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BADEN

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Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 184 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BADEN  , a

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town in the Swiss canton of Aargau, on the
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left
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bank of the
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river Limmat, 14 M. by
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rail N.W. of Zurich . It is now chiefly visited by reason of its hot
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sulphur springs, which. are mentioned by Tacitus (Hist. i. cap . 67) and were very fashionable in the 15th and 16th centuries . They are especially efficacious in cases of gouty and rheumatic affections, and are much frequented by Swiss invalids,
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foreign visitors being but few in number . They lie a little north of the old town, with which they are now connected by a
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fine boulevard . Many
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Roman remains have been found in the gardens of the Kursaal . The town is very picturesque, with its steep and narrow streets, and its one surviving gateway, while it is dominated on the west by the ruined castle of Stein,formerly a stronghold of the Habsburgs, but destroyed in 1415 and again in 1712 . In 1415 Baden (with the Aargau) was conquered by the Eight Swiss Confederates, whose
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bailiff inhabited the other castle, on the right bank of the Limmat, which defends the ancient
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bridge across that river . As the
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conquest of the Aargau was the first made by the Confederates, their delegates (or the federal
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diet) naturally met at Baden, from 1426 to about 1712, to settle matters
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relating to these subject lands, so that during that period Baden was really the capital of
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Switzerland . The diet sat in
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tire old town-hall or Rathaus, where was also signed in '714 the treaty of Baden which put an end to the war between France and the
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Empire, and thus completed the treaty of Utrecht (1713) . Baden was the capital of the canton of Baden, from 1798 to 1803, when the canton of Aargau was created . To the N.W. of the
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baths a new
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industrial quarter has sprung up of
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late years, the largest
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works being for electric
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engineering .

In 1900 the permanent

population of Baden was 6050 (German-speaking, mainly Romanists, with many Jews), but it is greatly swelled in summer by the influx of visitors . One mile S. of Baden, on the Limmat, is the famous Cistercian monastery of Wettingen (1227-1841—the monks are now at Mehrerau near Bregenz), with splendid old painted glass in the cloisters and magnificent early 17th-century carved stalls, in the choir of the church . Six miles W. of Baden is the small town of Brugg (2345 inhabitants) in a fine position on the
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Aar, and close to the remains of the Roman colony of Vindonissa (Windisch), as well as to the monastery (founded 131o) of Konigsfelden, formerly the
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burial-place of the early Habsburgs (the castle of Habsburg is but a short way off), still retaining much fine painted glass . See Barth . Frisker, Geschichte der Stadt and Bader zu Baden (Aarau, i88o) . (W . A . B .

End of Article: BADEN
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GRAND DUCHY OF BADEN

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