Geneva

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Coordinates: 46°12′N 6°09′E

Geneva
Country Switzerland Coat of Arms of Geneva
Canton Geneva
District N/A
46°12′N 6°09′E
Population 186,825 (2008)
  - Density Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character ",". /km² (Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character ",". /sq.mi.)
Area 15.86 km² (6.1 sq mi)
Elevation 375 m (1,230 ft)
A view over Geneva
A view over Geneva
Postal code 1200
SFOS number 6621
Mayor (list) Patrice Mugny (as of 2008) Vert
Demonym Genevois
Surrounded by
(view map)
Carouge, Chêne-Bougeries, Cologny, Lancy, Grand-Saconnex, Pregny-Chambésy, Vernier, Veyrier
Website ville-ge.ch
Geneva [zoom] (Switzerland)
Geneva [zoom]
Geneva [zoom]

Geneva (French: Genève) is the second-most populous city in Switzerland (after Zürich) and is the most populous city of Romandie (the French-speaking part of Switzerland).

Geneva was a center of the Reformation in the 16th century, and was a favoured destination for persecuted French Protestant refugees.

Geneva is a worldwide center for diplomacy and international cooperation, and is widely regarded as a global city, mainly because of the presence of numerous international organizations, including the headquarters of many of the agencies of the United Nations[1] and the Red Cross.[2] It is also the place where the Geneva Conventions were signed, which chiefly concern the treatment of wartime non-combatants and prisoners of war.

A 2007 survey by Mercer Consulting found Geneva to have the second-highest quality of life in the world (narrowly outranked by Zürich). [3]

Geography

Geneva seen from SPOT Satellite
The old town of Geneva in winter.
The Eaux-Vives quarter of Geneva.

The name Geneva is probably of Celtic origin; the city was mentioned in Latin texts with the spelling Genava. The name takes various forms in modern languages — Geneva in English and pronounced /dʒɨˈniːvə/, French: Genève IPA: [ʒənɛv], Template:Audio-de [gɛnf], Italian: Ginevra [dʒiˈneːvra], and Romansh: Genevra.

Geneva is located at the south-western end of Lake Geneva (French Lac Léman), where the lake flows back into the Rhône River. It is surrounded by two mountain chains, the Alps and the Jura.

The city of Geneva has an area of 15.86 km² (6.1 sq mi), while the area of the Canton of Geneva is 282 km² (108.9 sq mi), including the two small enclaves of Céligny in Vaud. The part of the lake that is attached to Geneva has an area of 38 km² (14.7 sq mi) and is sometimes referred to as Petit lac (English: small lake). The Canton has only a 4.5 km (2.8 mi) long border with the rest of Switzerland; out of a total of 107.5 km (66.8 mi) of borders, the remaining 103 are shared with France, with the Départment de l'Ain to the North and the Département de la Haute-Savoie to the South.

The altitude of Geneva is 373.6 meters (1,225.7 ft), and corresponds to the altitude of the largest of the Pierres du Niton, two large rocks emerging from the lake which date from the last ice age. This rock was chosen by General Guillaume Henri Dufour as the reference point for all surveying in Switzerland.[4]

The climate of Geneva is temperate. Ice storms near the Lac Léman are quite normal in the winter, when the average maximum daytime temperature in January is 39°F (4°C). In the summer many people enjoy swimming in the lake, and frequently patronize public beaches such as Genève Plage and Bains des Pâquis. The average maximum is around 77°F (25°C) in July. Mean annual precipitation is 33.5 inches (853mm).

The second main river of Geneva is the Arve River which flows into the Rhône River just west of the city center.

Most of the drinkable water (80 percent) is extracted from the lake; the remaining 20 percent is provided by groundwater originally formed by infiltration from the Arve River.

