The Orient Express was the name of a long-distance passenger train service created in 1883 by Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits (CIWL).
The route and
rolling stock of the Orient Express changed many times. Several
routes in the past concurrently used the Orient Express name, or
slight variants thereof. Although the original Orient Express was
simply a normal international railway service, the name has become
synonymous with intrigue and luxury travel. The two city names most
prominently associated with the Orient Express are Paris and
Constantinople (Istanbul), the original endpoints of the timetabled
service.
The Orient Express
was a showcase of luxury and comfort at a time when travelling was
still rough and dangerous. CIWL soon developed a dense network of
luxury trains all over Europe, whose names are still remembered today
and associated with the art of luxury travel – the Blue Train, the
Golden Arrow, North Express and many more.
In 1977, the Orient
Express stopped serving Istanbul. Its immediate successor, a through
overnight service from Paris to Vienna, ran for the last time from
Paris on Friday, June 8, 2007. After this, the route, still called
the "Orient Express", was shortened to start from
Strasbourg instead, occasioned by the inauguration of the LGV Est
which affords much shorter travel times from Paris to Strasbourg. The
new curtailed service left Strasbourg at 22:20 daily, shortly after
the arrival of a TGV from Paris, and was attached at Karlsruhe to the
overnight sleeper service from Amsterdam to Vienna.
On 14 December 2009,
the Orient Express ceased to operate and the route disappeared from
European railway timetables, reportedly a "victim of high-speed
trains and cut-rate airlines". The Venice-Simplon Orient Express
train, a private venture by Orient-Express Hotels Ltd. using original
CIWL carriages from the 1920s and 1930s, continues to run from London
to Venice and to other destinations in Europe, including the original
route from Paris to Istanbul. In March 2014 Orient-Express Hotels
Ltd. was renamed Belmond.
In 1982, the Venice-Simplon Orient Express was established as a private venture, running restored 1920s and 1930s carriages from London to Venice. This service runs between March and November, and is firmly aimed at leisure travellers, with tickets costing over $3,120 per person from London to Venice including meals. As of October 2009 the company offers once a year service from Paris to Istanbul in August and Istanbul to Paris trip in September.[4] Other routes include:
Istanbul–Bucharest–Budapest–Venice
London–Venice
London–Venice–Rome
Paris–Budapest–Bucharest–Istanbul
Paris–Venice
Rome–Venice
Venice–Budapest–London
Venice–Kraków–Dresden–London
Venice–London
Venice–Paris
Venice–Prague–London
Venice–Vienna–London
Venice–Rome
The company also
offers a similarly themed luxury train in Singapore, Malaysia,
Thailand and Laos, called the Eastern and Oriental Express.
In North America,
the American Orient Express, formerly the American European Express,
operated several train sets in charter service between 1989 and 2008.
On June 5, 1883, the
first Express d'Orient left Paris for Vienna. Vienna remained the
terminus until October 4, 1883. The train was officially renamed
Orient Express in 1891.
The original route,
which first ran on October 4, 1883, was from Paris, Gare de l'Est, to
Giurgiu in Romania via Munich and Vienna. At Giurgiu, passengers were
ferried across the Danube to Ruse, Bulgaria, to pick up another train
to Varna. They then completed their journey to Constantinople by
ferry. In 1885, another route began operations, this time reaching
Istanbul via rail from Vienna to Belgrade and Niš, carriage to
Plovdiv and rail again to Istanbul.
WL Orient Express
In 1889, the train's
eastern terminus became Varna in Bulgaria, where passengers could
take a ship to Constantinople. On June 1, 1889, the first direct
train to Istanbul left Paris (Gare de l'Est). Istanbul remained its
easternmost stop until May 19, 1977. The eastern terminus was the
Sirkeci Terminal by the Golden Horn. Ferry service from piers next to
the terminal would take passengers across the Bosphorus to Haydarpaşa
Terminal, the terminus of the Asian lines of the Ottoman Railways.
The onset of World
War I in 1914 saw Orient Express services suspended. They resumed at
the end of hostilities in 1918, and in 1919 the opening of the
Simplon Tunnel allowed the introduction of a more southerly route via
Milan, Venice and Trieste. The service on this route was known as the
Simplon Orient Express, and it ran in addition to continuing services
on the old route. The Treaty of Saint-Germain contained a clause
requiring Austria to accept this train: formerly, Austria allowed
international services to pass through Austrian territory (which
included Trieste at the time) only if they ran via Vienna. The
Simplon Orient Express soon became the most important rail route
between Paris and Istanbul.
Badge of the
Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits on a car of the Orient
Express
The 1930s saw the
zenith of Orient Express services, with three parallel services
running: the Orient Express, the Simplon Orient Express, and also the
Arlberg Orient Express, which ran via Zürich and Innsbruck to
Budapest, with sleeper cars running onwards from there to Bucharest
and Athens. During this time, the Orient Express acquired its
reputation for comfort and luxury, carrying sleeping-cars with
permanent service and restaurant cars known for the quality of their
cuisine. Royalty, nobles, diplomats, business people and the
bourgeoisie in general patronized it. Each of the Orient Express
services also incorporated sleeping cars which had run from Calais to
Paris, thus extending the service right from one edge of continental
Europe to the other.
WL Golden Arrow
The start of the
Second World War in 1939 again interrupted the service, which did not
resume until 1945. During the war, the German Mitropa company had run
some services on the route through the Balkans, but Yugoslav
Partisans frequently sabotaged the track, forcing a stop to this
service.
Following the end of
the war, normal services resumed except on the Athens leg, where the
closure of the border between Yugoslavia and Greece prevented
services from running. That border re-opened in 1951, but the closure
of the Bulgarian–Turkish border from 1951 to 1952 prevented
services running to Istanbul during that time. As the Iron Curtain
fell across Europe, the service continued to run, but the Communist
nations increasingly replaced the Wagon-Lits cars with carriages run
by their own railway services.
By 1962, the Orient
Express and Arlberg Orient Express had stopped running, leaving only
the Simplon Orient Express. This was replaced in 1962 by a slower
service called the Direct Orient Express, which ran daily cars from
Paris to Belgrade, and twice weekly services from Paris to Istanbul
and Athens.
In 1971, the
Wagon-Lits company stopped running carriages itself and making
revenues from a ticket supplement. Instead, it sold or leased all its
carriages to the various national railway companies, but continued to
provide staff for the carriages. 1976 saw the withdrawal of the
Paris–Athens direct service, and in 1977, the Direct Orient Express
was withdrawn completely, with the last Paris–Istanbul service
running on May 19 of that year.
The withdrawal of
the Direct Orient Express was thought by many to signal the end of
Orient Express as a whole, but in fact a service under this name
continued to run from Paris to Budapest and Bucharest as before (via
Strasbourg, Munich, and Budapest). This continued until 2001, when
the service was cut back to just Paris–Vienna, the coaches for
which were attached to the Paris–Strasbourg express. This service
continued daily, listed in the timetables under the name Orient
Express, until June 8, 2007. However, with the opening of the LGV Est
Paris–Strasbourg high speed rail line on June 10, 2007, the Orient
Express service was further cut back to Strasbourg–Vienna,
departing nightly at 22:20 from Strasbourg, and still bearing the
name.
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