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GRUYERE (Ger. Greyerz)

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 642 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GRUYERE (Ger. Greyerz)  , a
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district in the south-eastern portion of the Swiss canton of Fribourg, famed for its cattle and its cheese, and the
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original home of the " Ranz
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des Vaches," the melody by which the herdsmen call their cows home at milking time . It is composed of the
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middle reach (from Montbovon to beyond Bulle) of the Sarine or Saane valley, with its tributary glens of the Hongrin . (
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left), the Jogne (right) and the Treme (left), and is a delightful pastoral region (in 1901 it contained 17,364 cattle) . It forms an administrative district of the canton of Fribourg, its population in 190o being 23,111, mainly French-speaking and Romanists . From Montbovon (11 m. by
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rail from Bulle) there are mountain
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railways leading S.W. past
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Les Avants to
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Montreux (14 M.), and E. up the Sarine valley past Chateau d'Oex to Saanen or Gessenay (14 m.), and by a tunnel below a low pass to the Simme valley and Spiez on the Lake of Thun . The
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modern capital of the district is the small
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town of Bulle [Ger .
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Boll], with a 13th-century castle and in 1900 3330 inhabitants, French-speaking and Romanists . But 11 the
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historical capital is the very picturesque little town of Gruyeres (which keeps its final " s " in order to distinguish it from the district), perched on a steep hill (S.E. of Bulle) above the left
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bank of the Sarine, and at a height of 2713 ft. above the sea-level . It is only accessible by a rough
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carriage road, and boasts of a very
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fine old castle, at the
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foot of which is the solitary street of the town, which in 1900 had 1389 inhabitants . The castle was the seat of the
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counts of the Gruyere, who are first mentioned in 1073 . The name is said to come from the word gruyer, meaning the officer of woods and forests, but the counts
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bore the canting arms of a crane (grue), which are seen all over the castle and the town . That valiant
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family ended (in the legitimate
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line) with Count Michel (d .

1575) whose extravagance and consequent indebtedness compelled him in 1555 to sell his domains to

Bern and Fribourg . Bern took the upper Sarine valley (it still keeps Saanen at its head, but in 1798 lost the Pays d'En-Haut to the canton du Leman, which in 1803 became the canton of Vaud) . Fribourg took the rest of the county, which it added to Bulle and Albeuve (taken in 1537 from the bishop of
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Lausanne), and to the lordship of Jaun in the Jaun or Jogne valley (bought in 1502–1504 from its lords), in order to form the
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present administrative district of Gruyere, which is not co-extensive with the historical county of that name . See the materials collected by J . J . Hisely and published in successive vols. of the Memoires et documents de la suisse romande . . introa. a l'hist . (1851) ; Histoire (2 vols., 1855–1857) ; and Monuments de l'histoire (2 vols., 1867–1869); K . V. von Bonstetten, Briefe fiber ein Schweiz . Hirtenland (1781) (Eng. trans., 1784); J . Reichlen, La Gruyere illustree (189o), seq.; H . Raemy, La Gruyere (1867) ; and Les Alpes fribourgeoises, by many authors (Lausanne, 1908) .

(W . A . B .

End of Article: GRUYERE (Ger. Greyerz)
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GRUTER (or GRUYTERE), JAN (1560-1627)
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GRYNAEUS (or. GRYNER), JOHANN JAKOB (1540-1617)

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