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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Swiss Political Geography > Switzerland
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Switzerland, Swiss Political Geography

Related Category: Swiss Political Geography

Switzerland[swit´surlund] Pronunciation Key - History-

Emergence of the Swiss Nation

In 58 B.C. the Helvetii who inhabited the country (see Helvetia) were conquered by the Romans. Invaded (5th cent. A.D.) by the Alemanni and by the Burgundii, the area passed to the Franks in the 6th cent. Divided (9th cent.) between Swabia and Transjurane Burgundy, it was united (1033) under the Holy Roman Empire. The expanding feudal houses, notably ZAhringen and Kyburg, were supplanted (13th cent.) by the houses of Hapsburg and of Savoy. Hapsburg encroachments on the privileges of the three mountainous localities of Uri, Schwyz, and Unterwalden resulted in the conclusion (1291) of a defensive league among them. The legendary hero of this event is William Tell. The league triumphed at Morgarten (1315) and, joined by Lucerne, ZUrich, Zug, Glarus, and Bern, decisively defeated the Hapsburgs at Sempach (1386) and NAfels (1388).

In the 15th cent. the Swiss league rose to the first rank as a military power. The conquest of Aargau, Thurgau, and the valleys of Ticino, which were ruled as subject territories until 1798, was followed by Swiss victories over Charles the Bold of Burgundy (1476–77) and over Emperor Maximilian I, who in 1499 granted Switzerland virtual independence. By 1513, the admission to the confederation of Fribourg, Solothurn, Basel, Schaffhausen, and Appenzell had raised the number of cantons to 13, and this number was maintained until 1798. The conquest by Bern of Vaud from Savoy (1536), and close alliances with the Grisons, Geneva, St. Gall, and other towns and regions, further increased the Swiss orbit, but Switzerland's importance as a European power was broken in 1515 when the French defeated the Swiss at Marignano (see also Italian Wars).

A "perpetual alliance" with France (1516) and neutrality became the basis of Swiss policy. Swiss mercenaries, however, continued to serve abroad for three centuries (see Swiss Guards). The cantons, loosely bound by a federal diet and by individual treaties and often torn by internal feuds, were seriously split by the Reformation, preached by Zwingli at ZUrich and by Calvin at Geneva. The Catholics, led by the Four Forest Cantons, defeated the Protestants in battle; the Treaty of Kappel (1531) preserved Catholicism in Lucerne, Uri, Schwyz, Unterwalden, Zug, Fribourg, and Solothurn. National unity almost disappeared for more than two centuries, but religious divisions did not prevent the Swiss (except the Grisons) from remaining neutral throughout the Thirty Years War. Switzerland was an island of prosperity when, in 1648, at the end of the war, its formal independence was recognized in the Peace of Westphalia.

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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Aargau
Appenzell
Arles, kingdom of
Basel
Bern
Burgundy
John Calvin
Charles the Bold
Four Forest Cantons, the
Fribourg
Geneva, canton and city, Switzerland
Glarus
Grisons
Hapsburg
Helvetia
Helvetic Republic
Holocaust
Holy Roman Empire
Italian Wars
Jura, canton, Switzerland
Lucerne
Marignano, battle of
NeuchAtel
pass
Reformation
Savoy
Schaffhausen
Schwyz
Sempach
Solothurn
Sonderbund
Saint Gall, canton, Switzerland
Swabia
Swiss Guards
Tell, William
Thurgau
Ticino, canton, Switzerland
Unterwalden
Uri, canton, Switzerland
Valais
Vaud
Vienna, Congress of
ZAhringen
Zug
ZUrich
Huldreich Zwingli

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Places > Germany, Scandinavia, and Central Europe


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