hidden europe 26

A powerful inducement to travel

by Nicky Gardner

Summary

We review a new edition of Thomas Cook's Rail Map of Europe, a map that uses minimalist cartography to good effect in a map that is remarkably useful.

Maps are a marvellous form of propaganda. The 2009 printed timetable of Zeleznice Srbije (ZS or Serbian Railways) is a very handsome book. Far too good to be just discarded when it has run its course. The slim volume is a masterpiece of clarity and good design. The book has a clear fold-out map that would have you believe that ZS is running several train services within Kosovo, not to mention two routes that cross from Serbia into northeast Bosnia - the latter both non-existent, and it has been many a year since any ZS train ventured very far into Kosovo. Too many maps in national rail timetables show rail routes that are entirely historical (viz. they have long since ceased to have any trains) or elements which are aspirational pieces of cartographic fiction - ie. they are routes which might be fine additions to the rail network, but which don't actually exist.

So full marks to Brendan Fox and his team at Thomas Cook Publishing for the latest edition of their Rail Map Europe.

This is just an excerpt. The full text of this article is not yet available to members with online access to hidden europe. Of course you can read the full article in the print edition of hidden europe 26.
Related articleFull text online

Pure theatre: homage to Lake Lucerne

Swiss lakes are in a class of their own. But is there one that just has the edge over the rest? Some may cast their vote for Léman, and others will argue the case for Lugano. But for us it’s Lake Lucerne, where the lake’s unusual vaguely cruciform shape changes a boat journey into pure theatre.

Related article

Marking Time: New Train Services for 2020

The hidden europe award for ingenuity in creating new European rail travel opportunities is awarded to Austria's state rail operator, Österreichische Bundesbahnen (ÖBB). We look at what ÖBB will offer anew for 2020, and examine too what's new on the rails in Russia, Germany and elsewhere across Europe.

Related article

An Essex backwater: Discovering Harwich

The old town of Harwich, a port in the county of Essex on England's North Sea coast, is tucked away on the end of a peninsula. Maritime connections have shaped the development of Harwich. It's a place for sea breezes, rock oysters and watching the ferries come and go.