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The primary route segments of lines 18, 20, 22, 24, 25, 26, 28 and 29 all begin in Hamburg-Altona station. Some services continue to Kiel and Lübeck, Oldenburg or Stralsund and Binz. The trains to Lübeck and Kiel do not stop in Hamburg-Altona. Lines 18, 28 and 29 go via Berlin, while lines 20, 22, 24, 25 and 26 go via Hanover.
Intercity services are operated by the DB Fernverkehr division of Deutsche Bahn, Germany’s national railway. The Intercity name was introduced in Germany in 1971, replacing the F-Zug category, and was the top category of train in Germany until the introduction of the high-speed ICE services in the early 1990s.
Most of the maps are however not updated since 2010. hochgeschwindigkeitszuege.com ("High-speed trains") : maps from ICE network but also from the routes taken by high-speed trains in The Netherlands, Belgium, France, United Kingdom, Austria, Italy, Spain, etc. South-East Europe: File:Railway map of South East Europe.png; Austria. ÖBB Network map
Long-distance services of Deutsche Bahn (DB) are operated by its DB Fernverkehr (lit. ' DB Long-Distance Traffic ') division: InterCity-Express (ICE) – high speed train, largely national but some routes to the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria, France, and Denmark; EuroCity (EC) – international long-distance trains to larger cities ...
With the December 2017 schedule change, a new train service between Frankfurt am Main and Milan was introduced and branded by Deutsche Bahn (though neither by the Swiss nor the Italian railway companies) as EuroCity-Express followed by a second route between Munich and Zurich with tickets put in the same price category as ICE tickets, unlike ...
The numbering of German timetabled routes (Kursbuchstrecken or KBS) was changed twice by the Deutsche Bundesbahn after the Second World War, in 1950 and 1970. In the Deutsche Reichsbahn (East Germany) the numbering system was completely changed in 1968.
Route Length KBS Operator Rolling stock RB 30: Rhein-Ahr-Bahn Net: NA: Ahrbrück – Remagen – Bonn 50 km 477, 470: DB Regio NRW Alstom Coradia LINT 81 (620) RB 31: Der Niederrheiner Niers-Rhein-Emscher-Net Xanten – Moers – Duisburg: 44 km 498: RheinRuhrBahn: 1–2× Alstom Coradia Lint 41 (648) RB 32: Rhein-Emscher-Bahn S-Bahn Rhein-Ruhr
The bulk of the railway network in Germany belongs to DB Netz, a subsidiary of Deutsche Bahn AG – this situation is a relic from the time when the Deutsche Bundesbahn and Deutsche Reichsbahn had a monopoly. The stations and halts on the DB Netz network are run by DB Station&Service. Not included in this list are museum railways and transport ...