Background: the Deutsche Reichsbahn The
railway network in Germany dates back to 1835 when the first tracks were laid on a route between Nuremberg and . The
Deutsche Reichsbahn operated from 1920 through the
Weimar and
Nazi eras until 1949, when it was split between East and West Germany into two successor entities,
Deutsche Reichsbahn and
Deutsche Bundesbahn, respectively. They remained separate throughout the Cold War era division of Germany, and joined after the 1989 fall of the
Berlin Wall, and
German reunification in 1990. On 1 January 1994 and were merged to form one company, , the successor organisation to the Reichsbahn. At the same time, adopted its current logo and
DB abbreviation. Kurt Weidemann modernised the logo and typographer designed a new corporate font known as . When Deutsche Bahn was formed in January 1994, it became a joint stock-company, and was designed to operate the railways of both the former East and West Germany after unification in October 1990 as a single, uniform, and private company. There are three main periods of development in this unified German railway: its formation, its early years (1994–1999), and the period from 1999 to the present. Originally, DBAG had its head office in but moved to in central Berlin in 1996, where it occupies a 26-storey office tower designed by at the eastern end of the
Sony Centre and named . As the lease was to expire in 2010, DB had announced plans to relocate to , and in 2007 a proposal for a new head office by
3XN Architects won an architectural competition which also included
Foster + Partners, and . However, these plans were put on hold due to the
2008 financial crisis, and the lease was extended. Construction of the new head office building was started in 2017 under the title "" according to the designs by 3XN. Finished in February 2020, the Cube will house the legal offices of Deutsche Bahn, but not become the main head office.
1999 to present The second step of the (railway reform) was carried out in 1999. All rolling stock, track, personnel, and real assets were divided between the subsidiaries of DBAG: (long-distance passenger service, later renamed (operating the stations)). This new organisational scheme was introduced not least to implement
European Community directive 91/440/EEC that requires open access operations on railway lines by companies other than those that own the rail infrastructure. In December 2007, DB reorganised again, bringing all passenger services into its arm, logistics under and infrastructure and operations under . The DB is owned by the Federal Republic. By the
Constitution, the Federal Republic is required to retain (directly or indirectly) a majority of the infrastructure (the present ) stocks. In 2008, it was agreed to "float" a portion of the business, meaning an end to the 100% share the German Federal Republic had in it, with a plan that 25% of the overall share would be sold to the private sector. However the onset of the
2008 financial crisis saw this cancelled. In 2014, the Jewish community of Thessaloniki demanded that the , which is the successor of the , should reimburse the heirs of Greek Holocaust victims of Thessaloniki for train fares that they were forced to pay for their deportation from Thessaloniki to and Treblinka between March and August 1943. In June 2018 controversy grew in the
United Kingdom over widespread cancellations of railway services and numerous delayed services operated by Deutsche Bahn in Britain, under its
Northern brand. This resulted in Britain's Minister of Transport, Chris Grayling, setting up an enquiry into whether the Deutsche Bahn subsidiary had breached its contractual agreement to provide railway services in the north of England. In 2024, Deutsche Bahn faced significant operational challenges during the
Euro 2024 football tournament, including frequent train delays, cancellations, and infrastructure issues. The rail carrier reported a €1 billion half year net loss stemming from investments to repair its rail network, strikes and bad weather in July of the same year. As a result, Deutsche Bahn announced that they would shed 30,000 administrative jobs, roughly equal to 9% of their workforce. In September 2024, the company came to an agreement with
DSV of Denmark, a logistics company; in the agreement, DSV will acquire
Schenker from Deutsche Bahn for $15.84 billion.
Logo File:Deutsche Reichsbahn Gesellschaft logo.svg|1 April 1920 to 26 April 1945, operating as
Deutsche Reichsbahn File:Deutsche Reichsbahn DDR.svg|30 August 1924 to 31 December 1993, operating as
Deutsche Reichsbahn.This mark was used in tandem with the previous logo until April 1945. File:Deutsche Bundesbahn.svg|10 October 1946 to 31 December 1993, operating as File:Deutsche Bahn AG-Logo.svg|Current logo, in use since 1 January 1994, operating as
Deutsche Bahn ==Train categories==