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EuroNight, abbreviated EN, is a European train category that denotes many mainline national and international night train services within the Western and Central European inter-city rail network.
Most services discontinued, high-speed trains and budget airlines
Overview
editThe classification and name were brought into use in May 1993.[1] Unlike the equivalent day-running counterparts EuroCity and InterCity trains, the EuroNight trains tend to run during the nighttime and are equipped with various cars for accommodating sleep services. Nearly all EuroNight trains require reservations and additional fare supplements in addition to the regular cost of a ticket from the destination to the arrival point. These supplements vary in price depending on whether the traveler wishes to sit in a regular seat, a couchette "lying bed", which offers a padded, felt bed with a blanket and small pillow, or a sleeping bed, which allows a mattress bed with full bedding (sheets, comforters, pillows).
Nearly all EuroNight services are international and jointly operated by national rail companies sharing cars on a route. EN trains are the standard night-train service for Western and most Central European nations. They are distinct from the older D-Nacht services, many of which still operate in Central and Eastern Europe. EN trains have criteria that rail companies must match in order to receive EN designation; the numbering format is EN 999; many routes also have accompanying names derived in the 19th and 20th centuries.
Operating carriers
editThe following carriers currently have designated cars and train conductors who work the EN lines. Many railway companies share cars on the same train line between routes; for example, EN 235 between Vienna and Rome share cars of both the ÖBB and Trenitalia.
- Austria's ÖBB (introducing in December 2016 its Nightjet-Services)
- Croatia's HŽ
- Czech Republic's ČD
- France's SNCF (as part of their Intercités de nuit brand)
- Hungary's MÁV
- Italy's Trenitalia
- Netherlands, The NS Hispeed[2]
- Poland's PKP Intercity
- Romania's CFR
- Slovakia's ZSSK
- Slovenia's SZ
- Sweden's SJ
- Switzerland's SBB
Deutsche Bahn operated the additional City Night Line hotel-quality night services between Germany, Italy, the Czech Republic, Switzerland, and The Netherlands. Two of those, the Kopernikus and the Canopus, were designated EuroNight trains as EN 458/459. Deutsche Bahn terminated all of its own night train services by December 2016.[3]
List of EuroNight trains
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See also
editNotes
edit- ^ Operates as IC 576/577 between Prague and Břeclav.
References
edit- ^ "International Services from May 23" (changes taking effect). Thomas Cook European Timetable (May 1–22, 1993 edition), p. 3. Peterborough, UK: Thomas Cook Publishing.
- ^ "EuroNight to Copenhagen, Prague, Moscow". Dutch Railways NS. 2012-10-09. Retrieved 2012-10-09.
- ^ DB to withdraw all remaining sleeper trains 21 December 2015
- ^ a b "001 Praha – Česká Třebová – Přerov – Bohumín" (PDF). České dráhy. 2024-06-09. Retrieved 2024-06-22.
- ^ "320 (Ostrava –) Bohumín – Čadca, Dětmarovice – Petrovice u Karviné" (PDF). České dráhy. 2024-06-09. Retrieved 2024-06-22.
- ^ a b "Timetable 2023/2024" (PDF). ŽSSK. 2024-06-17. Retrieved 2024-06-22.
- ^ "002 (Praha –) Česká Třebová – Brno – Kúty" (PDF). České dráhy. 2024-04-28. Retrieved 2024-06-22.
- ^ "260 Česká Třebová – Křenovice horní n." (PDF). České dráhy. 2024-06-09. Retrieved 2024-06-22.
- ^ "250 (Brno -) Šakvice - Kúty" (PDF). České dráhy. 2023-12-10. Retrieved 2024-06-22.
- ^ a b "477 METROPOL EuroNight (Breclav - Budapest-Nyugati)". MÁV. Retrieved 2024-06-22.