


Its immediate successor, a through overnight service from Paris to Bucharest, was later cut back in 1991 to Budapest, and in 2001 was again shortened to Vienna, before departing for the last time from Paris on Friday 8 June 2007. In 1977, the Orient Express stopped serving Istanbul. The two city names most prominently served and associated with the Orient Express are Paris and Istanbul, the original termini of the timetabled service. Although the original Orient Express was simply a normal international railway service, the name became synonymous with intrigue and luxury rail travel. Several routes in the past concurrently used the Orient Express name, or slight variations.

The route and rolling stock of the Orient Express changed many times. The train traveled the length of continental Europe, with main terminal stations in Paris in the northwest and Istanbul in the southeast, and branches extending service to Athens, Brussels, and London. The Orient Express was a long-distance passenger train service created in 1883 by the Belgian company Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits (CIWL) that operated until 2009. Poster advertising the winter 1888–1889 timetable
