I | INTRODUCTION |
Switzerland, federal republic in west central Europe.
Switzerland is a small, landlocked country set amid mountainous terrain in the
heart of the European continent. It is bordered on the west by France, on the
north by Germany, on the east by Austria, and on the south by Italy. The tiny
principality of Liechtenstein lies between Switzerland and Austria. Each of the
four major bordering countries has had an influence on Swiss culture. The Swiss
people are an ethnic mix consisting mainly of native German, French, and Italian
speakers, and most towns have two or even three correct names in those
languages. The country has an area of 41,285 sq km (15,940 sq mi). Its largest
city is Zürich, and the capital is Bern.
Switzerland’s official name is
Confoederatio Helvetica (Latin for “Helvetic Confederation”), which is
frequently translated in English as Swiss Confederation. The Helvetii, an
ancient Celtic people who occupied what is now western Switzerland, were
defeated by the Roman army of Julius Caesar in the 1st century bc. As a province of Rome, the region
became known as Helvetia. The name Confoederatio Helvetica, an ethnically
and linguistically neutral term that recalls this ancient history, is testimony
to an enduring desire to forge unity among a diverse population. The name
Switzerland (French Suisse; German Schweiz; Italian
Svizzera), the nation’s widely recognized but unofficial designation, is
a variation on Schwyz, a territory that in 1291 became the first member
of the present-day confederation. The Swiss flag, a red square with a centered
white cross, is a variation on the traditional flag of the Schwyz region.
II | LAND AND RESOURCES |
A | Natural Regions |
Switzerland is one of the most
mountainous countries of Europe. More than 70 percent of its area is covered by
the Alps, in the central and southern regions, and the Jura, in the northwest.
The Swiss Alps are part of the largest mountain system in Europe and are famous
for their jagged peaks and steep-sided valleys.
The Swiss Alps encompass several mountain
ranges, three of which are particularly noteworthy. The Pennine Alps, which form
a part of Switzerland’s southwestern border with Italy, have Switzerland’s
highest peak, the 4,634-m (15,203-ft) Dufourspitze, one of ten lofty summits of
the Monte Rosa mountain group. Nearby is the world-famous Matterhorn (Italian
Monte Cervino), a 4,478-m (14,692-ft) glacially sculpted mountain, and
the 4,545-m (14,911-ft) Dom, the tallest mountain located entirely within
Switzerland. The Bernese Alps, which straddle the border between the cantons of
Bern and Valais, have many of Switzerland’s most famous peaks. These include the
Eiger, Mönch, and Jungfrau, mountains that tower above the resort town of
Interlaken. The Rhaetian Alps, which form part of the eastern border with Italy,
contain Piz Bernina and neighboring peaks in the Saint Moritz area.
The Jura (Celtic for “forest”) are much
lower than the Alps and occupy a smaller area. They are generally rounded and
naturally wooded, with many cleared areas used as pastureland for dairying. The
highest peaks in the Swiss Jura are Chasseron and Chasseral, located some 50 km
(30 mi) apart, each rising to a height of 1,607 m (5,272 ft).
Between these two mountain systems lies
the Swiss Plateau, or Mittelland, a basin that stretches across much of central
Switzerland. It extends from Lake Geneva (Lac Léman) in the far southwest to the
Bodensee (Lake of Constance) in the far northeast. A region about 50 km (30 mi)
wide with an average elevation of about 400 m (about 1,300 ft) above sea level,
the plateau consists of gently-to-moderately rolling terrain punctuated by
hills. Most of Switzerland’s large towns and about three-quarters of the Swiss
population are located in this region. The plateau contains many lakes and
rivers, as well as Switzerland’s most fertile soils.
B | Rivers and Lakes |
Switzerland is a principal water source
in central Europe, and the nation’s rivers flow into four different seas. The
Rhine, one of Europe’s major rivers, rises in eastern Switzerland. The Rhine
drains much of northern Switzerland and flows to the North Sea. Its largest
tributary is the Aare, which drains most of the Swiss Plateau and the southern
slopes of the Jura. The Rhône, the other great European river originating in
Switzerland, flows west and south to the Mediterranean Sea. The Ticino river
system in southern Switzerland flows to the Po and into the Adriatic Sea. The
Inn drains eastern Switzerland and flows into the Danube, which empties into the
Black Sea.
Switzerland’s mountain systems contain
innumerable picturesque valleys, most of which are traversed by streams and
rivers. Waterfalls frequently issue from the slopes above. Some waterfalls are
exceptionally high. The spectacular Staubbach Falls in the canton of Bern is one
of the world’s highest, with a drop of some 300 m (about 980 ft). Glaciers feed
many Swiss rivers. Among the best known is the Rhône Glacier, a vast glittering
cascade of ice at the headwaters of the Rhône River. The Bernese Alps have the
highest concentration of glaciers in the Alps.
Most rivers in Switzerland are not suited
for navigation. Their fall is too great and their currents too swift. Even the
Rhine is broken by dramatic falls near the northern city of Schaffhausen. It is
not suited for commercial navigation in Switzerland until Basel, just inside the
border with Germany.
Switzerland is famous for its many scenic
lakes, especially those of the Alpine region. Lakes have long been important for
transportation in Switzerland, and many towns are situated along lakeshores.
Several lakes are shared with other countries, including Lake Geneva,
Switzerland’s largest lake, on the western frontier with France, and Bodensee
(Lake of Constance), on the northeastern frontier with Germany and Austria. On
the southern frontier with Italy are Lake Lugano and Lake Maggiore, which lies
at 190 m (640 ft) above sea level, the country’s lowest point. Lakes entirely
within Switzerland include Lake of Neuchâtel, Lake of Lucerne (Vierwaldstätter
See), Lake of Zürich (Zürichsee), Brienzersee, and Thunersee.
C | Climate |
Switzerland has a varied climate, due
largely to differences in elevation and exposure to sun and prevailing winds. On
the plateau and in the lower valleys of Switzerland a temperate climate
prevails, with a mean annual temperature of about 10°C (about 50°F). In the
summer months, temperatures in low-lying areas can rise above 27°C (80°F).
Mountainous areas are significantly cooler throughout the year, and temperatures
decrease about 2 Celsius degrees (about 3 Fahrenheit degrees) for every
additional 300 m (1,000 ft) of elevation. Large glaciers are found in the Alps,
and permanent snow covers the highest peaks. Winter temperatures are generally
below freezing throughout Switzerland, except for the north shore of Lake Geneva
and the shores of the Swiss-Italian lakes, which have a mild climate like that
of northern Italy. During January and February high-pressure conditions over the
Alps bring clear, cold weather that is ideal for winter sports.
Precipitation in Switzerland generally
increases with elevation. Precipitation on the Swiss Plateau and in the lower
valleys is about 910 mm (about 36 in) annually; the higher regions typically
receive more precipitation. Most precipitation occurs during the winter in the
form of snow, when moisture-laden winds moving northward from the Mediterranean
are forced to rise over Switzerland’s Alpine ranges.
Locally important winds include the
bise and foehn. The bise is mainly a summer phenomenon in which a
warm breeze moves up-valley during the day, causing cloud formation over higher
elevations. The wind reverses direction about sundown and moves down the valley
as a cool downdraft. The foehn, which occurs during the winter months, is a dry
and relatively warm airflow that is drawn northward over the Alps. The foehn can
quickly melt snow and ice, increasing the risk of mudslides and avalanches.
D | Natural Resources |
Waterpower is the chief natural resource of
Switzerland. The principal source of water is runoff from the considerable
annual precipitation that falls on the Alps. An important complement is melt
water from the country’s hundreds of glaciers. The Swiss have long harnessed the
energy of falling water for productive uses. Long ago, torrents turned
waterwheels that powered preindustrial mills and machinery. Today, the flow is
captured by hundreds of hydroelectric power facilities, which provide 54 percent
of the country’s domestic electricity.
Mineral resources are not plentiful in
Switzerland. Granite, limestone, other building stones, and salt are the only
abundant mineral resources with commercial value. Small deposits of iron and
manganese ores also are found.
