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Federal Charter of 1291
The 'Federal Charter' or 'Letter of Alliance' () documents the 'Eternal Alliance' or 'League Of The Three Forest Cantons' (), the union of three
cantons in what is now central
Switzerland, formed in early August,
1291.
This inaugural confederation grew through a long series of accessions to modern Switzerland. The Alliance was concluded between the people of the
alpine areas of
Uri,
Schwyz and
Unterwalden (''homines vallis Uranie universitasque vallis de Switz ac communitas hominum Intramontanorum Vallis Inferioris''). The participants are referred to as ''conspirati'' and (synonymously) ''coniurati'', traditionally translated in German as "
Eidgenossen".
The league was set up as a league for defense purposes against any attacker, probably prompted by the death of
Rudolf I of Habsburg on
15 July 1291. Before his death, Habsburg attempted to reinforce his claim over Schwyz and Unterwalden which meant a succession of military interventions.
The authenticity of the letter is disputed. Most historians agree that it is almost certainly a product of the
14th century. In
1991, the parchment was
radiocarbon dated to between
1252 and
1312 (with a certainty of 85%). The document is thus certainly unrelated to the emergence of the modern federal state in
1848, as had sometimes been suggested before the carbon dating. It should rather be seen in the context of chapter 15 of the
Golden Bull of 1356, where
Charles IV outlawed any ''conjurationes, confederationes,'' and ''conspirationes'', meaning in particular the city alliances (''
Städtebünde''), but also other communal leagues that had sprung up through the
communal movement in medieval Europe.
External link
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Original text and translations