
Hamburg – Bremen – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Bern – Brig | 1998–2002 | |||||
6/7 | 2003–2004 | |||||
Lutetia | Paris – Geneva – Lausanne – Brig – Milan | 21/24 | France Switzerland Italy |
SNCF | 1987–1993 | TGV, EC |
Madrid Talgo | Paris – Bordeaux – Madrid | 407/409 | France Spain |
RENFE | 1987–1993 | |
Manzoni | Winterthur – Zürich – Chiasso – Milan | 50/51 | Switzerland Italy |
SBB | 1989–1993 | EC |
Maria Theresia | Zürich – Innsbruck – Salzburg – Linz – Vienna | 160/161 | Switzerland Austria |
ÖBB | 1987–2010 | Railjet |
Marie Curie | Paris – Strasbourg – Karlsruhe – Stuttgart | 68/69 | France Germany |
DB | 1992–1996 | TGV |
Strasbourg – Karlsruhe – Stuttgart | 166/167 | France Germany |
DB | 2005 | IC/TGV | |
168/169 | ||||||
Matterhorn | Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Bern – Brig | 72/73 | Germany Switzerland |
DB | 1989–1991 | ICE, EC |
Wiesbaden – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Bern – Brig | 100/101 | SBB | 1991–2002 | |||
6/7 | 2003–2004 | |||||
Maurice Ravel | Paris – Strasbourg – Karlsruhe – Stuttgart – Munich | 66/67 | France Germany |
DB | 1989–2007 | TGV |
64/65 | 2003–2007 | |||||
Strasbourg – Karlsruhe – Stuttgart – Munich | 60/61 | France Germany |
DB | 2003–2008 | IC/TGV | |
264/265 | 2003–2006 | |||||
266/267 | 2003–2007 | |||||
360/361 | 2009–2010 | |||||
Max Reinhardt | Munich – Salzburg – Linz – Vienna | 16/17 | Germany Austria |
ÖBB | 1993–2000 | Railjet |
116/117 | 2003–2006 | |||||
Mediolanum | Basel – Luzern – Chiasso – Milan | 115/116 | Switzerland Italy |
CIS | 2004–? | EC |
Luzern – Chiasso – Milan | 153/158 | Switzerland Italy |
SBB | 2011– | EC | |
Memling | Cologne – Aachen – Liège – Brussels – Bruges – Oostende | 48/49 | Germany Belgium |
SNCB | 1987–1988 | ICE, IC |
1991–1993 | ||||||
Frankfurt – Koblenz – Cologne – Aachen – Liège – Brussels – Bruges – Oostende | 22/23 | 1988–1991 | ||||
Dortmund – Cologne – Aachen – Liège – Brussels – Bruges – Oostende | 48/49 | 1993–1995 | ||||
34/35 | 1995–1998 | |||||
Merkur | Copenhagen – Rødby – Puttgarden – Hamburg – Bremen – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Frankfurt | 30/31 | Denmark Germany |
DB | 1987–1991 | ICE |
Michaelangelo | Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck – Verona – Milan – Roma | 80/81 | Germany Austria Italy |
FS | 1989–1991 | |
84/85 | 1991–2009 | |||||
Mimara | Munich – Salzburg – Villach – Ljubljana – Zagreb | 10/11 | Germany Austria Slovenia Croatia |
HŽ | 1991–1993 | EC |
192/193 | 2000–2002 | |||||
112/113 | ÖBB | 2003–2008 | ||||
Leipzig – Nuremberg – Munich – Salzburg – Villach – Ljubljana – Zagreb | 10/11 | HŽ | 1993–1995 | ICE, EC | ||
Berlin – Leipzig – Nuremberg – Munich – Salzburg – Villach – Ljubljana – Zagreb | 1995–2000 | |||||
Munich – Salzburg – Villach – Klagenfurt | 112/113 | Germany Austria |
ÖBB | 2003–2008 | EC | |
Villach – Ljubljana – Zagreb | 212/213 | Austria Slovenia Croatia |
EC | |||
Munich – Salzburg – Villach – Klagenfurt | 110/111 | Germany Austria |
ÖBB | 2003–2006 2009– |
EC | |
Munich – Salzburg – Villach – Ljubljana – Zagreb – Belgrade | 210/211 | Germany Austria Slovenia Croatia Serbia |
||||
Molière | Dortmund – Cologne – Aachen – Liège – Paris | 40/41 | Germany Belgium France |
DB | 1987–1993 | ICE, Thalys |
30/31 | SNCF | 1993–1997 | ||||
Monginevro | Lyon – Turin | 140/143 | France Italy |
