Andermatt
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Andermatt | ||||||||||
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Population | 1,312 (2002) | |||||||||
- Density | 21 /km² (55 /sq.mi.) | |||||||||
Area | 62.15 km² (24 sq mi) | |||||||||
Elevation | 1,447 m (4,747 ft) | |||||||||
Postal code | 6490 | |||||||||
SFOS number | 1202 | |||||||||
Mayor | Hansueli Kumli | |||||||||
Surrounded by (view map) |
Airolo (TI), Göschenen, Gurtnellen, Hospental, Tujetsch (GR) | |||||||||
Website | www.gemeinde-andermatt.ch | |||||||||
Andermatt is a municipality in the canton of Uri in Switzerland.
It has a population of 1,312 inhabitants has an area of 62.15 km². With Realp and Hospental, it is located in the Urseren valley, 22 km south of Altdorf.
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[edit] Geography
Andermatt is located in a high Alpine valley—the Ursern Valley—in the Adula Alps.
[edit] Transport
Andermatt serves as a crossroads between southern Switzerland and the North as well as between eastern Switzerland i.e. Graubünden/Grisons and Western Switzerland, i.e. Valais, Berne and the Swiss Romande. The town is thus connected by four Alpine passes: the Oberalp Pass to the East, the St. Gotthard Pass (6,916 ft) to the South, the Realp Pass (5,046 ft) and the Furka Pass (7,992 ft) to the West, as well as the Göscheneralp Pass (5,850 ft) to the North. The Schöllenen Gorge in the Reuss Valley between Andermatt and Göschenen is the location of the infamous Devil's Bridge.
[edit] Roads
[edit] Rail
It is a station on the Matterhorn-Gotthard-Bahn.
[edit] Airports
[edit] History
Archaeological finds dating back to 4,000 BC indicate that the Ursern Valley was populated already in the Neolithic period. During Roman times this Alpine valley was probably inhabited by some Helvetic Celtic tribes. However, the origins of Andermatt can only be traced back to Alemannic tribes, the Walsers, who established settlements in the area, where the current town of Andermatt is situated.
A ceremony will also mark the momentous Flight of the Earls through the small town of Andermatt exactly four centuries ago this St Patrick's Day.
The currently serving Irish Ambassador to Switzerland Mr. James Sharkey said weeks of celebrations will lead up to the inauguration of the memorial.
The last Gaelic Earls fled English rule on a small ship from Co Donegal in 1607 in a defining moment that would forever alter the course of Irish history.
On their way towards Spain - where they intended to gather an army to reclaim Ulster - they passed through Switzerland.
On their epic journey over the Alps, the chieftains lost a fortune of gold down a ravine by the infamous Devil's Bridge, near Andermatt, on St Patrick's Day in 1608.
It has never been recovered and is known as the Lost Treasure of the St Gotthard Pass.
The new memorial to the earls will be inaugurated outside the old Church in Andermatt which, coincidentally, is dedicated to the Irish Saint Columbanus.
"Andermatt is a small town in the Alps - about the size of Buncrana or Carndonagh in Co Donegal - and they already have two monuments there," said Ambassador Sharkey.
"One memorial monument is to the Russians who reached the Alps in 1814 while the other is to the French who resisted them during the Napoleonic Wars.
This recent addition is to become the third monument commemorating the passage of historically important European events, this time to mark the passage of Irish Earls, who reached the Alps some 200 years earlier.
Celebrations marking relations between Ireland and Switzerland will start on February 27th. with an exhibition about the Flight of the Earls in the Swiss frontier city of Basel.
The Nobel Peace Prize winner John Hume is to unveil the memorial to Ireland's last Gaelic chieftains.
The parish of Andermatt was, however, not mentioned until the year of 1203 AD, serving as a tenure to the Benedictine Disentis Abbey. In 1649 AD, with the emergence of an independent Swiss Confederation, the ecclesiastical rights of the Monastery Disentis were revoked in favour of civil legislation.
Between 1818-1831 AD the nearby St. Gotthard Pass was made accessible to stagecoaches. As the last resort before the pass, Andermatt flourished economically and became a popular spa town.
The opening, in 1881 AD, of the St. Gotthard railway tunnel, however, reverted its fortunes as the tunnel runs immediately beneath the town, connecting the Central Swiss town Göschenen with Airolo in Ticino. Some Andermattians, who worked on the tunnel were killed during its construction. A strike by the tunnel workers, furthermore, was put down through the use of military force killing a further four workers.
Since 1885 AD Andermatt has been converted into a garrison town of the Swiss Federal Army. Here the infrastructure for the High Command of the Swiss Federal Army in an event of war was built. Today it is location of a Training Centre of the Swiss army.
Plans to build a series of reservoirs in the Ursern Valley were voted down by the locals. Several avalanches, in particular in the winter of 1951 AD and 1975 AD have caused havoc in some residential areas of Andermatt killing the inhabitants of the houses affected.
[edit] Tourism
[edit] Skiing, hiking, biking, and snowshoeing
[edit] External links
- Andermatt in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
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