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Balkan Express (train)

The Balkan Express (Turkish: Balkan Ekspresi) was an international overnight passenger train that ran between Istanbul, Turkey and Belgrade, Serbia, via Sofia, Bulgaria. The train began operations in 1991 from Istanbul to Budapest, Hungary, but was cut back to Belgrade after 2000. Service was discontinued in March 2013, when Sirkeci station closed for the construction of the Marmaray commuter rail network. In 2017, the Istanbul-Sofia Express was inaugurated as a successor to the Balkan Express, although the route was shortened to Sofia.

Balkan Express
The Balkan Express at Dimitrovgrad, with a BDŽ Class 07 locomotive.
Overview
Service typeInter City
StatusDiscontinued
LocaleSoutheastern Europe
First service1991[1]
Last service2013
SuccessorIstanbul-Sofia Express
Former operator(s)
Route
TerminiSirkeci station, Istanbul
Main station, Belgrade (2000-13)
Keleti station, Budapest (1991-2000)
Average journey time21 hours, 55 minutes
Train number(s)490/491 (1993-2013)
412/413 (1991-93)
On-board services
Class(es)2nd, 1st
Disabled accessLimited, due to older equipment
Seating arrangements
  • Open coach car
  • Couchette car
Sleeping arrangements
  • Couchette car
  • Sleeping car
Baggage facilities
  • Overhead racks
Technical
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)
Electrification
Route map
Distance Station
0 km İstanbul
27 km (17 mi) Halkalı
129 km (80 mi) Çerkezköy
229 km (142 mi) Alpullu
250 km (155 mi) Pehlivanköy
296 km (184 mi) Edirne
316 km (196 mi) Kapıkule
336 km (209 mi) Svilengrad
347 km (216 mi) Lyubimets
363 km (226 mi) Harmanli
378 km (235 mi) Simeonovgrad
401 km (249 mi) Dimitrovgrad
478 km (297 mi) Plovdiv
515 km (320 mi) Pazardzhik
531 km (330 mi) Septembvri
631 km (392 mi) Podujane
634 km (394 mi) Sofia
677 km (421 mi) Dragoman
691 km (429 mi) Kalotina-Zapad
698 km (434 mi) Dimitrovgrad
722 km (449 mi) Pirot
751 km (467 mi) Bela Palanka
786 km (488 mi) Niška Banja
797 km (495 mi) Niš
826 km (513 mi) Aleksinac
864 km (537 mi) Stalac
885 km (550 mi) Paracin
892 km (554 mi) Cuprija
904 km (562 mi) Jagodina
934 km (580 mi) Lapovo
950 km (590 mi) Velika Plana
962 km (598 mi) Palanka
987 km (613 mi) Mladenovac
1,027 km (638 mi) Rakovica
1,041 km (647 mi) Belgrade

History

The name "Balkan Express" was used on a number of different train services from Europe to Istanbul, before the modern iteration of the train.

Previous Iterations

The Balkan Express was launched on 1 January 1916[2] as a sleeping car service between Berlin and Istanbul. The twice weekly service had a schedule of 58 hours for the 1,200 miles (1,900 km),[3] and it ran through Dresden, Vienna, Belgrade and Sofia. Departures were from Berlin on Wednesdays and Saturdays, and Istanbul on Tuesdays and Saturdays.[4] The train was discontinued in October 1918.[5]

From 1927 the name was given to a train service between the Hook of Holland and Istanbul.[6] With a connecting London and North Eastern Railway service from London Liverpool Street to boat train at Harwich, the journey time from London to Constantinople was 70 hours and 8 minutes. In 1935, the service was accelerated and three hours was cut from the schedule.[7]

In May 1955 a new Balkan Express was launched from Vienna via Graz and Belgrade (avoiding Bulgaria) to Athens and Istanbul.[8]

Balkan Express (1991-2013)

Following the revolutions of 1989, new international train services were inaugurated throughout Eastern Europe. The main train connecting Istanbul to central Europe was the Istanbul Express (Ex 1292/1293), operating between Munich, Germany and Istanbul, via Salzburg, Ljubljana, Zagreb, Belgrade and Sofia. In 1991, a new train service from Istanbul to central Europe was inaugurated, the Balkan Express.[1] This train, numbered Ex 412/413, followed the same route as the Istanbul Express until Belgrade, where the train continued north to Subotica and into Hungary. The train also had through cars to Košice, Czechoslovakia and Warsaw, Poland as well as extra coaches that were added and removed during the trip. In its first years of service, the Balkan Express was a popular train in the Balkans, consisting of equipment from five railways.