About 11 percent of Switzerland’s land is
used for agriculture, while another 30 percent is covered by forests. Steep
terrain is the principal obstacle to agricultural expansion. The mountainous
landscape is, however, central to the country’s famous tourism industry, one of
Switzerland’s most important revenue sources.
E | Plants and Animals |
Switzerland’s varied climate supports a
great diversity of plants and animals. In the sunny and southerly canton of
Ticino, Mediterranean-style scrub vegetation and pines are common. Decorative
palms also dot communities along the shores of Lake Lugano and Lake Maggiore. In
the cooler, more northerly parts of the country, a mix of deciduous trees and
coniferous trees dominates. The most common deciduous trees include oak, beech,
maple, and chestnut. Coniferous trees include spruce, pine, and fir.
Elevation and exposure to sun have a
powerful influence on Switzerland’s plant life. A major characteristic of plant
geography in Switzerland is vertical zonation, a clustering of species at
different elevations according to their ability to tolerate warmer or colder
temperatures. The exact elevation at which one community of plants is replaced
by another varies significantly in different locations. Sunny south-facing
slopes, for example, are warmer and drier than shaded north-facing slopes. As a
result, different species may characterize opposing slopes of a single
valley.
In general, deciduous forests dominate
landscapes below about 1,400 m (about 4,500 ft), while coniferous forests
dominate from that elevation to about 2,200 m (about 7,200 ft). Above this
elevation begins the alp, the meadow above the tree line. Various grasses
and flowering plants are common here, the latter including edelweiss, alpine
aster, alpine pansy, and gentianella. The realm of permanent snow and ice—the
region above the alp—typically begins at about 3,000 m (about 9,800 ft).
Chamois, marmot, and ibex inhabit the Alpine
regions, as do the golden eagle, bearded vulture, and Alpendohle—a
relative of the crow. The forests contain deer, fox, and many species of birds,
including varieties of woodpecker, pheasant, and jay. Species of wolf and lynx
are still found in some areas. Lakes and wetlands provide habitat for the grebe,
heron, plover, and numerous duck species. Trout are common in the streams, and
salmon are found in some rivers.
F | Environmental Issues |
The environmental problems faced by
Switzerland stem largely from human impacts due to population growth,
consumption of fossil fuels, urbanization, and the steady rise of tourism. One
of the most significant threats to the environment is damage to forests from
acid rain, a form of air pollution. Acid rain is caused by the burning of fossil
fuels, which emit sulfate and nitrate particles into the atmosphere. These
compounds, which fall to the earth in the form of rain, snow, and fog, can prove
fatal to trees and other plant life. Trees in Switzerland play a critical role
in averting landslides and avalanches by preventing soil erosion and holding
back snow. In an effort to maintain healthy trees, Switzerland vigorously
supports regional, European, and global treaties aimed at reducing emissions
that contribute to acid rain. Domestically, Switzerland has sought to reduce
damaging emissions by enacting strict vehicle emission standards and by limiting
heavy truck traffic on the transalpine routes. To further protect Swiss forests,
a federal permit is required to cut trees.
The concern for plant protection extends
beyond trees to numerous other species, especially flowering plants. Years of
agriculture, livestock grazing, and other land-use practices have imperiled many
native plant species. To help prevent extinctions, dozens of plant varieties are
protected under federal law—they may not be picked, uprooted, or transplanted.
Many other species have more limited protections. The Swiss National Park,
located in Graubünden canton, was established mainly to protect and preserve
endangered plants. Founded in 1914, it is one of Europe’s first national parks.
Hundreds of nature reserves also exist in agricultural, urban, and wilderness
areas across Switzerland.
Water pollution is another major
environmental concern in Switzerland. Many of the nation’s rivers and lakes have
been degraded by agricultural fertilizers, urban sprawl, and pollutants from
automobiles and trucks. The expansion of alpine tourist resorts is of special
concern because such developments can degrade pristine headwaters. Safe disposal
of radioactive wastes from the nation’s nuclear power plants is also a
concern.
Major Swiss environmental laws are made
at the level of the federal government, although protected areas are usually
managed by individual cantons. Nongovernmental organizations, such as the Swiss
League for the Protection of Nature, play an important part in conservation,
environmental policymaking, and management of protected areas. Internationally,
Switzerland is bound by environmental agreements on air pollution, biodiversity,
climate change, endangered species, hazardous wastes, and the ozone layer.
Regionally, Switzerland participates with its neighbors in agreements to protect
the delicate environments of the Alps.
III | PEOPLE AND SOCIETY |
Over the course of human history many
different groups have left their mark on Switzerland, including ancient
Etruscans, Celts, Romans, and Germanic peoples. Today, most Swiss can trace
their ancestry to Alpine, Nordic, and southern European peoples. The ethnic
composition of Switzerland is generally defined by the country’s major language
communities: German, French, Italian, and Romansch (Rhaeto-Romanic). Other
ethnicities, including Spanish, Portuguese, and Turkish, make up about 6 percent
of the population.
A | Population Characteristics |
The population of Switzerland (2008
estimate) is 7,581,520, with an overall population density of 191 persons per sq
km (494 per sq mi). The population is unevenly distributed, with nearly 90
percent living on the Swiss Plateau. Some 68 percent of the population is
classified as urban, but most people live in small towns. Swiss citizens account
for about three-quarters of the total population. The remaining people are
citizens of other countries, mainly Italy, Spain, Portugal, and France. The vast
majority of noncitizens are guest workers and their families.
Switzerland, like many industrialized
countries, is experiencing a declining birth rate and an overall slowing of the
rate of population growth. The estimated growth rate in 2008 was only 0.33
percent. Current projections suggest Switzerland’s population will begin
declining in the first decades of the 21st century. The Swiss people, with an
average life expectancy of 80.7 years, are among the world’s longest lived. The
country’s infant mortality rate (the number of infants per 1,000 who die before
the age of 1) is 4, one of the world’s lowest.
B | Political Divisions |
Switzerland is a confederation of 26
states, called cantons. There are 20 full cantons and six half-cantons; the
half-cantons were formed when three full cantons were subdivided. The cantons
and half-cantons are as follows: Aargau; Appenzell (consisting of the
half-cantons Appenzell-Ausserrhoden and Appenzell-Innerrhoden); Basel
(consisting of the half-cantons Basel-Landschaft and Basel-Stadt); Bern;
Fribourg; Geneva (Genève); Glarus; Graubünden (Grisons); Jura; Lucerne (Luzern);
Neuchâtel; Sankt Gallen; Schaffhausen; Schwyz; Solothurn (Soleure); Thurgau;
Ticino; Unterwalden (consisting of the half-cantons Nidwalden and Obwalden);
Uri; Valais; Vaud; Zug; and Zürich. The cantons and half-cantons are subdivided
into communes (German gemeinde), which are roughly equivalent to counties
and number about 3,000.
C | Principal Cities |
The capital of Switzerland is Bern, which
has a population (2005 estimate) of 122,178. Zürich (347,517) is a financial
center and Switzerland’s largest city. Basel (163,930) is a commercial center
noted for textile and clothing manufacturing. Geneva (178,722) is a cultural,
financial, and manufacturing center that is also home to the headquarters of
several hundred international organizations, including the Red Cross and the
World Health Organization. Lausanne (117,388) is a transportation center and the
permanent home of the International Olympic Committee, which administers the
Olympic Games.
D | Religion |
Roman Catholicism is the faith of about
44 percent of the population of Switzerland, and about 41 percent of the people
are Protestant. Muslims, Orthodox Christians, and people of the Jewish faith
make up a small percentage of the population, while those with no religion
number about 7 percent. Freedom of worship is guaranteed by the Swiss
constitution. A national referendum in 1973 repealed articles of the
constitution, dating to 1848, that prevented members of the Jesuit order (a
religious order of the Roman Catholic Church) and affiliated societies from
settling in Switzerland.
Several important developments of the
16th-century Protestant Reformation occurred in Switzerland. The pastor
Huldreich Zwingli instituted sweeping reforms in Zürich as a Swiss Reformation
leader. Later, French theologian John Calvin took residence in Geneva where his
religious doctrines and reforms in civil administration and education achieved
lasting influence.
