Rembrandt (train)

The Rembrandt was an express train that linked Amsterdam in the Netherlands, with Munich in Germany and later Chur in Switzerland. The train was named after the renowned Dutch painter Rembrandt.[1] For its first 16 years it was a first-class-only Trans Europ Express, becoming a two-class InterCity in 1983 and finally a EuroCity in 1987.

Rembrandt
EC90 panoramic coach (Apm 19) of
Swiss Federal Railways in Utrecht
Overview
Service typeTrans Europ Express (TEE)
(1967–1983)
InterCity (IC)
(1983–1987)
EuroCity (EC)
(1987–2002)
StatusDiscontinued
LocaleNetherlands
Germany
Switzerland
First service28 May 1967 (1967-05-28)
Last service14 December 2002 (2002-12-14)
SuccessorICE, EC Rätia
Former operator(s)Deutsche Bundesbahn
Swiss Federal Railways
Route
StartAmsterdam CS
EndMünchen Hbf. / Chur
Distance travelled887 km / 985 km
Service frequencyDaily
On-board services
Catering facilitiesRestaurant car
Observation facilitiesfrom 1991
Technical
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Electrification1500 V DC (Netherlands)
15 kV 16,7 Hz (Germany) & (Switzerland)
Route diagram (1987–2002)
Amsterdam CS
Rhine
Utrecht CS
Arnhem
NS / DB border
Emmerich
Oberhausen Hbf
Duisburg Hbf
Düsseldorf Hbf
Cologne Hbf
Bonn Hbf
Koblenz Hbf
Mainz Hbf
Mannheim Hbf
Karlsruhe Hbf
Baden-Baden
Freiburg Hbf
Basel Bad
DB / SBB border
Rhine
Basel SBB
Zurich HB
Thalwil
Wädenswil
Pfäffikon
Ziegelbrücke
Sargans
Bad Ragaz
Rhine
Landquart
Chur

History

Trans Europ Express

With the completion of the electrification works at the Dutch–German border on the Arnhem–Oberhausen line, the Rembrandt was launched on 28 May 1967.[2][3] Of the then-three TEE services on that line, the Rembrandt was scheduled as the afternoon service from Amsterdam, between the Rheingold in the morning and the Rhein-Main in the evening. The Rembrandt conveyed through coaches for the TEE Helvetia that were exchanged in Mannheim,[3][4] thus providing an afternoon TEE service between Amsterdam and Zürich via the Rhine Valley, alongside the TEE Edelweiss which departed from Amsterdam in the morning and was routed via Brussels and Luxembourg en route to Zurich. It carried a dining car staffed by the German Sleeper and Dining Car Company (DSG).[3][5]

Route placard for the 1980–83 route

The Rembrandt was the first TEE to call in Baden-Wurtemberg's capital, Stuttgart.[6] Northbound, the Rembrandt departed for Amsterdam from Munich early in the morning, thus providing a morning service complementing the existing afternoon TEE service provided by the Rheinpfeil. On 27 May 1979, the exchange of coaches with the Helvetia was discontinued,[7] and the stop at Mannheim was replaced by a stop at Darmstadt.[8] On 1 June 1980, the route was shortened to Stuttgart at the southern end.[5]

The Rembrandt's last day of operation as a TEE was 28 May 1983. The following day, its southern terminus was moved farther north, to Frankfurt am Main, and the train was converted to a two-class InterCity service.[9][10] It continued to carry a full dining car. Its train number was IC 122 northbound, IC 123 southbound.[10]

EuroCity

On 31 May 1987, with the start of the EuroCity network, the EC Rembrandt replaced the TEE Rheingold, although the Swiss terminus was not Geneva but Chur. The original route of the Rembrandt was served by EC Frans Hals. When new Swiss rolling stock of type EC90 became available in 1991, the Rembrandt was formed with class EC90 coaches, including observation cars – or "panoramic" coaches – Swiss class Apm 19. As the Rheingold had carried observation cars from 1962 until 1976, the 1991 change to the Rembrandt's consist returned such cars to the train service through the Rhine Valley, although in a newer form, not the vista-dome type that the Rheingold had carried. On 14 December 2002, the Rembrandt was replaced by an ICE service between Amsterdam and Basel.[11]

References

  1. TEE, p. 22.
  2. La Légende des TEE, p. 266.
  3. "Summer Services, 1967" (changes taking effect). Cooks Continental Timetable (February 1967 edition), p. 406. London: Thomas Cook Publishing.
  4. La Légende des TEE, p. 267.
  5. Thomas Cook International Timetable (March 1–April 5, 1980 edition), pp. 67, 556. Peterborough, UK: Thomas Cook Publishing.
  6. TEE Züge in Deutschland, p. 114.
  7. Das grosse TEE Buch, p. 86
  8. Thomas Cook Continental Timetable (May 27 – June 30, 1979 edition), p. 67.
  9. TEE Züge in Deutschland, p. 117.
  10. Thomas Cook Continental Timetable (May 29 – June 30, 1983 edition), pp. 6, 67.
  11. La Légende des TEE, p. 269.

Works cited

  • Centre for publicrelations UIC (1972). TEE (in Dutch). Paris: Union International des Chemins de Fer.
  • Hajt, Jörg (2001). Das grosse TEE Buch (in German). Bonn/Königswinter: Heel Verlag. ISBN 3-89365-948-X.
  • Mertens, Maurice; Malaspina, Jean-Pierre (2007). La Légende des Trans Europ Express (in French). Vannes: LR Presse. ISBN 978-29-036514-5-9.
  • Goette, Peter (2008). TEE-Züge in Deutschland (in German). Freiburg: EK-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-88255-698-8.

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