FS | 1996–2003 | |
Mont Blanc | Hamburg – Hannover – Kassel – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Geneva | 76/77 | Germany Switzerland |
DB | 1987–1991 | ICE, IC |
Berlin – Hannover – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Geneva | 106/107 | 1991–1993 | ||||
Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Zürich – Geneva | 1993–1999 | |||||
Bremen – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Zürich – Geneva | 2000 | |||||
Mont Cenis | Lyon – Turin | 136/139 | France Italy |
FS | 1996–2003 | |
Monteverdi | Geneva – Lausanne – Brig – Milan – Venice | 37/42 | Switzerland Italy |
SBB | EC | |
39/40 | EC | |||||
Monte Rosa | Paris – Geneva – Lausanne – Brig – Milan | 124/129 | France Switzerland Italy |
CIS | 2004–? | TGV, EC |
Moravia | Ostrava – Bratislava – Budapest | 130/131 | Czech Republic Slovakia Hungary |
|||
Mozart | Paris – Strasbourg – Karlsruhe – Stuttgart – Munich – Salzburg – Linz – Vienna | 68/69 | France Germany Austria |
ÖBB | 1989–1991 | TGV, Railjet |
64/65 | 1991–2002 | |||||
Munich – Salzburg – Linz – Vienna | 68/69 | Germany Austria |
2003–2008 | Railjet | ||
Odra | Prague – Ostrava – Zilina | 142/143 | Czech Republic Slovakia |
|||
Olše | Prague – Ostrava – Zilina | 147 | Czech Republic Slovakia |
|||
Otto Lilienthal | Berlin – Braunschweig – Kassel – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Zürich | 72/73 | Germany Switzerland |
DB | 1991–1992 | ICE |
78/79 | 1992–1993 | |||||
Paderewski | Berlin – Frankfurt (Oder) – Poznań – Warsaw | 44/45 | Germany Poland |
PKP | 1998–2002 | EC |
Paganini | Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck – Verona – Bologna | 12/13 | Germany Austria Italy |
DB | 1991–1993 | EC |
Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck – Verona – Venice | 1993–1995 | |||||
Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck – Verona | 2000–2002 | |||||
Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck – Verona | 86/87 | FS | 1995–2000 | EC | ||
82/83 | 2003–2008 | |||||
Palatino | Paris – Genoa – Rome | 212/213 | France Italy |
SNCF | 1987–2003 | |
Parsifal | Cologne – Aachen – Liège – Paris | 44/45 | Germany Belgium France |
SNCF | 1987–1993 | Thalys |
32/33 | 1993–1997 | |||||
Patscherkofel | Saarbrücken – Kaiserslautern – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck | 14/15 | Germany Austria |
DB | 1993–1995 | EC |
Piet Mondriaan | Amsterdam – Utrecht – Oberhausen – Düsseldorf – Cologne | 146/147 | Netherlands Germany |
DB | 1991–2000 | ICE |
Polonia | Warsaw – Katowice – Vienna – Klagenfurt – Villach | 102/103 | Poland Czech Republic Austria |
ÖBB/PKP | 1997– | EC |
Porta Bohemica | Hamburg – Berlin – Dresden – Prague[7] | 176/177 | Germany Czech Republic |
ČD | 1993–2007 | EC |
Hamburg – Berlin – Dresden – Prague – Brno[8] | 176[9] | 2008– | EC | |||
Posnania | Berlin – Frankfurt (Oder) – Poznań | 48/49 | Germany Poland |
PKP | 1998–2002 | EC |
Praha | Warsaw – Katowice – Prague | 106/107 | Poland Czech Republic |
PKP | 1993– | EC |
Prinz Eugen | Hamburg – Hannover – Kassel – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Linz – Vienna | 90/91 | Germany Austria |
DB | 1987–1991 | ICE |
Kiel – Hamburg – Bremen – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Frankfurt – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Linz – Vienna | 28/29 | 1991–1997 | ICE | |||
