Planning and construction The first deliberations over the construction of the line go back to 1829. The intention was a trunk route from
Strasbourg to
Mainz, that would form a counterpart, west of the
Rhine, to a railway from
Mannheim to
Basel. It was discussed at length, whether it was more pressing and desirable to build a route through the uplands from Neustadt via Landau to Wissembourg or to establish a railway line along the Rhine via
Speyer,
Germersheim and
Wörth. The military in particular favoured a course that ran along the edge of the
Palatine Forest. In any case the political events of 1848 meant the project came to a standstill. In January 1850 a brochure appeared in Neustadt an der Haardt (now
Neustadt an der Weinstrasse) which pushed for a railway via Landau to Wissembourg and in which it was argued amongst other things should serve the larger townships rather than those immediately alongside the Rhine. In 1852 the decision finally fell in favour of the higher route after expert opinion and studies had been conducted in the spring. On 3 November that same year the Bavarian king,
Maximilian II, gave the green light for the construction, by approving the foundation of a limited company (
Aktiengesellschaft), that was to set the project in motion. The Maximilian Railway was built by
Paul Camille von Denis, who had already been responsible for building the
Palatine Ludwig Railway from Saarbrücken to the
Rheinschanze (today:
Ludwigshafen), from which the railway branched. The cost of building the railway came to four million
Gulden in all. Finally negotiations took place over the land to be used with the communities that the line would affect; in addition railway construction in the area of Landau was particularly difficult, because at that time it there was a fortification on the terrain intended for the railway.
The Maximilian Railway Company era (1855–1909) On 18 July 1855 the section of line from Neustadt to Landau was opened, the Landau–Wissembourg section followed on 26 November 1855. On 14 March 1864 the Winden–Maximiliansau stretch was opened and on 8 May 1865 the link between Maximiliansau and the Baden Maxaubahn (Karlsruhe–Maxau) was completed. In 1867 the Neustadt to Winden section was doubled, primarily to meet the increase in north–south traffic. In 1871 the section between Winden and Wissembourg - now belonging to Germany and renamed
Weißenburg - was also furnished with a double track. This measure was implemented against the background that the
Palatinate was alarmed about the competition for long-distance services, especially from
Prussia. The main station at Landau was rebuilt and considerably expanded in 1872 on the opening of the
Lower Queich Valley railway (
Untere Queichtalbahn - Germersheim–Landau).
Development to 1945 On 1 January 1909 the Maximilian Railway was transferred, along with the other companies belonging to the
Palatinate Railway to the ownership of the
Royal Bavarian State Railways. At that time the Maximilian Railway together with the Ludwigshafen–Strasbourg railway were in competition with the Baden railways for long-distance traffic. The long-haul trains on the Maximilian Railway worked the
Amsterdam –
Cologne –
Bingerbrück –
Rockenhausen –
Neustadt –
Wissembourg –
Strasbourg –
Basel route. Once the
World War I had broken out in 1914, scheduled services came to a standstill in order that the line could be guaranteed for military purposes. After the end of the war the
Alsace was annexed by
France under the terms of the
Versailles Treaty. In particular the railway, that from 1920 was operated by the
Deutsche Reichsbahngesellschaft (DRG), largely lost its importance for long-distance traffic, because from then on most of it switched to the eastern side of the Rhine. the occupation of the Palatinate by the French made operations even more difficult. From 1923 to 1924, a so-called
Regiebetrieb (i.e. publicly owned but independently run) operation was set up that was answerable to France. The final demise of long-distance services came after the end of French occupation in 1930. After the end of the 1930s the main services on the Maximilian Railway flowed increasingly towards Karlsruhe, which is why in 1938 a fixed bridge across the Rhine was built between Maximiliansau and Karlsruhe for the first time; in addition the Saarbrücken–München express trains, that previously ran on the Lower Queich Valley railway from Landau to Germersheim, were routed from now on via Winden, Wörth and Karlsruhe. This switch meant that the Winden–Wissembourg section lost its importance, whilst the former branch to Karlsruhe experienced an upturn. At the beginning of 1945 traffic ceased as a result of the end of the
World War II.
The Deutsche Bahn era (since 1945) After the Second World War the station building at Landau, that had suffered badly from the war, was gradually replaced by a brand new building. The second track on the section of line between Winden and Wörth was dismantled by the French occupying powers. In 1975 public transit ceased on the Winden–Wissembourg section, and it was finally reduced to a single track. In 1985 express trains from
Munich to
Saarbrücken started running on the Karlsruhe–Landau line. These trains called at Landau in order to use the
Queichtalbahn to Saarbrücken. After a shipping accident that occurred in 1987, a new bridge over the Rhine had to be built at Maxau. The bridge was opened on 29 April 1991 with one track and in 2000 was expanded to take a second track because it had become a bottleneck. The second track was opened to traffic on 12 May 2000. At the beginning of the 1990s the depot (
Bahnbetriebswerk) in Landau was closed and knocked down. Landau marshalling yard also disappeared. In 1994 through traffic from
Karlsruhe to
Neustadt in Landau was interrupted for several years; instead trains were route via the
Queichtalbahn Pirmasens–Landau as far as Neustadt. In addition in March 1997 the Winden–Wissembourg line was reactivated. In 2003 the main station at Neustadt was modernised as part of the introduction of
RheinNeckar S-Bahn onto the
Palatine Ludwig Railway. From 1 to 3 October 2005 steam trains belonging to the
Ulmer Eisenbahnfreunde (UEF) ran on the Maxbahn on the occasion of its 150th anniversary. The steam trains travelled on a circuit: Neustadt – Landau – Winden – Karlsruhe – Graben-Neudorf – Germersheim – Speyer – Schifferstadt – Neustadt and also from Neustadt to Wissembourg. Some hauled the so-called
Silberlings of the
Deutsche Bahn (DB). Kandel station was upgraded just in time for these celebrations. == Operations ==