E | Language |
The official languages of Switzerland are
German (spoken by 64 percent of the population), French (19 percent), and
Italian (8 percent). The fourth national language, Romansch, is spoken by less
than 1 percent of the people. Other languages, particularly Spanish, Portuguese,
and Turkish, are spoken by the remaining population.
Most Swiss are multilingual. In a
majority of the cantons the most commonly spoken language is
Schweizerdeutsch (Swiss German), an Alamannic dialect of German differing
vastly from other German dialects. Newspapers and magazines are written in
standard German, however, and German is the language of many theater, motion
picture, and television productions. French is the most commonly spoken language
in the cantons of Fribourg, Jura, Vaud, Valais, Neuchâtel, and Geneva, and
Italian is the predominant language in Ticino. Romansch, a Romance language, is
spoken chiefly in the canton of Graubünden.
F | Education |
Switzerland has a long history as a
center of education, and its modern educational system is among the best in the
world. Literacy is nearly 100 percent. The pedagogic tradition in Switzerland,
particularly religious education, was inspired in part by John Calvin, who
settled in Switzerland in 1536. The 18th-century Geneva-born philosopher Jean
Jacques Rousseau promoted an influential view of education that emphasized the
importance of individual self-expression. The theories of Johann Pestalozzi, the
18th-century Swiss educational reformer who advocated that children should learn
from their own experiences, have contributed to the development of educational
practices around the world. In recent times, the Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget
became widely recognized for his insights into the learning abilities and habits
of children.
Responsibility for primary and secondary
education lies with the cantons and half-cantons. Public primary schools are
free, and education is compulsory for children from age 6 or 7 until age 15 or
16, depending on the canton. Schools are taught in the local official language.
To promote national unity, primary school students are required to study a
second national language.
The cantons and half-cantons also
administer gymnasiums (college-preparatory schools), teacher-training
institutes, and various institutions of higher learning and special schools.
Switzerland’s vocational schools have a reputation for providing quality
technical training for the job market. Enrollment in vocational schools has
waned in recent decades as the economy has shifted away from manufacturing and
toward services. At the same time, university enrollment has increased
appreciably—more than 50 percent since 1980.
Most universities in Switzerland are
under cantonal control. They include the universities at Basel (founded in
1460), Lausanne (1537), Geneva (1559), Zürich (1833), Fribourg (1889), and
Neuchâtel (1909). The only institutions of higher education administered by the
federal government are the Federal Institutes of Technology at Zürich and
Lausanne. The academic excellence of Swiss universities is well known and draws
students from around the world.
IV | CULTURE |
Switzerland has a rich and diverse cultural
heritage. The German, French, Italian, and Rhaeto-Roman cultures embodied in the
Swiss linguistic regions have all profoundly influenced the broader Swiss
culture, even as they have retained their own distinctive forms of expression.
Foreign influences have shaped Switzerland since early times. By the Middle Ages
the country had achieved a high level of cultural development. Carolingian
culture, especially painting and Romanesque architecture, flourished, and the
Sankt Gallen (Saint-Gall) monastery emerged as a brilliant educational center.
Since that time the Swiss have assimilated most important European cultural
trends, including humanism and the Reformation. For centuries Switzerland’s
tradition of neutrality enriched Swiss culture by attracting a wide variety of
creative people to the country during times of turmoil and war.
Swiss contributions to science and
philosophy over the centuries are numerous. The influential 16th-century Swiss
physician Philippus Paracelsus, who combined the study of chemistry and
medicine, is sometimes considered the first modern scientist. Nicholas of Fluë,
a 15th-century theologian, achieved wide recognition and was canonized in 1947.
Mathematician Leonhard Euler made many important discoveries in the 18th
century, as did Nobel Prize-winning chemist Alfred Werner in the 19th century.
Philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau was one of the major writers of the Age of
Enlightenment, and educator Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi laid the groundwork for
modern elementary education in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Huldreich
Zwingli and John Calvin, leaders of the 16th-century Protestant Reformation, are
claimed by the Swiss, as are the eminent 20th-century psychological theorists
Jean Piaget and Carl Gustav Jung. Jakob Burckhardt, a Swiss historian of art and
culture, wrote the acclaimed Die Kultur der Renaissance in Italien (1860;
Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy, 1878).
A | Literature |
Though small in size, Switzerland has a
great literary tradition. Swiss literature encompasses Latin-Swiss literature
and German-Swiss and French-Swiss literatures, which are closely linked to the
literatures of the neighboring countries. Latin-Swiss literature was important
chiefly during the Middle Ages in religious and humanistic works. Historically
less significant are the Italian-Swiss, Romansch, and Swiss-dialect
literatures.
The most influential Swiss literature is
in German, beginning with the poetry of the minnesingers of the Middle Ages and
including the popular ballads and chronicles dating from the 14th to the 18th
centuries. Celebrated 19th-century German-Swiss authors include Gottfried
Keller, Conrad Ferdinand Meyer, Jeremias Gotthelf (pseudonym of Albert Bitzius),
and 20th-century Nobel Prize winners Carl Spitteler (1919) and Hermann Hesse
(1946). The works of 20th-century dramatists Max Frisch and Friedrich Dürrenmatt
are widely known and produced. Johanna Spyri wrote the children’s classic
Heidi (1880; translated 1884). Among the best-known French-Swiss authors
are Germaine de Staël, whose novel Corinne, ou l'Italie (Corinna, or
Italy, 1807) had a deep influence on fiction of the era, and 20th-century
novelist Charles Ferdinand Ramuz. Among Romansch writers, Peider Lansel gained a
reputation as an outstanding poet in the early 20th century.
B | Architecture |
Much of Switzerland’s historic
architecture has survived into the modern era, having been spared the ravages of
two 20th-century world wars. Roman occupation of Switzerland in the 1st century
bc gave rise to numerous colonies,
and many Roman ruins and monuments are well preserved. Noteworthy examples of
surviving Romanesque architecture can be found in the towns of Avenches,
Martigny, and Windisch, and in numerous cathedrals and castles across the
countryside. Later architectural styles, including Gothic, baroque, and
Renaissance, found rich expression in Switzerland, and these styles are still
visible in urban areas, especially Bern. In addition, no fewer than 20 styles of
regional folk architecture have been identified. Switzerland is also known for
its many covered bridges, which date from as far back as the 14th century.
The most influential modern Swiss
architect is Le Corbusier, a pseudonym for Charles Édouard Jeanneret. A major
force in modern architecture, Le Corbusier helped develop the International
Style that dominated architecture in the early 20th century. Swiss engineer
Robert Maillart won acclaim for his innovative bridge designs during the first
half of the 20th century.
C | Visual Arts |
A number of Swiss painters and sculptors
have achieved international recognition over the centuries. Chief among them are
painters Konrad Witz, Henry Fuseli, Arnold Böcklin, and Ferdinand Hodler.
Perhaps the best-known Swiss painter is Paul Klee, considered one of the
original masters of modern art. Sculptor Alberto Giacometti won renown for his
highly distinctive elongated figures, while fellow Swiss sculptor Jean Tinguely
achieved recognition for his elaborate mechanical sculptures and junk art.
Noteworthy contemporary artists include
sculptors Roman Signer and Thomas Hirschhorn, and mixed-media artists Pipilotti
Rist and Sylvie Fleury. Virtually every city of consequence in Switzerland has
one or more art museums. Switzerland also has a small film industry, which is
subsidized by the federal government. The annual Locarno International Film
Festival, which highlights the work of young filmmakers, is widely
renowned.
D | Performing Arts |
D1 | Music |
Although Switzerland is best known for
its rich tradition of folk music, Swiss composers have made notable
contributions to European classical music since the Renaissance compositions of
Ludwig Senfl and Heinrich Loris (called Henricus Glareanus). Influential Swiss
composers in the 20th century include Arthur Honegger, Ernest Bloch, Othmar
Schoeck, Frank Martin, Ernst Levy, and Conrad Beck. Swiss conductor Ernest
Ansermet gained worldwide fame as conductor of the Orchestre de la Suisse
Romande, based in Geneva.
Traditional Swiss folk music
encompasses a wide range of instruments, including the alphorn, a long wooden
instrument historically used by alpine herders to communicate. The yodel, a
singing style characterized by rapid shifts to falsetto and back, offered
another means of communication among isolated herders.
