- Heilbronn. Bad
Friedrichshall arose by the
connection of
Kochendorf and
Jagstfeld in 1933, and is
famous for its salt mine. Bad
Friedrichshall is a town...
-
State Railway on 25 June 1868 and it was
extended to Bad Friedrichshall-
Jagstfeld on 5
August 1869. The line has been
electrified to
allow the extension...
-
Valley Railway.
Until 13
December 2014 it was
called Bad Friedrichshall-
Jagstfeld station. The
Royal Württemberg
State Railways (German: Königlich Württembergischen...
- from
Meckenheim via
Sinsheim to
Jagstfeld (westliche Gabelbahn, ”Western Fork Railway”,
opened 1868/1869) and from
Jagstfeld to
Osterburken (Östliche Gabelbahn...
-
railway line from
Heidelberg via
Eberbach and
Mosbach to Bad Friedrichshall-
Jagstfeld in
southwestern Germany.
Today it is
administered by the Verkehrsverbund...
-
confluence of the
Neckar and Enz, the line runs to Bad Friedrichshall-
Jagstfeld through a very
meandering valley, with only one loop at Neckarwestheim...
-
station until 2010 — is a
station on the Neckargemünd–Bad Friedrichshall-
Jagstfeld railway in the
German state of Baden-Württemberg. The
station falls within...
- Friedrichshall-Kochendorf, 168.7 km)
Jagst (right
tributary at Bad Friedrichshall-
Jagstfeld, 190.2 km) Elz (right
tributary at Mosbach-Neckarelz, 39.8 km)
Itter (right...
- eim-Neckarelz-Mosbach (1862), Meckesheim-Rappenau (1868) and Rappenau-
Jagstfeld (1869) routes. The
railway offered low
fares and high speeds. For the...
- from
Heidelberg by way of
Eberbach and
Mosbach to Bad Friedrichshall-
Jagstfeld,
opened in 1879. Neckarelz–Osterburken line,
opened in 1866 as part of...