Thirty percent of the Canton's electricity needs is locally produced, mainly by three hydroelectric dams on the Rhone River (Seujet, Verbois and Chancy-Pougny). In addition, 13 percent of the electricity produced in the Canton is made from the heat induced by the burning of waste at the waste incineration facility of Les Cheneviers.

Natural gas is available in the City of Geneva, as well as in about two-thirds of the municipalities of the canton, and is imported from Western Europe.

Rade Geneve.jpg


History

John Calvin.
L'Escalade celebrating the defeat of the surprise attack by troops sent by Charles Emmanuel I, Duke of Savoy, in 1602.
The International Monument to the Reformation

The first traces of human civilization in Geneva, discovered on the shores of Lake Léman, date from around 3000 B.C.E. The hill of the Old City, that dominates the outlet of the lake, was not inhabited until 1000 B.C.E.

Around 500 B.C.E., Geneva was a Celtic fortified settlement. In 58 B.C.E., Geneva was a staging point in the campaign of the Helvetians and the Romans for Gaul. The name Geneva first appears in history as a border town, fortified against the Celto-Germanic Helvetii, which the Romans took in 120 B.C.E.

By 379, Geneva was the seat of a bishop and was within the Roman Empire, although details remain under debate. In 440 St. Salonius appears as Bishop of Geneva.

In 443 C.E., it was taken by Burgundy, and with the latter fell to the Franks in 534. In 888, the town was part of the new Kingdom of Burgundy. In 1032, the kingdom passed into the hands of the Germanic emperors so Geneva legally became subject to the empire.

From the 11th century to the Reformation, Geneva was ruled by its bishops, who had become the de facto lords of the city. In 1387, Bishop Adhémar Fabry granted the town its great charter, the basis of its communal self-government, which every bishop on his accession was expected to confirm.

The city belonged to the Genevese counts until they became extinct in 1394. From 1416, after assuming the title of duke, the Savoy dynasty sought to bring the city of Geneva under its power, particularly by elevating members of their own family to the episcopal see. Geneva's burghers had the Savoy dukes recognize the public assembly, to which every citizen belonged, as the city's legislative body.

Geneva's fairs reached their peak in the 15th century, giving the city an international reputation. During the first third of the 16th century, the Swiss cantons of Fribourg and Bern helped Geneva retain its autonomy against Savoy.

The Protestant Reformation, that began in 1517, plunged Geneva into new entanglements: while Bern favoured the introduction of the new teaching and demanded liberty of preaching for the French evangelists Guillaume Farel (1489–1565) and Antoine Froment (1508-1581), Catholic Fribourg renounced in 1511 its allegiance with Geneva.

In 1532, the Roman Catholic bishop of the city, Pierre de La Baume, was obliged to leave his residence, never to return. The burghers declared the see vacant, and proclaimed themselves a a republic in 1535. Savoy threatened to invade. Geneva needed military support from Protestant Berne. In 1536, the burghers declared the city Protestant.

French theologian and Protestant leader John Calvin (1509–1564), was based in Geneva from 1536 to his death. While expelling all those who would not convert to the Reformed religion, Calvin presided over Geneva's transformed into a modern city-state. The city was called "Protestant Rome", and from 1550, persecuted Protestants, mainly French and Italians, streamed into Geneva.

Geneva became a center of Protestant activity, producing works such as the Genevan Psalter, though there were often tensions between Calvin and the city's civil authorities. Though the city proper remained a Protestant stronghold, under bishop St Francis de Sales (1567–1622) a large part of Geneva returned to Catholicism in the early 17th century.

The Roman Catholic Charles Emmanuel I, Duke of Savoy (1562–1630), led a final unsuccessful attempt to recapture Geneva with a surprise attack on the night of December 11–12, 1602.

French and Italian Protestant refugees included noble families who assumed a right to rule. From the mid-16th century, these nobles controlled the aristocratic a Council of Twenty-five, which took over city government while the public assembly rubber-stamped decisions. Opposition to the aristocratic rulers grew among the diminishing numbers of residents who qualified as citizens at the end of the 17th century.