Hamburg – Bremen – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Frankfurt – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Linz – Vienna | ÖBB | 1997–1999 | ICE | |||
Rákóczi | Košice – Miskolc – Bratislava | 532/533 | Slovakia Hungary |
MÁV | ||
Rätia † | Hamburg – Hannover – Kassel – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Zürich – Chur | 70/71 | Germany Switzerland |
DB | 1987–1989 | ICE, EC |
170/171 | 1989–1991 | |||||
Berlin – Hannover – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Zürich – Chur | 102/103 | 1991–1996 | ||||
Leipzig – Hannover – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Zürich – Chur | 1996–1998 | |||||
Hamburg – Bremen – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Zürich – Chur | 1998–2002 | |||||
6/7 | SBB | 2003– | EC | |||
8/9 | 2005–2006 2013– | |||||
100/101 | 2005–2012 | EC | ||||
Rembrandt | Amsterdam – Utrecht – Oberhausen – Düsseldorf – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Zürich – Chur | 2/3 | Netherlands Germany Switzerland |
SBB | 1987–2002 | |
Rheinpfeil | Hannover – Kassel – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Zürich – Chur | 8/9 | Germany Switzerland |
DB | 1987–1991 | ICE, EC |
Riviera del Fiori | Nice – Monte Carlo – Genoa – Milan | 139/140 | France Monaco Italy |
FS | 2004–2009 | |
159/160 | ||||||
Robert Schuman | Paris – Luxembourg | 203/209 | France Luxembourg |
CFL | 1987–? | TGV |
Robert Stolz | Munich – Salzburg – Leoben – Graz | 16/17 | Germany Austria |
ÖBB | 1989–1991 | EC |
Romulus | Vienna – Klagenfurt – Venice – Florence – Rome | 30/37 | Austria Italy |
1987–2001 | ||
Rosenborg | Copenhagen – Rødby – Puttgarden – Hamburg | 186/187 | Denmark Germany |
DB | 1992–1994 | EC/ICE |
Rosenkavalier | Munich – Salzburg – Linz – Vienna | 60/61 | Germany Austria |
ÖBB | 1991–1993 | Railjet |
Rossini | Schaffhausen – Zürich – Chiasso – Milan | 53/56 | Switzerland Italy |
1987–? | IC, EC | |
Rubens | Brussels – Paris | 81/84 | Belgium France |
SNCB/SNCF | 1987–1993 | Thalys/TGV |
San Marco | Basel – Luzern – Chiasso – Milan – Verona – Vicenza – Venice | 111/114 | Switzerland Italy |
CIS | 2005–? | EC |
Sanremo | Nice – Monte Carlo – Genoa – Milan | 143/146 | France Monaco Italy |
FS | 2004–2009 | |
Schwabenland | Stuttgart – Schaffhausen – Zürich – Chiasso | 86/87 | Germany Switzerland |
SBB | 1987–1989 | IC, EC |
Schweizerland | Munich – Lindau – Bregenz – Zürich | 92/93 | Germany Austria Switzerland |
SBB | 1987–1991 | EC |
Munich – Lindau – Bregenz – Zürich – Bern | DB | 1991–1994 | EC, IC | |||
Semmelweis Ignác | Vienna – Budapest | 962/967 | Austria Hungary |
Railjet | ||
Skandinavien | Copenhagen – Rødby – Puttgarden – Hamburg | 32/33 | Denmark Germany |
DB | 1987–1991 | EC/ICE |
Slovan | Prague – Brno – Bratislava – Budapest | 274/275 | Czech Republic Slovakia Hungary |
|||
Slovenská strela | Prague – Brno – Bratislava | 277/278 | Czech Republic Slovakia |
|||
Smetana | Dresden – Prague – Brno – Vienna | 278/279 | Germany Czech Republic Austria |
ÖBB | 2003–2004 | EC |
Prague – Vienna | 72/73 | Czech Republic Austria |
ČD | EC | ||
Sobieski | Warsaw – Katowice – Vienna | 104/105 | Poland Czech Republic Austria |
PKP | 1994– | EC |
Soren Kierkergaard | Copenhagen – Rødby – Puttgarden – Hamburg | 184/185 | Denmark Germany |
DB | 1992–1994 | EC/ICE |