Music remains an important part of
contemporary Swiss culture. Zürich, Geneva, and Lausanne each have their own
opera houses as well as resident companies that offer a regular schedule of
performances during the year. Lucerne hosts an annual international music
festival, and numerous events devoted to folk, pop, country, and jazz are held
throughout Switzerland. The Montreux Jazz Festival is especially well
known.
D2 | Drama |
Swiss drama has a long history, and the
theater has enjoyed tremendous growth as a popular art form since the late 19th
century. Today, leading centers of drama include the Stadttheater Basel,
Stadttheater Bern, Grand Théâtre de Genève, Théâtre de la Comédie in Geneva, and
Théâtre Municipal de Lausanne. In addition to these large, state-subsidized
venues, numerous small independent theaters are found throughout the country,
giving aspiring dramatists the opportunity to have their plays produced. Even in
Romansch-speaking Switzerland, for example, amateur groups perform Romansch
plays and translated works. Professional ballet companies are present in Basel,
Geneva, Lausanne, and Zürich.
E | Libraries and Museums |
Switzerland has many federal, cantonal,
and municipal public libraries. These are complemented by collections maintained
by universities, private organizations, and religious institutions. The library
of Basel University, with several million volumes, is among the largest in
Switzerland. The Swiss National Library, in Bern, and the libraries of the
United Nations (UN) and of the International Labor Organization (ILO), both in
Geneva, are among the most important specialized libraries. The Abbey Library in
Sankt Gallen contains thousands of old and rare works that date from the 8th
century.
The National Museum, in Zürich, houses
the most important of several large historical collections in Switzerland. Fine
arts museums in Basel, Bern, and Zürich contain collections of 15th- and
16th-century German, 17th- and 18th-century Dutch and Flemish, 19th-century
French impressionist, and contemporary European works. The Museum of Art and
History and the Museum of Natural History, both in Geneva, are perhaps the best
of their types in the country. Noteworthy specialty museums include the
International Museum of Horology, devoted to clocks and timepieces, in La
Chaux-de-Fonds; the Swiss Transportation Museum, the country’s most visited
museum, in Lucerne; and the Swiss Open Air Museum at Ballenberg, which preserves
houses and farm buildings that epitomize the country’s rich rural
architecture.
V | ECONOMY |
Switzerland has a highly developed
industrialized economy and one of the highest standards of living in the world.
Gross domestic product (GDP) in 2006 totaled $380.4 billion. Services constitute
the dominant sector of the Swiss economy, with banking, insurance, tourism,
government administration, and other services accounting for 73 percent of all
employment. Industry, primarily manufacturing and construction, employs 23
percent. Switzerland’s domestic market is small, and most Swiss manufacturing is
geared to the production of high-quality goods for export. Key exports include
machinery and electronics; chemicals and pharmaceuticals; and watches, musical
instruments, and jewelry. Agriculture, forestry, and fishing employ 4 percent of
Swiss workers.
A | Labor |
In 2006 the Swiss labor force was made up
of 4.2 million people. Switzerland’s excellent educational system produces large
numbers of young people with academic, technical, and vocational training for
the job market. Progressive employment legislation ensures that workers are well
paid and well cared for. By federal law, men and women who perform the same work
must receive the same pay. Imbued with a strong work ethic, the Swiss are among
the world leaders in number of hours worked per year and in the least amount of
time lost to labor strikes and other disruptions. Foreigners comprise about
one-quarter of the labor force. The leading labor group is the Swiss Federation
of Trade Unions.
B | Agriculture |
Because cultivation is difficult on the
steep slopes that characterize so much of Switzerland, a majority of the
country’s arable land is devoted to pasture for grazing animals. The dairy cow
was domesticated in Switzerland in prehistoric times, and dairying has long
dominated the agricultural sector of the Swiss economy. Today, dairy products
account for about 35 percent of the value of all Swiss agricultural activity;
livestock accounts for another 28 percent. Cheese and milk chocolate—two
quintessential Swiss products—are derived from the dairy industry. Dozens of
varieties of cheese are produced and exported, including the world-famous Swiss
cheese, also known as Emmentaler because it is produced in the valley of
the Emme River. Almost equally famous is Gruyère, produced in and around
the town of the same name. Milk chocolates are made in considerable quantity.
Nestlé S.A., Switzerland’s largest single employer, and Lindt, are major
manufacturers of chocolate products. Dozens of other Swiss chocolate
manufacturers are known regionally and internationally.
Dairying has given rise to some of
Switzerland’s most enduring practices and symbols. Among the most important is
the transhumance, the seasonal movement of livestock between lowland
pastures and alpine meadows. The cycle begins in spring with the
alpaufzug, in which herders and their animals move up into alpine meadows
as the snow retreats. During this time of year, cows are fitted with bells of
different size and pitch so they can be found more easily in severe weather; the
bells produce a pleasant clanging across the alps. In the fall, before the snow
returns, herders and their animals return to lower elevations in a movement
called the alpabfahrt. Both the ascent and descent are cause for local
celebration and are marked by the donning of traditional costume.
Cultivation of grapes for wine began in
Switzerland during Roman times. Today, the production of grapes, and other
fruits, accounts for about 11 percent of the value of the country’s agricultural
output. Warm, south-facing slopes are favored for grape cultivation. The land
that rises above Lake Geneva between Lausanne and Montreux (locally called
Corniche de Lavaux) is an important center of grape production and is
especially picturesque.
Employment in the agricultural sector has
dropped significantly in recent decades, declining 25 percent between the years
1985 and 1995. At the same time, the value of Switzerland’s agricultural
production has risen. The employment loss is principally a result of the
mechanization of agriculture and land consolidation, as many small, family-owned
farms are replaced by larger agribusinesses.
C | Forestry and Fishing |
About 30 percent of Switzerland is
forested. For centuries timber was one of Switzerland’s most important sources
of raw material and fuel. Today, Swiss forests are carefully managed to prevent
any net loss of woodlands, which are vital to preserving Switzerland’s water
quality, wildlife, and scenic beauty, as well as to help protect against
landslides and avalanches. Reforestation of cleared areas is required under
Swiss law. Most timber is harvested in small, selective cuttings. Production of
timber in Switzerland was 5.7 million cu m (201 million cu ft) in 2006.
Fishing is a minor industry in
Switzerland, with catches of fish such as salmon and trout totaling about 2,689
metric tons in 2005. Most fishing takes place on Lakes Geneva and Neuchâtel and
Bodensee and their tributary rivers.
D | Mining |
The Swiss mining industry is not of major
importance. Mineral production mainly involves rock salt and cement.
E | Manufacturing |
Although raw materials are scarce in
Switzerland, the country has a well-developed manufacturing sector.
Switzerland’s skilled workers convert imported raw materials into high-value
exports.
Historically, manufacturing in Switzerland
stems from the country’s abundant sources of waterpower. For centuries the
physical energy of falling water turned water wheels that powered mills and
machinery of all sorts, especially those involved in textile manufacturing.
Textiles, in turn, created demand for dyes, which stimulated development of a
chemical industry. The country’s engineering, machinery, electrical, and metal
industries also can trace their origins in part to the age of water wheels.
Because potential waterpower exists throughout the country, Switzerland never
developed a manufacturing belt or industrial heartland. Instead, industrial
production is geographically dispersed.
Today, heavy engineering and machine
building, especially the manufacture of top-quality custom-built equipment,
accounts for a significant portion of Swiss exports. Switzerland is the largest
producer of textile machinery in the world, and one of the world’s top
manufacturers of weighing and printing machines. Switzerland remains a world
leader in the production of dyestuffs, and the Swiss pharmaceutical industry
ranks among the top producers of specialized drugs.
Also important to the economy are smaller
products of precision engineering, especially watches, chronometers, and
clocks—an industry that dates to the 16th century in Switzerland. Most important
developments in watchmaking since that time have come from Switzerland, whose
manufacturers have earned world renown for their expertise, workmanship, and
inventiveness. Switzerland has been the world’s dominant producer of watches and
chronometers since the 19th century. The contemporary Swiss watch industry is
concentrated in cities and towns throughout the Jura region. Hundreds of Swiss
firms annually produce some 1.5 billion watches, movements, basic parts, and
other watchmaking products—95 percent of which are exported. Famous for its
exquisitely engineered luxury timepieces, Switzerland is also known for making
the world’s bestselling plastic watch, the Swatch.