According to the 1991 schedule, the train departed Sirkeci station in Istanbul at 18:30 with nine cars, six of which would make the entire trip to Budapest: a baggage car, four couchette cars, three corridor-coach cars and a mail car. The train would reach the Bulgarian/Turkish border at midnight and proceed with custom controls. The next morning, the train would arrive at Sofia at 7:22. Four more cars would be added at Sofia: a dining car, three corridor-coach cars; one of which would continue to Warsaw. The extra cars were added for passengers traveling the daytime section of the route. Arriving at Belgrade at 15:40, the Yugoslavian equipment of the train (a corridor-coach, couchette-coach and mail car) were detached from the train. Arriving at Subotica at 19:20, the train would cross into Hungary and reach Budapest at 22:43.[9] The three through-cars would then be switched onto the R 330 "Polonia" and continue overnight to Warsaw or Košice.[10]

The Balkan Express widely avoided the conflict zones of the Yugoslav Wars, but was still victim to sporadic cancellations. However, the train continued to operate without major changes to its route. In 1994, through car service from Istanbul to Košice was extended further to Petrovice u Karviné, Czech Republic, via Žilina.

In the late 1990s, through-car service to Poland and the Czech Republic/Slovakia were discontinued. Ridership from Turkey greatly declined at the turn of the century, due to a growing economic crisis along with the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia during the Kosovo War. Because of this decline, only two cars regularly made the entire journey from Istanbul to Budapest, a baggage car and a couchette car. The majority of passengers traveled between Sofia, Belgrade and Budapest.[11] After 2000, the train was shortened by 341 km (212 mi) from Budapest to Belgrade. Within Turkey, the Balkan Express was then merged with the Istanbul-Bucharest Bosphorus Express and the two trains operated between Istanbul and Dimitrovgrad as one train. Through-cars to Budapest were re-introduced in 2004, together with new through-car service to Prague, Czech Republic and Chisinau, Moldova. However, these cars were attached to the Boshphorus Express and would detach from the Balkan Express at Dimitrovgrad. The through-cars to Budapest and Prague were then attached to the Transbalkan (460/461), which became the main train connection from central Europe to the Balkan countries.[12]

In the beginning of the 2010s, the Balkan Express had greatly lost its popularity from Turkey, as flying between Balkan countries became more efficient. By 2010, the joint Balkan/Bosphorus Express would depart Istanbul with only three cars, sometimes four. However, the closing of Sirkeci station for the construction of the Marmaray commuter rail project in 2013, led to the discontinuation of the Balkan Express. The Bosphorus Express however, continued to operate to Bucharest. Following the discontinuation of the Balkan Express as an overnight train, the most popular section of the route, between Sofia and Belgrade, remained in service. This train was renamed "Balkan" (1490/1491) and operates as a daily day-time service between the two cities. In 2017, the Turkish State Railways and the Bulgarian State Railways launched a new overnight train service from Istanbul to Sofia, using modern TVS2000 passenger cars. The Istanbul-Sofia Express (492/493) operates daily along the same route as the former Balkan Express, but does not make the full journey to Belgrade.[13]

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Orient Ex - The End". trains-worldexpresses.com. Retrieved 5 May 2022.
  2. ^ "The First Balkan Express". Birmingham Daily Post. England. 31 December 1915. Retrieved 5 November 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  3. ^ "The first "Balkan Express"". Nantwich Guardian. England. 21 January 1916. Retrieved 5 November 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  4. ^ "Eastern Road. German Communications Threatened". Sheffield Daily Telegraph. England. 18 September 1916. Retrieved 5 November 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  5. ^ "Balkan Express stops running". Dundee Evening Telegraph. Scotland. 18 October 1918. Retrieved 5 November 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  6. ^ "Balkan Express". Exeter and Plymouth Gazette. England. 14 May 1927. Retrieved 5 November 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  7. ^ "The LNER are informed…". The Scotsman. Scotland. 11 May 1935. Retrieved 5 November 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  8. ^ "Balkan Express". Railway Gazette International. 107: 127. 1957.
  9. ^ "Historical train compositions 1991/1992, Ex 412 Balkan Express". vagonweb.cz. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
  10. ^ "Historical train compositions 1991/1992, R 330 Polonia". vagonweb.cz. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
  11. ^ "Historical train compositions 1999/2000, R 490 Balkan Express". vagonweb.cz. Retrieved 6 May 2022.
  12. ^ "Historical train compositions 2004, R 460 Transbalkan". vagonweb.cz. Retrieved 6 May 2022.
  13. ^ Uysal, Onur (19 April 2013). "Holiday time for Halkalı". railturkey.org. Retrieved 6 May 2022.

