Eidgenossenschaft - meaning and definition. What is Eidgenossenschaft
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What (who) is Eidgenossenschaft - definition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Eidgenossen; Eidgenosse; Swiss Federation; Eidgenössisch; Eidgenoessisch; Eidgenossisch; Swiss Confederates; Eidgnosschaft
  • The Three Confederates (1914), monumental statue by [[James Vibert]] in the [[Federal Palace of Switzerland]].

Old Swiss Confederacy         
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  • [[Federal Charter of 1291]]
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  • The 13 cantons of the Old Swiss Confederacy
  • Associate states of the Old Swiss Confederacy in the 18th century
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  • Old Swiss Confederacy in the 18th century
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  • The forces of Zürich are defeated in the [[Second War of Kappel]].
  • coats of arms]] of the [[Thirteen Cantons]] of the Confederacy (1584)
  • Old Swiss Confederacy on 1637 map
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  • Structure of the Confederacy during the 18th century
  • Baden]] (1790s drawing)
  • Territorial development of Old Swiss Confederacy, 1291–1797
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CONFEDERATION OF CANTONS (1291-1798)
Swiss Confederacy; Old Swiss Confederation; Gemeine Herrschaft; Zugewandter Ort; Zugewandte Orte; Gemeine Herrschaften; Republic of the Swiss; Old Confederacy; Alte Eidgenossenschaft; République des Suisses; Republica Helvetiorum; Swiss Old Confederacy; Old Confederation; The Old Swiss Confederacy
Corpus helveticum, in the Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.Corps helvétique, in the Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
Switzerland         
  • The [[University of Basel]] is Switzerland's oldest university (1460).
  • The Act of Mediation was Napoleon's attempt at a compromise between the [[Ancien Régime]] and a Republic.
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  • Ski area over the glaciers of [[Saas-Fee]]
  • Percentage of foreigners in Switzerland (2019)
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  • The first [[Federal Palace]] in Bern (1857). One of the three cantons presiding over the [[Tagsatzung]] (former legislative and executive council), Bern was chosen as the permanent seat of federal legislative and executive institutions in 1848, in part because of its closeness to the French-speaking area.<ref name=Bundesstadt />
  • The [[Old City of Bern]]
  • Population density in Switzerland (2019)
  • The 1291 ''Bundesbrief'' (federal charter)
  • Federal Council]]
  • Federal Chancellor]] (w/ administrative tasks only) [[Walter Thurnherr]], Federal Councillor [[Ueli Maurer]], President [[Ignazio Cassis]] and Federal Councillor [[Karin Keller-Sutter]]}}
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  • Members of the [[European Free Trade Association]] (green) participate in the [[European single market]] and are part of the [[Schengen Area]].
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  • [[Fondue]] is melted cheese, into which bread is dipped.
  • Inauguration in 1882 of the [[Gotthard rail tunnel]] connecting the southern canton of Ticino, the longest in the world at the time
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  • Swiss cantons
  • Romansh]] (0.5%)}}
  • Köppen–Geiger climate classification]] map for Switzerland
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  • The [[Landsgemeinde]] is an old form of [[direct democracy]], still in practice in two cantons.
  • Entrance of the new [[Lötschberg Base Tunnel]], the third-longest railway tunnel in the world, under the old [[Lötschberg railway line]]. It was the first completed tunnel of the greater project [[NRLA]].
  • tallest dams]] in Europe, among which the [[Mauvoisin Dam]], in the Alps. Hydroelectric power is the most important domestic source of energy in the country.
  • The Old Swiss Confederacy from 1291 (dark green) to the sixteenth century (light green) and its associates (blue). In the other colours shown are the subject territories.
  • Physical map of Switzerland (in German)
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  • Swiss-built [[Mowag Eagle]]s of the land forces
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  • Some Swiss scientists who played a key role in their discipline (clockwise):<br />[[Leonhard Euler]] (mathematics)<br />[[Louis Agassiz]] (glaciology)<br />[[Auguste Piccard]] (aeronautics)<br />[[Albert Einstein]] (physics)
  • A Swiss Air Force [[F/A-18 Hornet]] at [[Axalp Air Show]]
  • A proportional representation of Switzerland exports, 2019
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  • General [[Ulrich Wille]], appointed commander-in-chief of the Swiss Army for the duration of World War I
  • United Nations]] in Geneva
  • Vals]]
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COUNTRY IN CENTRAL EUROPE
Suisse; Swiss Confederation; Schweiz; Svizzera; Confoederatio Helvetica; Confederaziun Svizra; Confederazione Svizzera; Confédération Suisse; Schweizerische Eidgenossenschaft; ISO 3166-1:CH; Confederation Helvetica; Switserland; Schwitzerland; Confœderatio Helvetica; Confédération suisse; Confederation Helvetia; Confederation of Helvatia; Suiza; Switzerland information; Confederatio Helvetica; SwissEnergy; Land of the Switzers; Svizra; Confederation Suisse; Confederation suisse; Swizterland; Swizerland; Helvetic Confederation; Confederaziun svizra; Švýcarsko; Swissland; Switzeland; Svissland; Die Schweiz; Swiss confederation; Schweitz; SWITZERLAND; Land of the Swiss; Etymology of Switzerland; Der Schweiz; Switzer land; Swiss Confederated States; Swisserland; Confederation of Switzerland; Schweizerisch; Helvetic confederaton; Swiss confederaton; Switzerlandic; Wildlife of Switzerland; Flora of Switzerland
Used as an interjection in conversation when someone is asking you to take sides and you don't want to be involved.
Hey, Sis, could you tell Mom and Dad to lay off me and my girlfriend? Reply: Switzerland.

