Classroom lesson ยท Trans-Siberian Railway ยท ๐Ÿ‡ท๐Ÿ‡บ Russia

Trans-Siberian Railway

The longest train journey in the world

Photo ยท Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The Trans-Siberian Railway is the longest railway line in the world, stretching 9,289 kilometres from Moscow in western Russia all the way to Vladivostok on the Pacific Ocean. Riding the whole route takes about a week without stopping - you pass through eight time zones, countless forests and mountains, and even go right along the shore of Lake Baikal.

Tell me more

The railway was built over many years starting in 1891. Before it existed, travelling across Russia meant months of slow, difficult journeys by horse and cart through enormous forests and freezing plains. The railway changed everything, connecting distant towns and cities and helping people, food and supplies travel across the country much more quickly.

The journey passes through an incredible variety of landscapes: wide grassy plains called the steppes, the thick evergreen forests of Siberia (called the taiga), mountain ranges, and the shores of Lake Baikal. As the train moves east, passengers watch the scenery change slowly through the windows. Deer, eagles and sometimes even bears can be spotted along the route.

Passengers travelling the whole route cross eight different time zones - meaning clocks have to be changed eight times! Each carriage has a small kitchen area and a friendly attendant called a provodnik who brings cups of tea in special glass-and-metal holders. Many travellers play cards, share food and make friends on the long journey, because you spend so much time together.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01If you could look out of a train window for a whole week, what would you hope to see?
  2. 02Eight time zones means clocks change eight times on one trip. What might be confusing about that?
  3. 03Why do you think building a railway across such a vast country was so important?
Try this

Classroom activity

Using a printed outline map of Russia, draw the Trans-Siberian Railway line from Moscow to Vladivostok. Mark three things you would see along the way (e.g. Lake Baikal, taiga forest, a mountain). Add a small clock at the start and end showing what time it would be at each end if it were 12 noon in Moscow.