Poland by Private Train
An opportunity to join the luxury Danube Express for three nights between Budapest and Warsaw with visits to Gdansk, Cracow, Košice and Malbork Castle
7 nights from £1945
Voyages Jules Verne has been involved with special train journeys for 30 years since the company’s launch with a train journey from London to Hong Kong. Our attention has therefore been caught by the launch of a new train in central Europe comprising new and restored carriages. Indeed some of our regular passengers may remember similar journeys on a Hungarian train some years back. The opportunity has arisen to offer a journey during the inaugural season that encompasses some of the highlights of eastern Europe in some comfort.
Poland lies between Germany and Russia and has been invaded and divided many times but has continually re-asserted its independence. In the 20th century alone it has come under both German and Russian rule but was involved in the defeat of both. It is now an independent nation again and member of the European Union. Gdansk is Poland’s most important port, lying on the Baltic and having been part of the Hanseatic League. It was long governed by the Teutonic Knights from Malbork and was for some time part of Prussia (also known as Danzig), but it is a Polish city that marked two of the 20th century’s most signifi cant events, the fi rst being the opening shots of World War II. The founding of the independent Solidarity union led by Lech Walesa in 1980 following the visit by the Polish Pope John Paul II in 1979 was in retrospect the start of the fall of Communism. Pope John Paul II lived and studied in Cracow during the Nazi occupation and later became Bishop. Cracow lost its medieval position of Polish capital in 1609 and this restricted later development, allowing its ancient centre to remain unspoilt.