Not all products manufactured for export
have their origins in modern factories and workshops. Switzerland also has a
long tradition of producing high-quality handicrafts. Most important among these
are music boxes, embroideries, laces, and carved wooden objects.
F | Services |
F1 | Currency and Banking |
The unit of currency is the Swiss
franc, divided into 100 centimes (1.30 francs equal U.S.$1; 2006
average). The semiprivate Swiss National Bank, the nation’s central bank, is the
bank of issue. Shares in the bank are held by the cantons, other banks, and the
public.
Switzerland is a major international
financial center, and private banking is one of the country’s principal
employers and sources of income. Leading commercial banks are the Union Bank of
Switzerland (UBS AG) and the Credit Suisse (Swiss Credit Bank). The Zürich Stock
Exchange is one of the most important in Europe, and the city is also a major
trade center for gold.
International depositors and financiers
have long favored Swiss banks because of Switzerland’s political and monetary
stability, experience in financial matters, and banking secrecy laws. The Swiss
banking industry rose to international prominence after World War I (1914-1918),
when inflation eroded the currencies of many war-damaged European countries. A
neutral nation, Switzerland emerged from the war with a strong economy and
stable currency. Foreign money deposited in Swiss banks, and accounted for in
Swiss francs, stood little chance of being lost to inflation. The advent of the
banking secrecy laws largely coincided with the rise of German dictator Adolf
Hitler in the years preceding World War II (1939-1945). Fearful of Hitler’s
intentions, many Europeans—especially Jewish people—began transferring personal
and commercial assets to Swiss banks. Hitler, angered that assets in Germany had
been sent abroad, dispatched agents to Switzerland to investigate. In response,
Swiss authorities enacted secrecy laws shielding the accounts from
scrutiny.
In recent decades Switzerland’s banking
secrecy laws have drawn criticism. A frequent complaint is that such secrecy has
helped criminals to hide their ill-gotten gains. In the mid-1990s, in response
to domestic and international pressure, Switzerland agreed to relax banking
secrecy laws when accounts are the subject of criminal investigations. During
the same period, a growing controversy emerged over funds in unclaimed accounts
of victims of the Nazi Holocaust. In 1995 the Swiss Banking Association (SBA),
under pressure from leading Jewish organizations, consented to search its vaults
for such accounts. A survey of the largest Swiss banks revealed $34 million in
dormant accounts opened before 1945. Jewish groups disputed the findings,
claiming the search should have turned up billions of dollars in lost assets.
Subsequent investigations confirmed the existence of thousands of additional
accounts. In 1998 Swiss banks agreed to a global settlement of all claims and
suits against them. This led to the creation of a $1.25 billion fund to
compensate Holocaust victims and their descendants. Not everyone considers the
matter closed, however, and investigations and legal maneuverings continue.
F2 | Foreign Trade |
Switzerland is highly dependent on
foreign trade, both for imports and exports. Swiss trade policy is marked by a
strong preference for free trade, low import duties, and few import quotas,
apart from limited quotas applied to some agricultural goods. The vast majority
of Switzerland’s foreign trade is with its industrialized neighbors in western
Europe, in addition to the United States, Japan, and China. In 2000
Switzerland’s chief trading partners for exports were, in order of importance,
Germany, the United States, France, Italy, the United Kingdom, Japan, and China.
Leading partners for imports were Germany, France, Italy, the United States, and
the United Kingdom.
Switzerland generally earns less from
exports than it spends on imports. Despite this deficit in foreign trade,
Switzerland maintains a positive balance of international payments because of
the large income it receives from other sources, mainly payments for services.
These include international banking, insurance, and tourism.
F3 | Tourism |
The tourism industry is a leading source
of foreign exchange and employment in Switzerland. Tourism has been important in
Switzerland since the Enlightenment, when writers, artists, and scientists found
inspiration in the majestic pinnacles of the Alps. Picturesque lakeside towns,
including Interlaken, Lausanne, Lucerne, Montreux, and Vevey, were the initial
centers of the Swiss tourism industry. In the 19th century, during the early era
of mountain climbing, foreign adventurers flocked to high-altitude towns, such
as Zermatt.
Swiss tourism experienced its most
significant expansion in the decades after World War II. Of major importance was
the advent of downhill skiing as a popular winter sport, made possible by the
development of the ski lift and cable car. Dozens of resorts have since
blossomed throughout the Swiss Alps, making Switzerland the skiing capital of
the world. Switzerland receives tens of millions of visitors annually.
G | Infrastructure |
G1 | Energy |
Switzerland’s extensive waterpower
resources account for about 54 percent of the country’s domestic electricity, or
about 16 percent of its total energy needs. More than half of Switzerland’s
total energy needs are met by oil and natural gas, virtually all of which is
imported. During the 1970s Switzerland turned increasingly to nuclear power to
meet the rising demand for energy, and today nuclear power plants generate about
41 percent of all electricity generated in Switzerland. Output from all sources
in 2003 was 63.4 billion kilowatt-hours.
G2 | Transportation |
Switzerland has a highly developed
transportation system, with a dense road network and comfortable, efficient
trains. Hundreds of finely engineered tunnels and bridges cross the country’s
rugged terrain. Especially important are the transalpine tunnels that permit
year-round travel through the Alps, which were historically a formidable barrier
to movement between northern and southern Europe. These include the Saint
Gotthard and Lotschberg train tunnels, and the 16.3-km (10.1-mi) Saint Gotthard
Road Tunnel, the world’s longest automobile tunnel and the main artery of
European transalpine traffic. An immense volume of traffic traverses these
routes, causing substantial air and noise pollution and leading to plans to
widen existing tunnels and construct new ones. The largest of these projects is
the 57-km (35-mi) Saint Gotthard Base Tunnel, a railway tunnel scheduled to open
in 2014. In 1994 Swiss voters approved a controversial referendum to protect
alpine areas from the negative effects of heavy traffic. The measure authorized
the Swiss government to restrict traffic over transalpine roads and to shift
most transalpine freight from trucks to railroad cars.
Swiss Federal Railways, owned by the
federal government, operates a majority of Switzerland’s more than 5,000 km
(3,000 mi) of railroad track, nearly all of which is electrified. Switzerland
also has a large number of private railroads, many of which are partially owned
by local governments. Few locations in Switzerland are far from a train station.
To conquer Switzerland’s great heights, the railroads make ample use of
switchbacks and loops. More important for high-altitude access, however, is the
cog locomotive, which has a special gearlike wheel with teeth that engage a
separate toothed rail. This permits steady ascent and controlled descent on
steep grades. Swiss cog locomotives offer some of the world’s most spectacular
train rides, including the Glacier Express, which runs between Zermatt and Saint
Moritz, and the Bernese Oberland railway, which climbs from Interlaken to the
Jungfraujoch, Europe’s highest train station at 3,454 m (11,332 ft). The
punctuality of train service is a national hallmark.
Switzerland’s highway system is equally
first-rate. Roads totaled 71,214 km (44,250 mi mi) in 2004. The rate of
automobile ownership in Switzerland is high and growing; in 2000 there was one
automobile for every two people. Increasing vehicular use is straining the road
system, and most major roads and highways are heavily congested, especially
during the summer and winter tourist seasons. Buses also are an important part
of public transportation in Switzerland, especially the famous, brightly painted
post buses operated by Swiss Post. The schedules of post buses are timed to
coincide with the departure of trains, which serve nearly every village and
town.
Waterways constitute another part of
Switzerland’s transportation network. The Rhine is the largest navigable river
in the country, but it is suited for commercial navigation only along the 19-km
(12-mi) stretch between Basel and Rheinfelden. A canal linking the Rhine and
Rhône is important for industrial shipping. Switzerland’s many lakes are used
for transportation and recreation; pleasure cruises are especially popular.
Although Switzerland is landlocked, the Swiss merchant marine, created by decree
of the federal government in 1941, consists of 32 large oceangoing vessels and
numerous river barges, which operate from foreign ports and from the port of
Basel on the Rhine River.
