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Train travel in Europe

I'll be in Germany, Switzerland, and France in April and May. I'll be travelling by train on two separate days in Germany, three in Switzerland, and two in France. I had planned to get a select three country pass, then learned that Frnce no longer participates. Shall I get a two country pass for germany and Switzerland then buy point to point tickets in France, or is there a better option?

I have a suggestion. I just tried www.bahn.de to see if it displays fares for trains on point to point routes including at least one point in Germany, and for a couple practice tries in April it does. I tried a Germany-Switz train and a Germany-Paris one. At least for a few trains, it gave a couple prices you could use for some comparisons. At least with enough info that you might just try some routes to see if the combinations of point to point tickets you might use are anywhere near the cost of the passes you're considering. If it's a close call, I can't help you! :) But if one alternative or the other is way more expensive, that might help you decide. The one thing to remember about passes is that they do give you flexibility and allow for spontaneity, whereas point to point tickets, whenever you buy them, ahead of time or on the spot, generally lock you into THAT train. Have a great trip!

Thanks for all of the great information. I've done some preliminary pricing and I'm going to do point to point in either Germany or France. Great advice!

What are your precise routes? If you can commit to specific departure dates and times and book well in advance (up to three months allowed), you can get discount fares for many routes.

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Travel | Rick Steves’ Europe: Glimpse the ancient past…

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Travel | rick steves’ europe: glimpse the ancient past in northeast england.

Step 2,000 years into the past by hiking Hadrian’s Wall. (Addie Mannan, Rick Steves’ Europe)

While southern England gets most of the glory – and the tourists – the country’s far northeastern corner harbors some of England’s best historical sights. Hadrian’s Wall serves as a reminder that this was once an important Roman colony, while nearby Holy Island is where Christianity gained its first toehold in Britain. And both can be reached from the town of Durham, home to England’s greatest Norman church.

For years I’ve visited Hadrian’s Wall, the remains of the fortification the Romans built nearly 2,000 years ago to mark the northern end of their empire, where Britannia stopped and the barbarian land that would someday be Scotland began. But until a more recent visit, I had never ventured beyond the National Trust properties, the museums, and the various car-park viewpoints.

This time, I spent a sunny late afternoon actually hiking the wall. As I scrambled along these Roman ruins, I took a moment to simply absorb the setting. All alone with the sound of the wind, I surveyed the vast expanses and craggy hills that seem to rip across the island, like a snapshot that has frozen some sort of geological violence in midaction.

Hadrian’s Wall stretches 73 miles across the isle. Once a towering 15-foot-tall fortification, that once mighty wall is now only about three feet wide and three to six feet high. But it’s still one of England’s most thought-provoking sights.

The best way to experience the wall is to focus on a six-mile stretch right in the middle, featuring three must-see sights: Housesteads Roman Fort, which shows you where the Romans lived; Vindolanda’s museum, which shows you how they lived; and the Roman Army Museum, which explains the empire-wide military organization that brought them here.

This stretch of the wall also boasts some of the most enjoyable hiking. A three-mile ridge walk alongside the wall from Steel Rigg to Sycamore Gap (named for the much-loved tree that stood there until vandals cut it down in 2023) to Housesteads Roman Fort gives you a perfect taste of scenery and history.

If you prefer history with monks mixed in, visit Holy Island. This small dot off the coast of northern England, near the Scottish border, was the home and original burial ground of St. Cuthbert, a great missionary monk and leader of the early Christian church in northern England. Known 1,200 years ago as Lindisfarne, this island was the source of the magnificent Lindisfarne Gospels, illustrated by monks with some of the finest art from Europe’s early Middle Ages. By the ninth century, Viking raids forced the monks to take shelter in Durham, but they returned centuries later to reestablish a church on this holy site.

Today, Holy Island makes a pleasant stop for modern-day pilgrims, who cross a causeway to a quiet town with B&Bs, cafés, and 150 residents. The island’s highlights include a priory, with an evocative field of ruined church walls and a tiny museum, a former coast-guard lookout tower offering expansive views, and a dramatically situated castle that’s more enticing from afar than it is inside.

South of Hadrian’s Wall and Holy Island and three hours north of London by train, the town of Durham sits snug below its castle and famous church. A sharp bend in the River Wear protected medieval Durham, providing a moat on three sides. Today, the river ties Durham into a tidy little bundle and seems to protect it only from the modern world.

