Cantons of Switzerland (original) (raw)

Each canton has its own constitution, legislature, government and courts. Most of the cantons' legislatures are unicameral parliaments. Their size varies between 58 and 200 seats. A few legislatures are general assemblies (Landsgemeinden). The cantonal governments consist of either 5, 7 or 9 members, depending on the canton. All tasks that do not explicitly fall within the Confederation according to the Swiss Constitution are matters of the cantons. The cantons determine the degree of autonomy of the municipalities, thus this varies greatly.

In cantonal matters, direct democracy in the form of general assemblies (Landsgemeinde) is now confined to the cantons of Appenzell Innerrhoden and Glarus. In all other cantons democratic rights are expressed using the ballot box.

Since the creation of the Canton of Jura in 1978 there have been no new cantons. Sometimes the number of cantons is given as 23. In this case the cantons of Unterwalden, Appenzell and Basel are counted as two half-cantons each. Unterwalden is divided into Obwalden and Nidwalden, Appenzell into Innerrhoden and Ausserrhoden, while Basel is divided into Basel-Stadt and Basel-Landschaft. These divisions exist for historical reasons and still only affect the number of seats in the Council of States and voting in federal initiatives. The new constitution of 1999 now enumerates each of the 26 cantons separately.

The table below lists the cantons in the order of the constitution.

Abbr Canton Since Capital Population1 Area2 Density3 Nr. of mun.s1 Official languages
ZH Z�rich (Zurich) 1351 Z�rich 1,228,600 1,729 701 171 German
BE Bern (Berne) 1353 Bern 947,100 5,959 158 399 German, French
LU Lucerne 1332 Lucerne 350,600 1,493 233 107 German
UR Uri 1291 Altdorf 35,000 1,077 33 20 German
SZ Schwyz 1291 Schwyz 131,400 908 143 30 German
OW Obwalden (Obwald) 1291 Sarnen 32,700 491 66 7 German
NW Nidwalden (Nidwald) 1291 Stans 38,600 276 138 11 German
GL Glarus 1352 Glarus 38,300 685 51 28 German
ZG Zug 1352 Zug 100,900 239 416 11 German
FR Fribourg 1481 Fribourg 239,100 1,671 141 242 French, German
SO Solothurn 1481 Solothurn 245,500 791 308 126 German
BS Basel-Stadt (Basle-City) 1501 Basel 186,700 37 5,072 3 German
BL Basel-Landschaft (Basle-Country) 1501 Liestal 261,400 518 502 86 German
SH Schaffhausen 1501 Schaffhausen 73,400 298 246 34 German
AR Appenzell Ausserrhoden (Outer Rhodes) 1513 Herisau4 53,200 243 220 20 German
AI Appenzell Innerrhoden (Inner Rhodes) 1513 Appenzell 15,000 173 87 6 German
SG St. Gallen (St. Gall) 1803 St. Gallen 452,600 2,026 222 90 German
GR Graub�nden (Grisons) 1803 Chur 185,700 7,105 26 211 German, Romansh, Italian
AG Aargau (Argovia) 1803 Aarau 550,900 1,404 388 232 German
TG Thurgau (Thurgovia) 1803 Frauenfeld 228,200 991 229 80 German
TI Ticino 1803 Bellinzona 311,900 2,812 110 244 Italian
VD Vaud 1803 Lausanne 626,200 3,212 188 382 French
VS Valais 1815 Sion 278,200 5,224 53 160 French, German
NE Neuch�tel 1815 Neuch�tel 166,500 803 206 62 French
GE Geneva 1815 Geneva 414,300 282 1,442 44 French
JU Jura 1979 Del�mont 69,100 838 82 83 French
CH Switzerland Bern 7,261,200 41,285 174 2,889 German, French, Italian, Romansh

The two letter abbreviations for Swiss cantons are widely used, e.g. on car license plates and in the ISO 3166-2 codes (with the prefix "CH-", i.e. CH-SZ for the canton of Schwyz).