Breitspurbahn

Breitspurbahn
East–West Mainline
Brest
Rennes
Paris
Munich branch
Metz
Saint-Quentin
Madrid
Liège
Barcelona
Aachen
Marseille
Spanish branch
Emmerich
Karlsruhe
Ruhrgebiet
Hamburg
Stuttgart
Hanover
Northwest–Southeast
Mainline
Berlin
Northwest–Southeast
Mainline
East–West Mainline
Prague branch
Moscow branch
Leipzig
Warsaw
Gotha
Minsk
Bamberg
Arctic branch
Nuremberg
St. Petersburg
Munich branch
Munich
Dresden
Linz
Prague
Prague branch
Vienna
Italian branch
Trieste
Moskau
Rome
Kazan
Bratislava
Kabul branch
Budapest
Akmolinsk
Bucharest
Kabul
Istanbul
Krasnoyarsk
Cottbus
Vladivostok branch
Breslau
Khabarovsk
Kattowitz
Vladivostok
Krakau
Yakutsk
Lemberg
Kyiv
Fairbanks
Odessa branch
to U.S. via Canada
Odessa
Stalingrad branch
Rostov-on-Don
Kharkov
Baku
Stalingrad
to India via Iran
Astrakhan
Herat

The Breitspurbahn (German pronunciation: [ˈbʁaɪtʃpuːɐ̯baːn], translation: broad-gauge railway) was a planned 3,000 mm (9 ft 10+18 in) broad-gauge railway, proposed during the time of Nazi Germany, supposed to run with double-deck coaches between major cities of Grossdeutschland, Hitler's expanded Germany,[1] and neighbouring states.

  1. ^ Puffert, Douglas J. (2009). Tracks across continents, paths through history: the economic dynamics of standardization in railway gauge. Chicago : University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226685090. p 182

© MMXXIII Rich X Search. We shall prevail. All rights reserved. Rich X Search