External links

  •   Media related to Balkan Express (train) at Wikimedia Commons

balkan, express, train, balkan, express, turkish, balkan, ekspresi, international, overnight, passenger, train, that, between, istanbul, turkey, belgrade, serbia, sofia, bulgaria, train, began, operations, 1991, from, istanbul, budapest, hungary, back, belgrad. The Balkan Express Turkish Balkan Ekspresi was an international overnight passenger train that ran between Istanbul Turkey and Belgrade Serbia via Sofia Bulgaria The train began operations in 1991 from Istanbul to Budapest Hungary but was cut back to Belgrade after 2000 Service was discontinued in March 2013 when Sirkeci station closed for the construction of the Marmaray commuter rail network In 2017 the Istanbul Sofia Express was inaugurated as a successor to the Balkan Express although the route was shortened to Sofia Balkan ExpressThe Balkan Express at Dimitrovgrad with a BDZ Class 07 locomotive OverviewService typeInter CityStatusDiscontinuedLocaleSoutheastern EuropeFirst service1991 1 Last service2013SuccessorIstanbul Sofia ExpressFormer operator s TCDD BDZ ZS 2005 13 JZ 1991 2005 MAV 1991 2000 RouteTerminiSirkeci station IstanbulMain station Belgrade 2000 13 Keleti station Budapest 1991 2000 Average journey time21 hours 55 minutesTrain number s 490 491 1993 2013 412 413 1991 93 On board servicesClass es 2nd 1stDisabled accessLimited due to older equipmentSeating arrangementsOpen coach carCouchette carSleeping arrangementsCouchette carSleeping carBaggage facilitiesOverhead racksTechnicalTrack gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in Electrification25 kV AC 50 Hz Istanbul KapikulePlovdiv DmitrovgradNis BelgradeRoute mapLegendDistance Station0 km Istanbul27 km 17 mi Halkali129 km 80 mi Cerkezkoy229 km 142 mi Alpullu250 km 155 mi Pehlivankoy296 km 184 mi Edirne316 km 196 mi KapikuleTurkey Bulgaria border336 km 209 mi Svilengrad347 km 216 mi Lyubimets363 km 226 mi Harmanli378 km 235 mi Simeonovgrad401 km 249 mi Dimitrovgrad478 km 297 mi Plovdiv515 km 320 mi Pazardzhik531 km 330 mi Septembvri631 km 392 mi Podujane634 km 394 mi Sofia677 km 421 mi Dragoman691 km 429 mi Kalotina ZapadBulgaria Serbia border698 km 434 mi Dimitrovgrad722 km 449 mi Pirot751 km 467 mi Bela Palanka786 km 488 mi Niska Banja797 km 495 mi Nis826 km 513 mi Aleksinac864 km 537 mi Stalac885 km 550 mi Paracin892 km 554 mi Cuprija904 km 562 mi Jagodina934 km 580 mi Lapovo950 km 590 mi Velika Plana962 km 598 mi Palanka987 km 613 mi Mladenovac1 027 km 638 mi Rakovica1 041 km 647 mi Belgrade Contents 1 History 1 1 Previous Iterations 1 2 Balkan Express 1991 2013 2 Gallery 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory EditThe name Balkan Express was used on a number of different train services from Europe to Istanbul before the modern iteration of the train Previous Iterations Edit The Balkan Express was launched on 1 January 1916 2 as a sleeping car service between Berlin and Istanbul The twice weekly service had a schedule of 58 hours for the 1 200 miles 1 900 km 3 and it ran through Dresden Vienna Belgrade and Sofia Departures were from Berlin on Wednesdays and Saturdays and Istanbul on Tuesdays and Saturdays 4 The train was discontinued in October 1918 5 From 1927 the name was given to a train service between the Hook of Holland and Istanbul 6 With a connecting London and North Eastern Railway service from London Liverpool Street to boat train at Harwich the journey time from London to Constantinople was 70 hours and 8 minutes In 1935 the service was accelerated and three hours was cut from the schedule 7 In May 1955 a new Balkan Express was launched from Vienna via Graz and Belgrade avoiding Bulgaria to Athens and Istanbul 8 Balkan Express 1991 2013 Edit Following the revolutions of 1989 new international train services were inaugurated throughout Eastern Europe The main train connecting Istanbul to central Europe was the Istanbul Express Ex 1292 1293 operating between Munich Germany and Istanbul via Salzburg Ljubljana Zagreb Belgrade and Sofia In 1991 a new train service from Istanbul to central Europe was inaugurated the Balkan Express 1 This train numbered Ex 412 413 followed the same route as the Istanbul Express until Belgrade where the train continued north to Subotica and into Hungary The train also had through cars to Kosice Czechoslovakia and Warsaw Poland as well as extra coaches that were added and removed during the trip In its first years of service the Balkan Express was a popular train in the Balkans consisting of equipment from five railways According to the 1991 schedule the train departed Sirkeci station in Istanbul at 18 30 with nine cars six of which would make the entire trip to Budapest a baggage car four couchette cars three corridor coach cars and a mail car The train would reach the Bulgarian Turkish border at midnight and proceed with custom controls The next morning the train would arrive at Sofia at 7 22 Four more cars would be added at Sofia a dining car three corridor coach cars one of which would continue to Warsaw The extra cars were added for passengers traveling