International air transport is provided
by Swiss International Air Lines, which is owned jointly by public and private
investors. Switzerland’s international airports are in Zürich, Geneva, and
Basel.
G3 | Communications |
The Swiss government plays a major role
in the provision of postal and telecommunications services throughout
Switzerland. In the late 1990s, in response to deregulation in international
markets, Switzerland instituted reforms to make postal and telecommunications
services more flexible and market-oriented. The Swiss Postal and
Telecommunications agency was divided into two separate units. Swiss Post, which
remains a federally owned institution, handles mail. Telecom PTT, which was
partially privatized, oversees telecommunications services and maintains
networks for sound and data transmission. The Swiss Broadcasting Corporation
provides radio and television programs in German, French, and Italian, and Swiss
Radio International transmits radio programs to foreign countries. In 1997 there
were 979 radios and 542 television receivers in use per 1,000 people.
Switzerland has 96 daily newspapers; dailies with international reputations
include Neue Zürcher Zeitung, published in Zürich, and Journal de
Genève, published in Geneva.
VI | GOVERNMENT |
Switzerland is a federal republic governed
under a constitution adopted in 1874 and amended many times since. The Swiss
political system combines direct and indirect democracy with the principle of
federalism, in which subnational units of government are granted wide powers.
Sovereign power rests with the people, who elect representatives and also
legislate directly by means of referendums. In federal elections, all citizens
aged 18 or older are eligible to vote.
Under Switzerland’s system of federalism,
the cantons and half-cantons exercise all the powers of government, except those
delegated exclusively to the federal government. These include the power to
declare war and make peace, to conclude treaties and alliances, to train, equip,
and direct the armed forces, and to regulate foreign trade. Both the federal
government and the subnational units (cantons and communes) have the power to
levy taxes. The federal government also regulates roads, railroads, and
communications; hydroelectric power; higher education; and labor. The cantons
have freedom in a wide range of policy areas and a high degree of administrative
autonomy.
The referendum is an important instrument
of direct democracy in Switzerland. A constitutional amendment may be initiated
by a petition of 100,000 voters and must be ratified by referendum. A petition
of 50,000 voters or eight cantons can force a referendum on proposed laws.
Referendums have decided many significant issues in Switzerland. These include
creating the canton of Jura in 1979; rejecting restrictions on abortion and some
forms of contraception in 1985; tightening constraints on immigration and
political asylum in 1987; making racial discrimination, racist propaganda, and
denial of the German Nazi Holocaust illegal in 1994; and defeating a proposal to
abolish the military in 2001. In 2002 Swiss voters approved a referendum
supporting Swiss membership in the United Nations. Referendums have also been
central to extending rights to women. A referendum in 1971 granted women the
right to vote in federal elections (a right eventually extended in all the
cantons by 1990), and an equal rights amendment to the constitution was approved
by referendum in 1981. A 1985 referendum granted women legal equality with men
in marriage.
A | Executive |
Executive power in Switzerland is vested
in the Bundesrat, or Federal Council. The Bundesrat is composed of seven
members who are elected to four-year terms by a joint session of the parliament.
Bundesrat members are elected from among members of the parliament and are
responsible to that body. All major political parties are represented on the
council, and no two members of the Bundesrat may come from the same canton. The
Bundesrat enforces existing laws and drafts new legislation, conducts foreign
affairs, and authorizes the mobilization of troops.
The legislature elects a president and a
vice president from among the council members to a single one-year term. The
president presides over meetings of the Bundesrat, but otherwise holds a largely
symbolic position. Each of the seven council members heads one of the federal
ministries. These are the ministries of economy, foreign affairs, transportation
and power, interior, finance, defense, and justice and police.
B | Legislature |
The Swiss parliament, called the Federal
Assembly, consists of two houses. The Ständerat, or Council of States,
the upper house, has 46 members (two for each full canton and one for each
half-canton), each elected for varying periods at the discretion of the canton.
The Nationalrat, or National Council, the lower house, has 200 members
elected for four-year terms under a system of proportional representation. Seats
in the National Council are allocated to cantons in proportion to population
size, with each canton receiving a minimum of one seat.
C | Judiciary |
The Federal Tribunal, located in Lausanne,
is the highest court of appeal in the land. It has final jurisdiction in suits
between the cantonal and federal governments, corporations and individuals, and
between cantons. The court is composed of 30 judges who are appointed to
six-year terms by the Federal Assembly. It has original jurisdiction only in
cases involving offenses against the confederation, and—unlike the United States
Supreme Court—it may not review the constitutionality of federal laws. There are
no lower federal courts in Switzerland. Capital punishment was abolished for
civilians in 1942 and for wartime offenses in 1991.
Each canton has its own autonomous system
of justice, including civil and criminal courts and a court of appeals. Cantonal
courts are responsible for interpreting federal law as it pertains to local
matters. The cantonal judiciary is composed of two or three levels of courts,
depending on the size of the canton. A single national code for criminal, civil,
and commercial law was introduced in 1942.
D | Local Government |
A concern for self-government is firmly
established in Switzerland, and units of local government are at the core of the
country’s system of decentralized democracy. All powers not delegated to the
confederation by the Swiss constitution are reserved to the cantons. Forms of
cantonal government vary, but most of the 26 cantons (there are 20 full cantons
and six half-cantons) have an elected legislative council and an executive
council. Several smaller cantons have preserved direct democracy in the form of
a Landsgemeinde (German for “village community”), a general assembly of
voting citizens who decide matters by a show of hands or voice vote.
Each canton is composed of communes, the
smallest units of local government. There are some 3,000 communes in
Switzerland, many of which comprise a town or city. Citizens elect their
communal authorities, who convene in local councils. Communes are largely
autonomous in many governmental matters. They have the authority to levy taxes;
maintain local roads, bridges, and public buildings; provide water and
electricity; and administer primary and secondary schools, police and fire
services, and social services. In addition, the communes—not the federal
government—control the granting of Swiss citizenship to foreigners. Adjacent
communes may group into a district, which is headed by a prefect who represents
the cantonal government.
E | Political Parties |
The Swiss have a multiparty system. In
1959 a power-sharing arrangement known as the “magic formula” was drawn up to
ensure consensus politics among the country’s four leading parties. These
parties were the Swiss People’s Party, representing the far right of the
political spectrum; the Social Democratic Party, a left-of-center party
advocating principles of democratic socialism; the Radical Free Democratic
Party, a centrist party promoting a strong federal government and liberal
democratic principles; and the Christian Democratic People’s Party, a centrist
party promoting cantonal rights. The Swiss People’s Party, which promotes
anti-foreigner policies, has gained in popularity in recent years, becoming the
largest party in the Swiss parliament. The pro-environment Green Party also
increased its share of seats.
F | Health and Welfare |
The Federal Insurance Law of 1911
regulates accident and sickness insurance. Accident insurance is compulsory for
most officials and workers. Compulsory insurance against illness does not exist
at the federal level in Switzerland, although cantons and communes may make it
obligatory. Unemployment insurance is compulsory for all wage earners. Old-age
and survivor’s insurance, which also includes disability benefits, has been
compulsory since 1948; it is financed by a payroll tax on both employers and
employees.
G | Defense |
The Swiss military consists of an army and
air force that number about 220,000 in total. Service in the Swiss military is
compulsory for all males. Women are exempt but may volunteer for a variety of
roles. A typical male inductee is called to service at the age of 20, undergoes
a few months of basic training and a period of service, then returns to civilian
life. For the next 20 years or more, however, inductees are periodically
recalled by the military to take refresher courses designed to maintain and
update military skills. In the meantime an inductee may be asked to serve at any
time. Switzerland’s citizen-soldiers keep weapons and ammunition, uniforms, and
other equipment at home, and the country can fully mobilize for defensive
purposes within about 48 hours.
Given this overall structure, the Swiss
military is best described as a highly trained militia, rather than as a
standing army. Only about 1 percent of military personnel serve full time,
typically as members of the officer corps. In peacetime, the military has no
hierarchical leader. A general is selected by the parliament only when military
mobilization is required.