For nearly a thousand years, pilgrims have come to Durham to see its cathedral. It was built around the year 1100 to house the much venerated bones of St. Cuthbert. The architecture is unusually harmonious because it’s all one style. The cathedral was built in just 40 years and survives essentially unaltered. In the rest of Europe, this kind of architecture would be called “Romanesque.” But in England, it’s called “Norman,” named after the invaders who brought the style across the English Channel from France. The cathedral’s round arches and zigzag carved decorations are textbook Norman.

For me, a Durham highlight is attending an evensong. I always arrive early and ask to be seated in the choir, the cozy, central church-within-a-church. In this vast, dark, and chilly building, the choir served as an intimate space where medieval monks could worship multiple times a day.

While the cathedral is the city’s top draw, it’s not the only one. Strolling the town and popping into the indoor market just off the main square is a delight. And, as home to England’s third-oldest university, the city is lively with tattooed students in search of a good karaoke bar.

From a magnificent cathedral to striking ruins, England’s northernmost fringes provide the best opportunity to delve into the country’s fascinating past while enjoying its friendly present.

(Rick Steves (www.ricksteves.com) writes European guidebooks, hosts travel shows on public TV and radio, and organizes European tours. This column revisits some of Rick’s favorite places over the past two decades. You can email Rick at [email protected] and follow his blog on Facebook.)

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COMMENTS

  1. Buying European Train Tickets by Rick Steves

    The easiest way to get train tickets online is to buy them through ricksteves.com (after all, you're already here!). Virtually all US-based websites and travel agents sell European train tickets for the exact same prices you'll find here. And rail-pass holders who still need tickets and/or seat reservations on certain trains — most notably ...

  2. Trains & Rail Passes

    Travel Tips: Trains & Rail Passes. Based on your trip itinerary, will you be better off buying point-to-point tickets or a rail pass? If it's a rail pass, which one? The information here will help you choo-choose wisely. You'll also find a wealth of practical train-travel tips. And when you're ready to buy your pass or tickets, you can do that ...

  3. train travel in Europe

    Hi there - My family (2 adults and 2 children - 17 and 14) are travelling to Europe in Dec/Jan - basic itinerary is: Rome, Florence, Venice, Grindelwold, Paris, St Antons. Can anyone advise us on the most cost effective train travel arrangements - without compromising comfort. Also - we are planning to do Jungfrau from Grindelwold.

  4. Rick Steves' Europe

    Watch Rick Steves' Europe, the most popular travel show on public TV, and explore the rich culture, history, and scenery of the continent.

  5. Train travel in Europe

    IF you do go - plan on longer than 2 or 3 days between cities; use Rick Steves for train tickets (you get to ask 3 free questions) AND definitely use his suggested contact to make your reservations. The woman was great - best money we spent. I imagine Rick has contacts for you in Australia, too.

  6. Rick Steves Europe: Tours, Travel, TV & Vacations

    Shop Rick's Travel Store. Find everything you need for packing - and planning your dream trip to Europe. Travel Tips. Find tips on everything from itinerary planning and packing to transportation, eating, and sleeping. ... ©2024 Rick Steves' Europe, Inc. | CST# 2086743 ...

  7. Train travel in Europe

    I have a suggestion. I just tried www.bahn.de to see if it displays fares for trains on point to point routes including at least one point in Germany, and for a couple practice tries in April it does. I tried a Germany-Switz train and a Germany-Paris one. At least for a few trains, it gave a couple prices you could use for some comparisons.

  8. My Way® Alpine Europe in 12 Days

    My Way® Alpine Europe in 12 Days. from $3,195 per person + air. This trip delivers endless opportunities for fresh-air thrills — from Austria's Sound of Music country to flower-carpeted meadows in Italy's Dolomites, fairy-tale castles in Germany's Bavaria, cut-glass peaks in Switzerland's Berner Oberland, and spectacular scenery in France's ...

  9. Rick Steves' Europe: Glimpse the ancient past in northeast England

    Step 2,000 years into the past by hiking Hadrian's Wall. (Addie Mannan, Rick Steves' Europe) By Rick Steves. April 23, 2024 at 4:45 a.m. While southern England gets most of the glory - and ...