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The Swiss City Canton: A POlitical Invention*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 June 2009
Extract
All major Swiss cities are located north of the Alps. Their development can be understood best as part of the development of the North European cities—those of Germany, Flanders and France—and as part of the communal movement as it developed in those areas. Yet the cities that eventually became Swiss are those that accepted more of the characteristic institutions of Italian city-states than did the rest, and it is this acceptance of certain Italian practices—particularly the creation of a rural territory and thus eventually of a territorial city-state—that made those cities into city Cantons, able to take part in the formation of Switzerland.
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References
1 Cf. Salvatorelli, L., L'ltalia comunale (Milan, Mondadori, 1940), p. 315.Google ScholarButler, W.F., The Lombard Communes (New York, Scribners, 1960), pp. 80–91.Google Scholar
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4 Cf. Salvatorelli, op. cit., pp. 460–464,
5 The French army at Novara in 1512 was estimated at 22,000 men, at Marignano in 1515 at 30,000. The total French force under Francis I in North Italy — “unprecedented in Italy” — was reported at 75,000, including numerous garrisons. , Nabholz, et al. , Geschichte der Schweiz (Zurich, 1432–1438), I, p. 304–307.Google Scholar The population of Lombardy was well in excess of half-a-million, and the number of men capable of bearing arms — which in Schwyz and Uri amounted to one-quarter of the population — was in Lombardy alone well above 100,000.
6 Ennen, Edith, Frühgeschichte der europäischen Stadt (Bonn, 1953), p. 256Google Scholar, and generally pp. 250–257.
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1 Gemperle, op. cit., p. 313. The Flemish developments in the 14th century resembled some of the features of the ruthlessly competitive politics of Northern Italy. The collapse of the autonomy of the Flemish cities and their disastrous defeat at Roosebeke in 1382 have been ascribed to three major factors: the bitter social and industrial conflicts within the cities, the complete passivity of the rural population, and the resentment of the lesser towns at their exploitation by the three dominant cities of Ypres, Ghent and Bruges. Gemperle, op. cit., p. 317.
10 See preceding note.
11 For a summary sketch, see Cram, Paul, “The Hanseatic League”, in Langer, W.L., Encyclopedia of World History, revised ed. (Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1960), pp. 307–310.Google Scholar Cf. also Schafer, D., Die deutsche Hanse (Leipzig, Velhagen and Klasing, 1903);Google ScholarMass, Konrad, Die deutsche Hanse (Jena, Diederichs, 1926);Google ScholarPagel, Karl, Die Hanse (Oldenburg, Stalling, 1942);Google ScholarGade, J.A., The Hanseatic Control of Norwegian Commerce during the Late Middle Ages (Leiden, Brill, 1951);Google ScholarHeitz, G., ed., Hansische Studien (Berlin, Akademie-Verlag, 1961).Google Scholar
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15 Ennen, op. cit., p. 257.
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19 Wolfgang von Wartburg, Geschichte der Schweiz, p. 79.
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