Online Encyclopedia

GLARUS (Fr. Glaris)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 79 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GLARUS (Fr. Glaris)  , the capital of the Swiss canton of the same name . It is a clean,
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modern little
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town, built on the
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left
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bank of the Linth (opposite it is the
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industrial suburb of Ennenda on the right bank), at the north-eastern
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foot of the imposing rock
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peak of the Vorder Glarnisch (7648 ft.), while on the east rises the Schild (6400 ft.) . It now contains but few houses built before 1861, for on the lo/11 May 1861 practically the whole town was destroyed by fire that was fanned by a violent Fohn or south wind, rushing down from the high mountains through the natural funnel formed by the Linth valley . The
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total loss is estimated at about
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half a million sterling, of which about £Ioo,000 were made up by subscriptions that poured in from every side . It possesses the broad streets and usual buildings of a modern town, the parish church being by far the most stately and well-situated
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building; it is used in
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common by the Protestants and Romans . Zwingli, the reformer, was parish priest here from 1506 to 1516, before he became a
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Protestant . The town is 1578 ft. above the sea-level, and in 1900 had a population of 4877, almost all German-speaking, while 1248 were Romanists . For the Linth canals (1811 and 1816) see LINTH . The
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DISTRICT OF GLARUS is said to have been converted to
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Christianity in the 6th century by the Irish monk, Fridolin, whose
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special
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protector was St Hilary of
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Poitiers; the former was the founder, and both were patrons, of the
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Benedictine nunnery of Sackingen, on the Rhine between Constance and Basel, that about the 9th century became the owner of the district which was then named after St Hilary . The Habsburgs, protectors of the nunnery, gradually drew to themselves the exercise of all the rights of the nuns, so that in 1352 Glarus joined the Swiss Confederation . But the men of Glarus did not gain their
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complete freedom till after they had driven back the Habsburgs in the glorious
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battle of Nafels (1388), the complement of
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Sempach, so that the Habsburgers gave up their rights in 1398, while those of Sackingen were bought up in 1395, on condition of a small
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annual payment . Glarus early adopted Protestantism, but there were many struggles later on between the two parties, as the chief
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family, that of Tschudi, adhered to the old faith .

At last it was arranged that, besides the common Landsgemeinde, each party should have its

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separate Landsgemeinde (1623) and tribunals (1683), while it was not till 1798 that the Protestants agreed to accept the Gregorian
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calendar . The slate-
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quarrying industry appeared early in the 17th century, while cotton-spinning was introduced about 1714, and
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calico-printing by 1750 . In 1798, in consequence of the resistance of Glarus to the French invaders, the canton was
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united to other districts under the name of canton of the Linth, though in 1803 it was reduced to its former limits . In 1799 it was traversed by the
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Russian army, under Suworoff, coming over the Pragel Pass, but blocked by the French at Nafels, and so driven over the Panixer to the Grisons . The old
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system of government was set up again in 1814 . But in 1836 by the new Liberal constitution one single Landsgemeinde was restored, despite the resistance (1837) of the Romanist population at Nafels .

End of Article: GLARUS (Fr. Glaris)
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