The Orient Express is the name of a long-distance passenger train originally operated by the Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits.
Its route has changed many times, and several routes have in the past
concurrently used the name (or slight variants thereof). Although the
original Orient Express was simply a normal international railway
service, the name has become synonymous with intrigue and luxury
travel. The two city names most intimately associated with the Orient
Express are Paris and Istanbul, the original endpoints of the service.
The current Orient Express does not serve Paris or Istanbul. Its immediate predecessor, a through overnight service from Paris to Vienna ran for the very last time from Paris on Friday, June 8, 2007. Since then, the route, still called the "Orient Express", has been shortened to start from Strasbourg instead, occasioned by the inauguration of the LGV Est which affords much faster travel times from Paris to Strasbourg. The new curtailed service leaves Strasbourg at 22.20 daily, shortly after the arrival of a TGV from Paris, and is attached at Karlsruhe to the overnight sleeper service from Amsterdam to Vienna.