Emperor Franz Joseph Railway
The Emperor Franz Joseph Railway (German: Kaiser-Franz-Josephs-Bahn) is an Austrian railway line originally named after Emperor Franz Joseph.
It was built after the War of 1866 as a connection between Prague and Vienna. In 1872, Vienna Franz Josef Station was built as the first terminal station inside the former Linienwall in the district of Alsergrund, inside the Gürtel. It crosses the Danube at Tulln and extends from there to Krems and to the border at Gmünd. In Bohemia, it continued through České Budějovice, Tábor and Benešov to Prague. Prague's present main station originally belonged to Franz Josef Railway. Various district capitals are only connected to it by bylines. A new station at Gmünd had to be built in 1919, after part of the town had become part of Czechoslovakia (České Velenice). After World War II, the line lost a lot of importance because of the Iron Curtain. However, trains to Prague and Berlin used it through the mid-90s. Today, the Franz Josef Railway is only used for regional trains, as trains to Prague run via Wien Meidling and Brno, and along the first Czech railway corridor.
Lines built by the Emperor Franz Joseph Railway lying in today's Czech Republic [1]
- České Budějovice - Plzeň (1868)
- Austria/Czech Republic border - České Velenice - České Budějovice (1869)
- České Budějovice - Tábor - Benešov - Prague (1871)
- Plzeň - Cheb (1872)
Notes
- ^ State borders and town names are indicated as of today.
Sources
- Siegfried Bufe, Heribert Schröpfer (1991), Eisenbahnen im Sudetenland, Egglham: Bufe-Fachbuchverlag, ISBN 3-922138-42-X
- Johann Stockklausner (1979), Dampfbetrieb in Alt-Österreich, Wien: Verlag Slezak, ISBN 3-900134-41-3
- Alfred Wolf: Die Franz-Josefs-Bahn und ihre Nebenlinien. Sutton Verlag, Erfurt 2006, ISBN 978-3-86680-041-0