VII | HISTORY |
In pre-Roman times the territory now known
as Switzerland was inhabited by the Helvetii in the west and the Rhaetians, a
people believed to have been related to the Etruscans, in the east. In the 1st
century bc Julius Caesar and the
Romans conquered the region, which they named Helvetia, and it became thoroughly
Romanized. A series of Germanic invasions swept over the Western Roman Empire in
the 4th century ad, and two
Germanic groups—the Burgundians and the Alamanni—conquered Helvetia.
A | The Middle Ages |
The Franks in turn conquered the Alamanni
in the 5th century ad and the
Burgundians in the early 6th century. The Franks introduced a new civilization
based largely on Christianity. On the dissolution of the Frankish Carolingian
Empire in the 9th century, most of Switzerland became part of the duchy of
Alemannia, or Swabia, one of the great feudal states of the German Kingdom; the
southwestern part was incorporated into the kingdom of Transjurane Bourgogne. In
1033 Switzerland was united under the German-dominated Holy Roman Empire. The
Swiss area consisted of a collection of petty states, ruled by dukes, counts,
bishops, and abbots, and a number of small city-states, independent by imperial
charter, which later became cantonal commonwealths.
B | Struggle for Independence |
In 1276 Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf I of
the Habsburg dynasty attempted to assert feudal rights in Switzerland, making
his power a threat to the traditional liberties of the Swiss. To resist Rudolf’s
aggression, representatives of the three so-called forest cantons—Uri, Schwyz,
and Unterwalden—gathered on August 1, 1291, in a meadow above the Lake of
Lucerne, and entered a league for mutual defense. This event is regarded as the
birth of Switzerland. Events preceding the conflict gave rise to the story of
William Tell, Switzerland’s most famous folk hero. According to legend, a
villainous governor named Gessler was sent by Habsburg authorities to govern the
canton of Uri. To proclaim his power, Gessler required passing locals to salute
his hat, which had been placed on a pole. When Tell refused, he was arrested and
ordered to shoot an arrow through an apple resting on his son’s head. After
doing so, Tell was arrested again, but later escaped and killed Gessler—an event
that is said to have prompted the Swiss uprising against the Habsburgs.
The first test of strength for the
confederation came in 1315, when mountaineers (peasant foot soldiers) of
the forest cantons confronted the superior forces of the Habsburgs and their
allies. The Swiss fighters routed the Habsburg forces at Morgarten Pass in the
canton of Schwyz, effectively guaranteeing the independence of the young
confederacy. This victory encouraged other communities to join the
confederation. The urban cantons of Lucerne, Zürich, and Bern, and the rural
cantons of Glarus and Zug, made separate alliances with the three forest cantons
between 1332 and 1353, establishing a series of confederations. Though lacking a
coherent structure, these alliances were able to provide for the independence of
every community.
In the 15th century the Swiss
Confederation was strong enough to undertake a vigorous program of expansion.
The Swiss captured Aargau in 1415, and from 1451 to 1466 the confederation won a
series of new allies: Sankt Gallen, in 1451; Appenzell, in 1452; Schaffhausen
and Stein am Rhein, in 1459; Rottweil, in 1463; and Mulhouse, in 1466. However,
these areas were not granted full rights. Swiss armies defeated the armies of
Charles the Bold, duke of Burgundy, in 1476, and of Holy Roman Emperor
Maximilian I in 1499. By the Treaty of Basel on September 22, 1499, Maximilian
was compelled to abandon his plans to reassert control in Switzerland and
recognize the unofficial independence of the Swiss. Soon afterward the
confederation expanded again and by 1513 included the cantons of Fribourg,
Solothurn, Basel, Schaffhausen, and Appenzell. This created a federal union of
13 cantons that continued unchanged until the French Revolution.
In the early 16th century, Swiss troops,
fighting with the French, were able to annex the Italian districts and towns
that later formed the canton of Ticino. Swiss fighters later sided with Italy in
a campaign to drive the French from the Po Valley. The campaign initially
succeeded, but French forces returned to the Po and in 1515 dealt the Swiss a
crushing defeat at Maringano in northern Italy. The defeat proved to the Swiss
that they could not hope to defeat their larger neighbors in battle. Soon
afterward, the Swiss renounced their expansionist aims, proclaimed a neutral
foreign policy, and turned to developing the country’s rich potential as a
crossroads of trade routes. Since then, Switzerland’s policy of neutrality has
been strictly observed.
Despite Switzerland’s withdrawal from
international warfare, Swiss mercenaries—known for their great courage and skill
in war—became famous throughout Europe. They continued to serve in other armies
for centuries. The tradition was largely abandoned in the 18th century when
Swiss fighters increasingly found themselves on opposing sides of European
conflicts. The Swiss Guard, the papal guard of the Vatican in Rome, is a vestige
of that era.
C | Reformation |
The Protestant Reformation spread to
Switzerland in 1518, when a Swiss pastor named Huldreich Zwingli began preaching
in Zürich. Zwingli denounced the sale of indulgences by the Roman Catholic
Church, and the city of Zürich, under Zwingli’s leadership, subsequently
revolted against church dogma. Zwingli’s followers burned relics, banned the
adoration of saints, and released clerics from their vows of celibacy.
Vigorously backed by the merchant class, such innovations further asserted the
city’s independence from the Roman Catholic Church and the Holy Roman Empire,
which had yet to officially recognize Swiss independence. Zwingli soon found
adherents in other Swiss towns, including Basel and Bern, but had difficulties
in conservative rural areas.
In 1536 the people of Geneva declared
themselves Protestant, refused to acknowledge the authority of their Roman
Catholic bishop, and proclaimed Geneva a republic. John Calvin, a French
theologian and Protestant reformer, was invited to Geneva to lead its citizens
in reforming the church. Calvin organized his church democratically,
incorporating ideas of representative government. From 1541 to 1564 Geneva
became the stronghold of the Calvinist brand of Protestantism.
Because Protestantism failed to take
hold in Switzerland’s Roman Catholic central cantons, a religious split was
inevitable. A series of short religious wars between the Protestant and Catholic
cantons ensued, resulting in a rough balance of power between the two religions.
Largely because of this equilibrium, the cantons remained outside the bitter
religious wars that engulfed Europe during the 16th and 17th centuries. In the
1648 Peace of Westphalia Switzerland won official recognition as an independent
state.
D | Internal Developments |
Switzerland grew increasingly prosperous
in the 17th and 18th centuries. The country’s neutrality proved economically
beneficial during the Thirty Years’ War and other conflicts, as Swiss merchants
profited from wartime trade. At the same time, Swiss industry greatly expanded,
aided by an influx of refugees. The textile industry, established centuries
earlier, became the county’s most important industrial enterprise. Factories
spinning significant quantities of cotton, linen, and silk were established.
Watchmaking also emerged as an important industry. Switzerland’s first guild of
watchmakers was established in Geneva in the early 17th century, and the
industry soon extended along the Jura mountain chain stretching from Geneva to
Schaffhausen.
Despite the country’s growing wealth,
political power in Switzerland was controlled by a small oligarchy. The wealthy
urbanized cantons dominated the confederation, and a few powerful families
dominated the country’s government and social life. Only the rich enjoyed
political liberties. Peasant unrest, driven by the growing domination of the
urban upper class over rural areas, exploded into an unsuccessful peasant revolt
in 1653.
E | French Revolution |
The French Revolution had a profound
effect on Switzerland. Switzerland did not join the war against revolutionary
France, and at first France accepted Swiss neutrality. However, in 1798 French
troops invaded and occupied the country with the help of the Swiss
revolutionaries, a group seeking political reforms and a strong national
government. The invasion put an end to the ancient Swiss confederation of 13
cantons, a loose defensive alliance with no central government. Napoleon
Bonaparte, the future emperor of France, unified Switzerland under the name
Helvetic Republic and imposed a written constitution. The constitution,
modeled on that of the first French Republic, gave Switzerland a bill of rights
and a strong central government.
The new constitution, however,
disregarded the nation’s tradition of federalism, and it was bitterly resisted
by many Swiss. The struggle between the federalists, who opposed the new system,
and the centralists, who favored it, was briefly interrupted in 1803, when
Napoleon withdrew the occupation troops and granted a new constitution with
Swiss approval. This constitution, known as the Act of Mediation, restored many
of the old cantonal privileges and expanded the confederation from 13 to 19
cantons. The new cantons included Aargau, Sankt Gallen, Graubünden, Ticino,
Thurgau, and Vaud.
