Swiss Amber

The Greeks, Romans, Celtic and other European peoples highly valued amber, a precious stone. Archaeological amber finds are made throughout Europe.

The finds date from the older Stone Age ( c .10000-4000 BC), the later Stone Age (c. 4000-1800 BC), the Bronze Age (c. 1800-500 BC) and Greek and Roman times.

The Roman (provincial) elite was also interested in this beautiful material, and the European rivers and Roman roads were important to communication.

Amber was also transported to Italy,  and an amber industry arose in Aquileia on the Adriatic Sea. The products were widely distributed throughout the Roman Empire.

Towards the middle of the second century and in the following centuries, the flourishing amber industry gradually dwindled due to the invasions by the ‘barbarians’.

Amber is found in large quantities in the Baltic Sea, Scandinavian countries (the oldest finds are in Denmark), and Switzerland. The most important finds have been made at Münchenstein, south of Bern.

It is not known whether amber was exported to Aquileia. Still, the Celtic/Rauraci people were skilled and experienced artisans and used amber for their ornaments and jewellery.

Source: M. Ploug, Amber (Copenhagen 2000)

The First World War and Switzerland

The association Switzerland in the First World War (La Suisse dans la Première Guerre mondiale/Die Schweiz im Ersten Weltkrieg) was founded during the centenary of the First World War in 1914.

It aims to analyse the history of Switzerland during this period and make it understandable to the public. The war also strongly influenced and changed neutral Switzerland.

Tensions between the social classes, French and German-speaking Switzerland, workers and peasants, officers and soldiers increased sharply during the four years of war. They culminated in the general strike of November 1918.

The exhibition shows these growing tensions in thematic chapters – economy, society, army and politics- using a visual scenography.

Hundreds of photographs, documents, films and objects tell the story of a Switzerland that, although spared from war, faced major political, economic and social challenges.

(Source and further information: www.grandeguerre.ch and  www.14-18.ch).

Forum of Swiss History in Schwyz

The new permanent exhibition at the Forum of Swiss History in Schwyz shows ‘Switzerland in the Making’. The exhibition focuses on the foundation and early development of the Swiss Confederacy in the Middle Ages. The history of the Swiss Confederation goes back more than seven hundred years.

The beginning of Switzerland is still debated: when, where, and how did the country’s history as a nation, confederation or Eidgenossenschaft begin? The exhibition puts these questions into the perspective of the economic, political, cultural and social developments of the 13th-14th centuries.

(Further information Forum Schweizer Geschichte, www.forumschwyz.ch).