A second wave of refugees flooded into Geneva at the end of the 17th century following Louis XIV's persecution of Protestants in France.

The 18th century was a golden age when industries, especially horology, business and banking boomed, while culture and artistic creativity in the 18th century flourished. Geneva was the birthplace of Jean Jacques Rousseau (1712–1778), a home for Voltaire (1694–1778), and attracted other Enlightenment luminaries.

The Geneva revolution of 1792 brought down the aristocratic government of the Ancien Régime. Geneva was annexed by France in 1798 and made the administrative centre of the Department of Léman.

Freedom was returned on December 31, 1813, after the defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte's armies. The republic's magistrates sought entry into the Swiss Confederation, which was granted in 1815. That year, the Congress of Vienna fully re-established Swiss independence and the European powers agreed to recognise Swiss neutrality, marking the last time that Switzerland fought in an international conflict.

A revolution in 1846 led by James Fazy overthrew the government of the Restoration

The Sonderbund Civil war broke out in 1847. The Sonderbund was league among seven Catholic and Conservative cantons, to protect their interests against a centralization of power. The war lasted for less than a month, causing fewer than 100 casualties, and resulted, in 1848, in a federal constitution and the use of referenda.

Geneva-born businessman and social activist Henri Dunant (1828–1910) inspired the creation of the International Committee of the Red Cross in 1863. The 1864 Geneva Convention was based on Dunant's ideas.

Geneva's international role was confirmed after the World War I (1939-1945) when it was chosen as the site for the headquarters of the League of Nations, the forerunner of the United Nations Organisation.

Government

The Palace of Nations.

Switzerland is formally a confederation but similar in structure to a federal republic. The president is both the chief of state and head of government, representing the Federal Council, which is the formal chief of state and head of government, whose council members, rotate in one-year terms as federal president. The bicameral Federal Assembly consists of the Council of States (46 seats) and the National Council (200 seats).

The Swiss Confederation consists of 26 cantons, each of which are responsible for healthcare, welfare, law enforcement, public education, and retain the power of taxation. The cantons comprise a total of 2889 municipalities. Geneva is the capital of the Canton of Geneva, which continues to call itself La Republique du Genève.

The canton is governed by an executive power, the Council of State, which consists of seven members elected for four-year terms, and by a legislature, the Great Council, comprising 100 deputies, also elected for four-year terms by proportional ballot.

The canton is divided into municipalities (or communes) which have their own assemblies and a mayor, a (Stadtpräsident), who is a first among equals in the executive council.

The city of Geneva is divided into eight "quartiers" or districts, often made up of several conglomerated neighborhoods.[5] On the Left Bank (Rive Gauche) these include Jonction, Centre / Plainpalais / Acacias, Eaux-Vives and Champel while the Right Bank includes Saint-Jean / Charmilles, Servette / Petit-Saconnex, Grottes / Saint-Gervais and Paquis / Nations.

Geneva is the seat of the European headquarters of the United Nations and of many other inter-governmental organizations.

Geneva was the seat of the League of Nations between 1919 and the league's dissolution in 1946. It was first housed in the Palais Wilson, and then in the Palais des Nations, which now hosts the United Nations. Numerous international non-governmental organizations have also elected Geneva as their headquarters.

Economy

The Geneva tram.
Geneva Sécheron Train station.

Switzerland is a peaceful, prosperous, and stable modern market economy with low unemployment, a highly skilled labor force, and a per capita GDP ($40,100 in 2007) larger than that of the big Western European economies.

Geneva's economy is mainly services oriented. The city has an important and old finance sector, which is specialized in private banking (managing assets of about 1 trillion USD) and financing of international trade. It is also an important centre of commodity trade.