In 1815, after Napoleon’s downfall, the
cantons rejected the French-sponsored government. The full power of the cantons
to govern themselves was restored, and the cantons allied themselves together as
sovereign states. The Congress of Vienna, in 1815, recognized the perpetual
neutrality of Switzerland, and Swiss territory was expanded to include 22
cantons, with the addition of Valais, Geneva, and Neuchâtel. Since that time the
country’s boundaries have remained largely unchanged.
F | Civil War |
The period following the reintegration of
Switzerland as a confederation of sovereign states was marked by internal
strife. Conflict existed between autocratic and democratic elements, with many
cantonal governments controlled by reactionary oligarchs. The cantons maintained
separate armies, legal systems, and currencies, and each conducted its own
foreign affairs. The Swiss increasingly viewed citizens of other cantons as
foreign nationals. At the same time, the religious conflict between Roman
Catholic and Protestant areas intensified.
Opposition to decentralization and the
reactionary cantonal governments increased in subsequent decades with the growth
of liberal sentiment. The Radical Party developed in the 1830s, with the aim of
strengthening the federal government. Support for cantonal sovereignty led seven
Roman Catholic cantons to form a defensive league, the Sonderbund, in
1847. The federal government declared the league a violation of the
constitution, and civil war resulted when the league refused to disband. The
federal army brought the civil war to a rapid conclusion before any major
European power could intervene.
The federal constitution of 1848 was a
direct result of the war, and it significantly expanded federal power. A balance
was achieved between advocates of strong central government and conservative
forces who demanded the preservation of cantonal authority. This compromise
helped heal the wounds of the war and established a basic constitutional
framework that has lasted to the present day. A permanent executive body was
created, consisting of a federal council of seven members elected by a bicameral
legislature. The federal government was given the authority to issue currency,
regulate customs duties, and, most importantly, to conduct foreign affairs. Bern
was designated as the federal capital. In 1874 the constitution was revised,
completing the development of Switzerland from a group of cantons to a unified
federal state. The constitution also gave Swiss citizens a greater voice in
government by introducing the initiative and the referendum.
G | Economic Development |
The 19th century was a period of rapid
economic growth in Switzerland. Tourism emerged as an important source of
revenue, and the nation’s older economic sectors, including agriculture and
industry, began to modernize. Economic gains were especially great in the
textile industry, which adopted mechanized spinning machines. The production and
maintenance of these machines led to the development of Switzerland’s famous
machine-building industry.
During the last decades of the 19th
century industrial growth in Switzerland continued, aided by a national program
of railroad construction. The expanding rail network, which included the 1882
opening of the Saint Gotthard tunnel, facilitated transalpine travel and
increased the importance of Switzerland as a transportation center. With the
help of the chief natural resource, hydropower, imported raw materials were
transformed into high-quality products and shipped to the world. Switzerland has
maintained this export-oriented pattern of industrial development to the present
day.
H | Switzerland in the World Wars |
Although Switzerland remained neutral in
World War I (1914-1918), it did not escape from the conflict unscathed. National
unity was threatened internally because the French Swiss overwhelmingly favored
the cause of France, and the German-speaking population sympathized with
Germany. In addition, the cost of keeping its army mobilized created a heavy
economic burden. Vitally needed raw materials were cut off, unemployment
increased, and food became scarce. A wave of unrest culminated in November 1918
with a general strike that brought the country to a standstill. After the war,
in 1919, Geneva was chosen as the site for the headquarters of the League of
Nations.
The outbreak of World War II (1939-1945)
found the Swiss people more united, since German National Socialism, or Nazism,
had few friends in the country. Strategically, however, Switzerland’s position
was precarious, as it was surrounded by totalitarian powers. Switzerland’s
established tradition of neutrality, its humanitarian activities, and its armed
readiness to defend itself against aggressors, all helped prevent the country
from becoming engulfed in the conflict.
I | Neutrality and International Relations |
Because of its long history of
neutrality, Switzerland became the favored site of international conferences and
the headquarters of many organizations. During the mid-19th century the main
office of the International Red Cross was established in Geneva. Swiss
neutrality was strengthened after World War I when the League of Nations, also
based in Geneva, issued a 1920 declaration that recognized Switzerland’s
permanent neutrality and guaranteed its territorial integrity.
At the end of World War II the League of
Nations was disbanded and replaced by the United Nations (UN). Switzerland
declined to join the UN, convinced that remaining outside the organization would
help preserve its independent position as a neutral. The nation did, however,
acquire permanent observer status at the UN, becoming a member of many UN
agencies. In addition, Switzerland permitted the organization to establish its
European headquarters and several of its agencies—including the International
Labor Organization and the World Health Organization—on Swiss soil. In 1948
Switzerland became a member of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT), an international trade organization replaced in 1995 by the World Trade
Organization (WTO). WTO headquarters are in Geneva.
The far-reaching political, economic,
and social changes generated by greater European integration during the postwar
years have forced Switzerland to continually reevaluate the meaning of
neutrality and its position toward Europe. In 1948 Switzerland willingly joined
the Organization for European Economic Cooperation, but had misgivings about
joining the European Economic Community (EEC, later the European Community [EC],
then, in 1993, the European Union [EU]). The organization’s avowed goals of
closer economic and political cooperation were unacceptable to Switzerland.
However, Switzerland was a founding member of the European Free Trade
Association (EFTA) in 1960, and in 1963 the country joined the Council of
Europe.
In 1992 Swiss voters soundly rejected a
government-backed proposal to join the European Economic Area (EEA), a
free-trade agreement that would draw Switzerland and the other EFTA members into
the EU’s single market. The agreement held that EFTA countries would be bound by
EU laws but would not be involved in the EU’s political integration. The Swiss
electorate’s rejection of the EEA was a significant blow to Switzerland’s
application, filed earlier that year, to join the EU. However, in 1993, after
three previous rejections, voters approved a national value-added tax consistent
with the tax structure of other EU members.
In recent years, Switzerland has
continued to test the meaning of neutrality. While some Swiss have argued in
favor of a strict interpretation bordering on isolationism, others have
supported a policy of greater international engagement, citing the nation’s
robust foreign trade and the increasingly multinational character of Swiss
businesses. Matters culminated in March 2002 when, following a fiercely
contested campaign, Swiss voters approved a national referendum in favor of
joining the UN. The experiences of Finland and Sweden, which successfully
maintained their own policies of neutrality as UN members, appeared to have
swayed many Swiss voters.
J | Contemporary Domestic Issues |
Switzerland faced a number of important
challenges as the country moved into the 21st century. One of the most
contentious issues is immigration, which has provided labor for Switzerland’s
expanding economy since World War II. During the 1970s, many Swiss became
disturbed at the large number of resident foreign workers in the country, and
laws were adopted limiting immigration. Today, economic growth and a declining
domestic birth rate increasingly pits those who favor expanding the number of
foreign workers in Switzerland against those who believe increased immigration
poses a threat to the country’s traditional character.
Maintaining Switzerland’s celebrated
environmental quality in the context of continued industrialization and economic
growth poses another set of challenges. Swiss efforts to curtail acid rain,
which has damaged one-third of Swiss forests, are opposed by domestic and
international forces that view restrictions on industry and transportation as
economically harmful. At the same time, the expansion of cities and tourist
resorts increasingly threatens the natural and cultural resources that attract
international visitors.
Swiss neutrality, a traditional value, is
likely to be tested in the years ahead as the country builds closer economic
ties with the EU and formally joins the UN. So too is Switzerland’s long
tradition of compulsory military service, which some Swiss have portrayed as a
costly relic of the past. Critics of the army have met fierce resistance from
soldiers and former soldiers, who view military service as central to
Switzerland’s traditional values of preparedness and self-reliance. Whatever the
eventual outcome of these issues, it is virtually certain that the Swiss will
approach them with the same commitment to unity and democratic principles that
has characterized the nation for much of its history.
No comments:
Post a Comment