Wikipedia

Eidgenossenschaft

Eidgenossenschaft (German pronunciation: [ˈaɪdɡəˌnɔsənʃaft]) is a German word specific to the political history of Switzerland. It means "oath commonwealth" or "oath alliance" in reference to the "eternal pacts" formed between the Eight Cantons of the Old Swiss Confederacy of the late medieval period, most notably in Swiss historiography being the Rütlischwur between the three founding cantons Uri, Schwyz and Unterwalden, traditionally dated to 1307. In modern usage, it is the German term used as equivalent with "Confederation" in the official name of Switzerland, Schweizerische Eidgenossenschaft, rendered Confédération and Confederazione in French and Italian, respectively. The related adjective, eidgenössisch, officially translated as Swiss federal, is used in the name of organisations, for example the Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. The term Eidgenosse (literally: comrade by oath) refers to the individual members of the Eidgenossenschaft. It is attested as early as 1315, in the Pact of Brunnen (as Eitgenoze), referring to the cantons of Uri, Schwyz and Unterwalden. The abstract noun Eidgenossenschaft (mostly contracted to eidgnoszschaft or eidgnoschaft) is attested in the 15th century. In modern usage, Eidgenosse is sometimes used (in archaic or ironic usage) for "Swiss citizen", especially for those citizens of purely Swiss origin, not immigrated.

In a historical context, Eidgenossenschaft refers to the medieval Swiss Confederacy, which grew from the 13th to the 16th century in central Europe, persisted until 1798 and then evolved into a federal state in the 19th century. When used in this sense, the eternal nature of the pact is necessary—the members of the Dreizehn Orte (Thirteen Cantons), frequently made time-limited alliances sworn by oath with other partners, but such pacts were not considered an Eidgenossenschaft.

The members of an Eidgenossenschaft are called Eidgenossen (singular Eidgenosse). This term is documented in an alliance from 1351 between the communal, countrified lieus of Uri, Schwyz and Unterwalden and the civic city lieus of Lucerne and Zürich, which referred to themselves as such. In the evolution of the Swiss Confederacy, the members initially were not united by one single pact, but rather by a whole set of overlapping pacts and separate bilateral treaties between various members. The abstraction to the singular use of Eidgenossenschaft, which implies a stronger sense of community and the perception of a strong common cause, did not occur until some forty years later, after the Battle of Sempach, although it began already in the Pfaffenbrief of 1370, a treaty among some of the then eight members of the Swiss Confederacy.

The communal movement in medieval Europe often led to similar alliances or leagues, called conjurationes in the Latin of the official documents of the time. The city alliances (German: Städtebünde) in the medieval Holy Roman Empire, in which the member cities also were equal, can be regarded as Eidgenossenschaften, too, although they generally proved less stable, partly due to their fragmented territories. The best known of these city alliances was the Hanseatic League, but many others existed in the 13th and 14th century. An early example is the Lombard League at the time of Frederick I "Barbarossa"; an example from Switzerland would be the "Burgundian Confederacy" of Bern.

In the Holy Roman Empire, emperor Charles IV outlawed any such conjurationes, confederationes, and conspirationes in his Golden Bull of 1356. Most Städtebünde were subsequently dissolved, sometimes forcibly, and where refounded, their political influence was much reduced. On the Swiss Eidgenossenschaft, however, the edict had no such effect as Charles IV, who was of the House of Luxembourg, regarded the Swiss as potential useful allies against his rivals, the Habsburgs.