Important Cities
- Bern (Capital)
- Zurich
- Basel
- Geneva
- Lucerne
- Zuric
- Zug
- Chur
- Montreux
- Bellinzona
- Lausanne
Main Attractions
- Berne Old City
- Swiss National Museum (Zurich)
- Chateau de Chillon, Montreux
- Glacier Garden (Lucerne)
- Fribourg Old Town
- Lake Geneva
- Interlaken
- Lucerne Covered Bridge
- The Matterhorn, Zermatt
- Mt Pilatus
- The Jungfrau Region
- Reitberg Museum(Zurich)
- St Moritz
- Zurich Old Town
Main Industries
- Chemicals
- Textiles
- Machinery
- Watches
Hunted Facts on switzerland
- You should be traveling through Switzerland, and you should be sure that you are seeing their exquisite outdoor elements.
- This is something that you are only going to be able to witness at one place on earth, and so a visit to Geneva cannot be completed until you have taken the tours of the rooms in which some of the most important decisions in the world are made.
- The people are going to be the most important aspects of traveling in Switzerland, so you should take every opportunity that you have to visit with the people who actually live there.
- Switzerland is a small, landlocked country set amid mountainous terrain in the heart of the European continent.
- Switzerland is a principal water source in central Europe, and the nation’s rivers flow into four different seas.
- Switzerland has a varied climate, due largely to differences in elevation and exposure to sun and prevailing winds.
- A male native of Switzerland is said to be a Schweizer and a female is a Schweizerin in German; Suisse (male) or Suissesse (female) in Swiss French and svizzero (male) or svizzera (female) in Italian.
- Switzerland is a federation of relatively autonomous cantons, some of which have a history of confederacy that goes back more than 700 years, arguably putting them among the world's oldest surviving republics.
- Switzerland comprises three basic topographical areas: the Swiss Alps, the Swiss plateau, and the Jura mountains.The Alps are a high mountain range running across the central-south of the country.
- Switzerland was 2,392,740 persons; the census of 1910 showed 3,753,293 inhabitants; on 1 December, 1910, the resident population (those actually present in the different localities) was altogether 3,765,002 persons.
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