Many people work in the numerous offices of international organizations located in Geneva (about 24,000 in 2001). Geneva hosts the international headquarters of companies like JT International (JTI), Mediterranean Shipping Company, Serono, SITA, Société Générale de Surveillance and STMicroelectronics. Many other multinational companies like Caterpillar, DuPont, Take Two Interactive, Electronic Arts, Hewlett-Packard, INVISTA, Procter & Gamble and Sun Microsystems have their European headquarters in the city too.

There is a long tradition of watchmaking (Baume et Mercier, Chopard, Franck Muller, Patek Philippe, Rolex, Raymond Weil, Omega, etc.). Two major international producers of flavours and fragrances, Firmenich and Givaudan, have their headquarters and main production facilities in Geneva.

The city's main newspaper is the Tribune de Genève, with a readership of about 187,000, a daily newspaper founded in 1879. Le Courrier, founded in 1868, was originally supported by the Roman Catholic Church, but has been completely independent since 1996.

Geneva is covered by the various French language radio networks of the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation, in particular the Radio Suisse Romande.

The main television channel covering Geneva is the Télévision Suisse Romande; while its headquarters are located in Geneva, the programs cover the whole of Romandy and are not specific to Geneva.

The Geneva Motor Show is one of the most important international auto-shows. The show is held at Palexpo, a giant convention center located next to the International Airport

Geneva is connected to both the Swiss railway network SBB-CFF-FFS, and the French SNCF network, including direct connections to Paris, Marseille and Montpellier by TGV. Geneva is also connected to the motorway systems of both Switzerland (A1 motorway) and France. Public transport is by bus, trolleybus, tram, or by boat, which link the two banks of the lake within the city. Taxis in Geneva can be difficult to find, and often refuse to take babies and children. The city is served by the Geneva Cointrin International Airport.

Demographics

University of Geneva

As of June 2008, the population of the Commune (city) of Geneva was 186,825. The city of Geneva is at the center of the Geneva metropolitan area, known as the agglomération franco-valdo-genevoise in French. The agglomération franco-valdo-genevoise includes the Canton of Geneva in its entirety as well as the District of Nyon in the Canton of Vaud and several areas in the neighboring French departments of Haute-Savoie and Ain. In 2005 the agglomération franco-valdo-genevoise had 769,000 inhabitants, two-third of whom lived on Swiss soil and one-third on French soil. The Geneva metropolitan area is experiencing steady demographic growth of 1.2 percent a year and the agglomération franco-valdo-genevoise is expected to reach one million people in 2030.

The population of the Canton contains 148,500 people originally from Geneva (33.7 percent), 122,400 Swiss from other cantons (27.6 percent) and 170,500 foreigners (38.7 percent), from 180 different countries.[6] Including people holding multiple citizenship, 54.4 percent of people living in Geneva hold a foreign passport.[7]

The ethnic make-up of Switzerland is: German 65 percent, French 18 percent, Italian 10 percent, Romansch 1 percent, other six percent.

Geneva is remarkable for its linguistic diversity, the result of the presence of the United Nations and over 150 international organisations, the headquarters of some 140 multi-national companies, 120 diplomatic missions, and a centuries of trade. Geneva has a 40 percent non-Swiss resident population with English the language of communication. Language Franco-Provençal language German, which is spoken by 63.7 percent of the Swiss population, French 20.4 percent, and Italian 6.5 percent, are all official languages.

While Geneva is usually considered a Protestant city, there are now more Roman Catholics (39.5 percent) than Protestants (17.4 percent) living in the Canton. About 22 percent of the inhabitants claim no religion, and the remainer practice Islam (4.4 percent), Judaism (1.1 percent), other religions, or did not respond.[8]

Geneva is home to the University of Geneva, founded by John Calvin in 1559. Also, the oldest international school in the world is located in Geneva, the International School of Geneva, founded in 1924 along with the League of Nations. Webster University, an accredited American university also has a campus in Geneva.

