The canton and city of Fribourg

The city of Fribourg/Freiburg was founded by Duc Berthold IV of Zähringen (1125-1186) in 1157.

1157-1536

Fribourg joined the Swiss Confederation (Eidgenossenschaft) in 1481. The Burgundian wars (1474-1477) were decisive. The relationship with Habsburg and the Holy Roman Empire was also tense.

Emperor Maximilian (1459-1519) introduced new taxes in the 1490s. The cities, Orte or cantons of the Confederation, still belonged to the Holy Roman Empire but were independent. They resisted the levy of new taxes.

Habsburg also conflicted with the three leagues in Graubünden (Zehngerichtebund, Gotteshausbund, Graue or Obere Bund). The Eidgenossen supported the three leagues.

Maximilian lost the Schwabenkrieg (or Schweizer-or Engadinerkrieg) in 1499. However, France defeated the Eidgenossen in 1515 (Marignano). The peace treaty with France was signed in the Hotel de Ville in Fribourg on 29 November 1516. The eternal Peace, la Paix éternelle, der ewige Friede, lasted until the French invasion in 1798.

The Reformation divided the Eidgenossenschaft after 1520. Freiburg remained Catholic. Bern became Protestant. Freiburg became a bastion of dogmatic Catholicism but remained an ally of the Protestant canton of Bern until 1798.

1798-1848

Freiburg followed the history of the Swiss Confederation in the crucial years 1798, 1803-1813, 1815 and 1848.

(Source: H. Walter, Histoire de Fribourg, Une Ville-État pour l’éternité (XVIe-XVIIIe siècle), Tome 2, Neuchâtel 2002).

Impressions of the city of Freiburg/Fribourg

 

The Church of Allschwil

The picturesque village of Allschwil (canton of Basel-Landschaft) and its half-timbered houses do not deny their proximity to Alsace.

The French-Swiss border has, therefore, run right through the area since 1815, as it does in the towns of Basel and St. Louis (French border) and Basel and Weil am Rhein (Germany) (and the Rhine in between).

The church was built in the Romanesque style and is mentioned in documents about Almeswilre as early as 1118. Subsequently, the small village church has undergone many alterations. In the 19th century, Jodok Friedrich Wilhelm (1797-1843) renovated the church in the neoclassical style. The interior was restored to its former glory in 1985.

Today, Allschwil is a village of 20,000 inhabitants, and the new St. Peter and Paul church replaced its medieval predecessor. The church is a national monument today.