Regions
Africa North America South America Asia Australia Caribbean Europe View all regions
Categories
Travel Agents Cruises Tours Hotels View all categories
Essentials
Trip Tips - NEW!
Share Your Trip
Trip Blogs - NEW! Video Gallery - NEW! Photo Gallery - NEW!
By Topic
Europe Canada United States South America Caribbean Australia Africa Asia View all articles
The Best Of
Most Popular - NEW! Highest Rated - NEW!
Member Login
Canton of Glarus
About Canton of Glarus
is a canton in east central Switzerland. The capital is Glarus. There are 25 municipalities in the canton (July 2006). The population is German speaking and either Protestant or Catholic.
| Contents |
| Geography |
| History |
| Industry |
| Municipalities |
| References |
| External links |
Geography
Electrical power from Klöntalersee is one of the cantons main export goods.
The canton of Glarus is dominated by the deep valley of the Linth River. Most of the area is mountainous. The highest peak in the Glarus Alps is the Tödi with 3614m. Other mountains include the Hausstock (3158m) and the Glärnisch (2910m). There is also a large lake called Walensee (Lake Walen). The total area of the canton of Glarus is 685 km², of which about half is considered productive. Forestry is an important branch of industry in the canton.
History
Church of Glarus by Ferdinand Stadler
The history of this canton is dominated by religion. The inhabitants of the Linth Valley were converted to Christianity in the 6th century by the Irish monk Saint Fridolin, who still features in the coat of arms of the canton today. He founded Säckingen Abbey near Basel. From the 9th century, the area around Glarus was owned by the abbey. By 1288 the Habsburgs, bit by bit, claimed all the abbey's rights. This resulted in the people of Glarus joining the Swiss Confederation in 1352.
Between 1506 and 1516 the reformer Huldrych Zwingli was priest in Glarus, but by 1564 all of Zwingli's followers were eliminated. This, however, did not end the struggles between the Protestants and the Catholics in the area. To secure peace it was decided that each party should have its own assembly (''Landsgemeinde'') in 1623, and at a later stage in 1683, each side was granted the right to have its own tribunals.
Between 1798 and 1803 Glarus was part of the Canton of Linth as established by Napoleon. In 1836 the constitution was adapted to unite the assemblies and establish only one ''Landsgemeinde''.
About two thirds of Glarus (593 Buildings) were destroyed after a big fire in 1861. After this incident, Glarus was rebuilt in block fashion according to construction plans by Bernhard Simon and Johann Caspar Wolff.
On May 6, 2007 Glarus became the first Swiss canton to lower the Voting age to 16 [1]
Industry
The geography of the canton helped to establish slate works in the 17th century. The mountainous surroundings of Glarus were also an advantage in industrialisation. Cotton spinning was important in the 18th century, complementing traditional woolen spinning. Industrialisation also brought cotton printing, hydroelectric plants and later metal and machinery factories, as well as paper mills.
Dairy farming and cattle breeding were not replaced by industrial advances. Cattle graze on mountain pastures. Cattle breeding and dairying are important on the mountain pastures.
Municipalities
The 25 municipalities (''Ortsgemeinden'') are:
★ Betschwanden ★ Bilten ★ Braunwald ★ Elm ★ Engi ★ Ennenda ★ Filzbach ★ Glarus ★ Haslen (united former municipalities Leuggelbach, Nidfurn and Haslen) ★ Linthal ★ Luchsingen (united former municipalities Diesbach, Hätzingen and Luchsingen) ★ Matt | ★ Mitlödi ★ Mollis ★ Mühlehorn ★ Näfels ★ Netstal ★ Niederurnen ★ Oberurnen ★ Obstalden ★ Riedern ★ Rüti ★ Schwanden ★ Schwändi ★ Sool |
References
1. SwissInfo, retrieved on May 7 2007
External links
★ Official Statistics
★ Official Site (German)
★ the Linth valley on Google Maps
This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.
Travel Articles
Recent Blogs
Did you know?
- Canada has the most lakes and resevoirs in the world: a total of 31 and 1,300 square km's.
- In Canada, children's letters sent to Santa by mail are opened and replied to by "elves" at Canada Post - they reply to over 1 million letters, in approx 26 languages
- In some conservative parts of Thailand, you can eat only with a spoon - using a fork to eat is considered scandalous, and only to be used to put food into the spoon.
Travel News
- Expedia eyes more media monetisation - Travolution
- City leaders slam tourist boards plan - Edinburgh Evening News
- Beyond the Waikiki tourist trap - BCLocalNews
- From Tuesday's Globe and Mail - Globe and Mail
- BITE 'brings the world to Bahrain' - Gulf Daily News
- It's the Only Way to go - the Essex Way! - The Gazette
- Gold Medal plans to expand its Travel TV - TTG live
- Memorial Day weekend I-75 traffic could face Zilwaukee Bridge closure - MLive.com
- Big turnout for key travel expo - Gulf Daily News
- New air services into Rimini and Naples - Travel Daily News International