The Geneva School of Diplomacy and International Relations is a private university on the grounds of the Château de Penthes, an old manor with a park and view of Lac Leman.

However, out of all the educational and research facilities in Geneva, CERN is probably the best known on a world basis. Founded in 1954, CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research) was one of Europe's first joint ventures and has developed as the world's largest particle physics laboratory. Physicists from around the world travel to CERN to research matter and explore the fundamental forces and materials that form the world.

Of interest

The World Intellectual Property Organization.

Since 1818, a particular chestnut tree has been used as the official "herald of the spring" in Geneva. The sautier (secretary of the Parliament of the Canton of Geneva) observes the tree and notes the day of arrival of the first bud. While this event has no practical impact, the sautier issues a formal press release and the local newspaper will usually mention the news.

As this is one of the world's oldest records of a plant's reaction to climatic conditions, researchers have been interested to note that the first bud appears earlier and earlier in the year. The first recorded dates were in March or April. In recent years, it has usually been in mid-February and sometimes even earlier.[9] In 2002, the first bud appeared unusually early, on February 7, and then again on December 29 of the same year. The following year, one of the hottest Europe has ever had, became a year with no bud. In 2008, the first bud also appeared very early, on February 19.

  • Geneva observes Jeune genevois on the first Thursday following the first Sunday in September. By local tradition, this commemorates the date the news of the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre of Huguenots reached Geneva. The Genevois joke that the federal equivalent holiday, Jeune fédéral, is observed two weeks later on account of the rest of the country being a bit slow on the uptake.
  • The "Escalade" (literally, "scaling the walls") on December 11-12 each year, which commemorates victory against Roman Catholic Charles Emmanuel I, Duke of Savoy, in 1602, is Geneva's main patriotic celebration.
  • The main sport team in Geneva is Servette FC, a football club founded in 1890 and named after a borough on the right bank of the Rhône. Geneva is also home of the Genève-Servette Hockey Club, who play in the Swiss National League A.

Looking to the future

Does the city face no challenges or offer up anything else as a legacy?"

Does the city need reconstruction?

Is it a model city? The second-highest quality of life in the world Will it run out of water?

Does it have a crucial role to play in the nation?


References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  1. Staying on the Safe Side; Geneva. The New York Times. The New York Times Company (1990-06-24). Retrieved 2008-04-19.
  2. 36 Hours in Geneva. The New York Times. The New York Times Company (2007-09-16). Retrieved 2008-02-02.
  3. Mercer Human Resource Consulting World-wide quality of living survey. London, 2 April 2007. Last accessed 13 January 2008
  4. Swisstopo, Height reference for Switzerland. Last accessed on 1 February 2007.
  5. Districts of Geneva. Official Website of Geneva. Retrieved 2008-02-09.
  6. Population of Geneva, on the website of Statistique Genève. Last accessed 1 February 2007.
  7. OCSTAT. Les binationaux dans le canton de Genève. Résultats du recensement fédéral de la population 2000. Communications statistiques n° 24, Geneva, December 2005.
  8. Inhabitants of the Canton of Geneva according to their religion, on the website of Statistique Genève. Last accessed 1 February 2007.
  9. La Une de la FAO no 93 année 253 : FAO: La Treille, promenade et lieu d'observation climatique

Further reading

  • Geneva (municipality) in German, French or Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  • Dieter Fahrni. 2003. An Outline History of Switzerland. From the Origins to the Present Day, 8th enlarged edition. Pro Helvetia, Zürich. ISBN 3908102618
  • Senarclens, Jean de, and Jean de Senarclens. 1995. Geneva: historical guide. Genève: Editions du Tricorne, S. Kaplun. ISBN 9782829301445
  • Geneva. 2007. Cityspots. Peterborough: Thomas Cook. ISBN 9781841577722
  • Monter, E. William. 1967. Calvin's Geneva. New dimensions in history: historical cities. New York: Wiley. OCLC 183613

External links

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