Cantons of Switzerland

administrative divisions of the Swiss Confederation

Switzerland is divided into 26 different territories called cantons. A canton is similar to a state in the United States.

The cantons of Switzerland

In the past, each canton had its own army and money. This changed in 1848 when Switzerland finished a civil war and changed to the structure it has now.

The cantons Uri, Schwyz, Unterwalden (Nidwalden and Obwalden together are called Unterwalden) are called Urkantone. An Urkanton is a canton that existed since the foundation of Switzerland in 1291. With time, other cantons joined Switzerland. Jura is the newest canton in Switzerland since 1978. In that year, it split from the canton of Bern, after some rioting.

The cantons of Basel-Stadt, Basel-Landschaft, Appenzell Innerrhoden, Appenzell-Ausserrhoden, Obwalden and Nidwalden are different from the others in one way. For historical reasons, their voting is counted differently in national elections. Other than that, they are the same as the others.

In Switzerland, the individual municipalities and cantons are very free. Usually, there is a Swiss law (at the level of the whole confederation). Very often this states general things and says that the cantons must follow this rule. The cantons then make detailed rules, each in the way it sees fit. Sometimes this leads to strange situations. There are 26 different schooling systems.

Drug abuse is a federal offense. Punishment is usually one to three years, but can also be only a fine. The problem is: Consumption itself (not trading, or giving away for free) is not punishable. Also in light cases, the police can say that there will be no fine. This has led to the fact, that in each canton, this law is applied differently. In one canton, smoking marijuana will mean a fine, in another, it can mean a prison term.

The word for that is called federalism. That means each canton has its own government and constitution. The constitution is the highest law in a state.

List and map

The cantons are listed in the order given in the federal constitution.[1]

FlagAbbrCantonSinceCapitalPopulation1Area2Density3Nr of Municipalities1Official languages
ZHZürich (Zurich)1351Zürich1,228,6001,729701171German
BEBern1353Bern947,1005,959158399German, French
LULucerne1332Lucerne350,6001,493233107German
URUri1291Altdorf35,0001,0773320German
SZSchwyz1291Schwyz131,40090814330German
OWObwalden (Obwald)1291Sarnen32,700491667German
NWNidwalden (Nidwald)1291Stans38,60027613811German
GLGlarus1352Glarus38,3006855128German
ZGZug1352Zug100,90023941611German
FRFribourg1481Fribourg239,1001,671141242French, German
SOSolothurn1481Solothurn245,500791308126German
BSBasel-Stadt (Basle-City)1501Basel186,700375,0723German
BLBasel-Landschaft (Basle-Country)1501Liestal261,40051850286German
SHSchaffhausen1501Schaffhausen73,40029824634German
ARAppenzell Ausserrhoden (Outer Rhodes)1513Herisau453,20024322020German
AIAppenzell Innerrhoden (Inner Rhodes)1513Appenzell15,000173876German
SGSt. Gallen (St. Gall)1803St. Gallen452,6002,02622290German
GRGraubünden (Grisons)1803Chur185,7007,10526211German, Romansh, Italian
AGAargau (Argovia)1803Aarau550,9001,404388232German
TGThurgau (Thurgovia)1803Frauenfeld228,20099122980German
TITicino1803Bellinzona311,9002,812110244Italian
VDVaud1803Lausanne626,2003,212188382French
VSValais1815Sion278,2005,22453160French, German
NENeuchâtel1815Neuchâtel166,50080320662French
GEGeneva1815Geneva414,3002821,44245French
JUJura1979Delémont69,1008388283French
CHSwitzerland Bern7,261,20041,2851742,890German, French, Italian, Romansh

Notes: 1 As of 31 December 2001, National Statistics, 2 km², 3 per km², based on 2000 population 4 seat of government and parliament, the seat of the judicial authorities is Trogen.

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).

References