Stachus | Munich – Salzburg – Linz – Vienna | 66/67 | Germany Austria |
ÖBB | 1987–1989 | Railjet |
18/19 | 1989–1991 | |||||
166/167 | 1991–1993 | |||||
Stendhal | Paris – Turin – Milan | 220/221 | France Italy |
SNCF | 1994–? | |
Stradivari | Vienna – Klagenfurt – Venice | 32/33 | Austria Italy |
2004–? | ||
Thomas Mann † | Copenhagen – Rødby – Puttgarden – Hamburg | 190/191 | Denmark Germany |
DB | 1991–1992 | EC |
182/183 | 1992–1998 | |||||
30/33 | DSB | 1998–2000 | ||||
30/31 | 2001– | EC | ||||
Thunersee | Berlin – Hannover – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Bern – Interlaken | 108/109 | Germany Switzerland |
DB | 1991–1995 | ICE |
Ticino | Basel – Luzern – Chiasso – Milan | 109/110 | Switzerland Italy |
CIS | 1993–2008 | EC |
Tiepolo | Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck – Verona – Venice | 86/87 | Germany Austria Italy |
FS | 1995–2009 | EC |
Tiziano | Hamburg – Hannover – Kassel – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Luzern – Chiasso – Milan | 74/75 | Germany Switzerland Italy |
DB | 1987–1991 | ICE, EC |
Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Luzen – Chiasso – Milan | 8/9 | SBB | 1991–1993 | EC | ||
Hannover – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Luzen – Chiasso – Milan | DB | 1993–1998 | ICE, EC | |||
Magdeburg – Hannover – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Luzen – Chiasso – Milan | 1998–1999 | |||||
Hamburg – Bremen – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Luzern – Chiasso – Milan | 1999–2002 | EC | ||||
Traianus | Budapest – Bucharest | 46/47 | Hungary Romania |
1997–2002 | ||
Transalpin | Basel – Zürich – Innsbruck – Salzburg – Linz – Vienna | 162/163 | Switzerland Austria |
ÖBB/SBB | 1987–2010 | EC, Railjet |
Zürich – Innsbruck – Leoben - Graz | 2013– | EC | ||||
Uetliberg | Stuttgart – Schaffhausen – Zürich | 158/159 | Germany Switzerland |
SBB | 1993–1995 | IC |
Val Gardena | Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck – Bolzano | 188/189 | Germany Austria Italy |
ÖBB | 2005–2006 | EC |
81/82 | 2009 | |||||
Munich – Kufstein – Innsbruck – Bolzano – Verona | 188/189 | 2007–2008 | ||||
Vallese | Paris – Geneva – Lausanne – Brig – Milan | 120/127 | France Switzerland Italy |
SNCF | TGV, EC | |
Varsovia | Berlin – Frankfurt (Oder) – Poznań – Warsaw | 40/41 | Germany Poland |
DB | 1993–2002 | EC |
Warsaw – Katowice – Břeclav – Bratislava – Budapest | 130/131 | Poland Czech Republic Slovakia Hungary |
2012– | EC | ||
Vauban | Brussels – Luxembourg – Metz – Strasbourg – Basel – Milan | 90/91 | Belgium Luxembourg France Switzerland Italy |
SBB | 1988–2007 | EC |
Brussels – Luxembourg – Metz – Strasbourg – Basel – Bern – Interlaken | Belgium Luxembourg France Switzerland |
2007 | EC, ICE | |||
Brussels – Luxembourg – Metz – Strasbourg – Basel – Zürich | 2007– | EC | ||||
Verbano | Basel – Bern – Brig – Milan | 130/131 | Switzerland Italy |
EC | ||
50/51 | SBB | 2008– | EC | |||
52/59 | 2009– | |||||
56/57 | ||||||
Verdi | Münster – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Luzen – Chiasso – Milan | 4/5 | Germany Switzerland Italy |
DB | 1991–1992 | EC |
Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel – Luzen – Chiasso – Milan | 1992–2002 | |||||
Versailles | Paris – Geneva | 975/978 | France Switzerland |
SNCF (TGV) | 1987–? | TGV |
Victor Hugo | Paris – Metz – Saarbrücken – Kaiserslautern – Mannheim – Frankfurt | 52/53 | France Germany |