the daytime section of the route Arriving at Belgrade at 15 40 the Yugoslavian equipment of the train a corridor coach couchette coach and mail car were detached from the train Arriving at Subotica at 19 20 the train would cross into Hungary and reach Budapest at 22 43 9 The three through cars would then be switched onto the R 330 Polonia and continue overnight to Warsaw or Kosice 10 The Balkan Express widely avoided the conflict zones of the Yugoslav Wars but was still victim to sporadic cancellations However the train continued to operate without major changes to its route In 1994 through car service from Istanbul to Kosice was extended further to Petrovice u Karvine Czech Republic via Zilina In the late 1990s through car service to Poland and the Czech Republic Slovakia were discontinued Ridership from Turkey greatly declined at the turn of the century due to a growing economic crisis along with the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia during the Kosovo War Because of this decline only two cars regularly made the entire journey from Istanbul to Budapest a baggage car and a couchette car The majority of passengers traveled between Sofia Belgrade and Budapest 11 After 2000 the train was shortened by 341 km 212 mi from Budapest to Belgrade Within Turkey the Balkan Express was then merged with the Istanbul Bucharest Bosphorus Express and the two trains operated between Istanbul and Dimitrovgrad as one train Through cars to Budapest were re introduced in 2004 together with new through car service to Prague Czech Republic and Chisinau Moldova However these cars were attached to the Boshphorus Express and would detach from the Balkan Express at Dimitrovgrad The through cars to Budapest and Prague were then attached to the Transbalkan 460 461 which became the main train connection from central Europe to the Balkan countries 12 In the beginning of the 2010s the Balkan Express had greatly lost its popularity from Turkey as flying between Balkan countries became more efficient By 2010 the joint Balkan Bosphorus Express would depart Istanbul with only three cars sometimes four However the closing of Sirkeci station for the construction of the Marmaray commuter rail project in 2013 led to the discontinuation of the Balkan Express The Bosphorus Express however continued to operate to Bucharest Following the discontinuation of the Balkan Express as an overnight train the most popular section of the route between Sofia and Belgrade remained in service This train was renamed Balkan 1490 1491 and operates as a daily day time service between the two cities In 2017 the Turkish State Railways and the Bulgarian State Railways launched a new overnight train service from Istanbul to Sofia using modern TVS2000 passenger cars The Istanbul Sofia Express 492 493 operates daily along the same route as the former Balkan Express but does not make the full journey to Belgrade 13 Gallery Edit The joint Balkan Bosphorus Express waiting to depart Sirkeci station with a TCDD E52500 series electric locomotive The Balkan Express in Sofia The Balkan Express departing Dragoman with a BDZ Class 44 locomotive pulling The Balkan Express near Pirot with a ZS series 661 locomotive pulling The train is running between the non electrified section between Kalotina and Nis The Balkan Express in Nis The JZ class 441 locomotive takes over for the third and final electrified stretch to Belgrade Destination board See also EditBudapest Belgrade Skopje Athens railwayReferences Edit a b Orient Ex The End trains worldexpresses com Retrieved 5 May 2022 The First Balkan Express Birmingham Daily Post England 31 December 1915 Retrieved 5 November 2017 via British Newspaper Archive The first Balkan Express Nantwich Guardian England 21 January 1916 Retrieved 5 November 2017 via British Newspaper Archive Eastern Road German Communications Threatened Sheffield Daily Telegraph England 18 September 1916 Retrieved 5 November 2017 via British Newspaper Archive Balkan Express stops running Dundee Evening Telegraph Scotland 18 October 1918 Retrieved 5 November 2017 via British Newspaper Archive Balkan Express Exeter and Plymouth Gazette England 14 May 1927 Retrieved 5 November 2017 via British Newspaper Archive The LNER are informed The Scotsman Scotland 11 May 1935 Retrieved 5 November 2017 via British Newspaper Archive Balkan Express Railway Gazette International 107 127 1957 Historical train compositions 1991 1992 Ex 412 Balkan Express vagonweb cz Retrieved 4 May 2022 Historical train compositions 1991 1992 R 330 Polonia vagonweb cz Retrieved 4 May 2022 Historical train compositions 1999 2000 R 490 Balkan Express vagonweb cz Retrieved 6 May 2022 Historical train compositions 2004 R 460 Transbalkan vagonweb cz Retrieved 6 May 2022 Uysal Onur 19 April 2013 Holiday time for Halkali railturkey org Retrieved 6 May 2022 External links Edit Media related to Balkan Express train at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Balkan Express train amp oldid 1089936447, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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