DB | 1987–1995 | ICE |
Vindobona | Berlin – Dresden – Prague – Brno – Vienna | 172/173 | Germany Czech Republic Austria |
ÖBB | 1993–2000 | EC, Railjet |
Hamburg – Berlin – Dresden – Prague – Brno – Vienna | DB | 2001–2009 | ||||
Hamburg – Berlin – Dresden – Prague – Brno – Vienna – Klagenfurt – Villach | ÖBB | 2009–2014 | ||||
Berlin – Dresden – Prague – Brno – Vienna | 178/179 | DB | 2007 | |||
177[10] | ČD | 2008–2012 | ||||
Hamburg – Berlin – Dresden – Prague – Bratislava | 177[10] | Germany Czech Republic Slovakia |
2013– | EC | ||
Voltaire | Paris – Geneva | 973/976 | France Switzerland |
SNCF (TGV) | 1987–? | TGV |
Wawel | Hamburg – Lüneburg – Stendal – Berlin – Cottbus – Wroclaw – Kraków | 240/241 | Germany Poland |
DB/PKP | 2007–2008 | |
340/341 | 2009–2010 | |||||
248/249 | 2011–2012 | |||||
Hamburg – Lüneburg – Stendal – Berlin – Cottbus – Wroclaw | 2013–2014 | |||||
Wörthersee | Münster – Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Munich – Salzburg – Villach – Klagenfurt | 14/15 | Germany Austria |
DB | 1989–1990 | EC |
114/115 | DB | 2008– | EC | |||
Dortmund – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Munich – Salzburg – Villach – Klagenfurt | 14/15 | DB | 1990–1991 | EC | ||
112/113 | 1991–1995 | |||||
112 | 1995–1999 | |||||
114/115 | 2003–2008 | |||||
Saarbrücken – Kaiserslautern – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Munich – Salzburg – Villach – Klagenfurt | 113 | 1995–1999 | EC | |||
112/113 | 2000–2002 | |||||
Frankfurt – Stuttgart – Munich – Salzburg – Villach – Klagenfurt | 112/113 | Germany Austria |
ÖBB | 2009 2012– |
EC | |
117[11] | DB | 2009– | ||||
Frankfurt – Stuttgart – Munich – Salzburg – Leoben – Graz | 318/319 | Germany Austria |
DB | 2009–2010 | EC | |
218/219 | 2011– | EC | ||||
Frankfurt – Stuttgart – Munich – Salzburg – Linz | 390/391 | Germany Austria |
DB | 2009– | EC | |
Saarbrücken – Kaiserslautern – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Munich – Salzburg – Leoben – Graz | 316/317 | Germany Austria |
DB | 2009–2010 | EC | |
216/217 | 2011– | EC | ||||
Siegen – Frankfurt – Stuttgart – Munich – Salzburg – Villach – Klagenfurt | 112/113 | Germany Austria |
ÖBB | 2010–2011 | RE, EC | |
Zagreb | Vienna – Graz – Zagreb | 158/159 | Austria Croatia |
EC | ||
Zdeněk Fibich | Prague – Vienna | 74/75 | Czech Republic Austria |
ČD | EC |
Notes
- 1 2 EC Admiral de Ruijter and Benjamin Britten were each two train services, with a ferry in between
- ↑ EC 371, the southbound service, terminated at Prague
- ↑ EC 371, the southbound service, terminates at Brno
- ↑ Only EC 38, the southbound service, served Malmö
- ↑ Only EC 37, the northbound service, served Malmö
- ↑ EC Komet was a sleeper train
- ↑ From 2001–2002, EC Porta Bohemica started at Westerland (Sylt)
- ↑ EC 176 began at Prague in 2008
- ↑ EC 176 is a northbound only service (Brno to Hamburg)
- 1 2 EC 177 is a southbound only service (Berlin to Vienna/Bratislava)
- ↑ EC 117 is a southbound only service (Frankfurt to Klagenfurt)
References
- Deutsche Bahn, Ihr Zugbegleiter/Ihr Reiseplan, Editions 1987 up to 2007
- Thomas Cook Continental Timetable, 31 May – 30 June 1987
- M. Mertens and J.P. Malaspina, La légende des Trans Europ Express, Vannes 2007
- Fernbahn
- Reisezüge
- Vagonweb
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