Helvetia

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File:Zweifranken (cropped).jpg
Standing Helvetia on obverse of a Swiss 2-franc coin

Helvetia (Template:IPAc-en)<ref>Template:Cite dictionary</ref> is a national personification of Switzerland, officially Template:Lang, the Swiss Confederation.

The allegory is typically pictured in a flowing clothing, with a spear and a shield emblazoned with the Swiss flag, and commonly with braided hair and a wreath as a symbol of confederation. The name is a derivation of the ethnonym Template:Lang, the name of the Gaulish tribe inhabiting the Swiss Plateau before the Roman conquest.

History

File:De Merian Helvetiae, Rhaetiae et Valesiae 001.png
Matthäus Merian (1642)

The fashion of depicting the Swiss Confederacy in terms of female allegories arose in the 17th century. This replaced an earlier convention, popular in the 1580s, of representing Switzerland as a bull (Template:Langx).

In the first half of the 17th century, no single allegory was identified as Helvetia. Rather, several allegories represented both virtues and vices of the confederacy. On the title page of his 1642 Topographia, Matthäus Merian depicted two allegorical figures seated below the title panel: one is the figure of an armed Template:Lang, representing Swiss military prowess and sovereignty, the other is a female Abundantia allegory crowned with a city's ramparts.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Female allegories of individual cantons predate the single Helvetia figure. There are depictions of a Respublica Tigurina Virgo (1607), a Lucerna shown in 1658 with the victor of Villmergen, Christoph Pfyffer, and a Berna of 1682.

Over the next half-century, Merian's Abundantia would develop into the figure of Helvetia proper. An oil painting of 1677/78 from Solothurn, known as Template:Lang, shows a female Template:Lang allegory standing on a pillar. In 1672, an oil painting by Albrecht Kauw showed several figures labelled Template:Lang. These represent vices such as Template:Lang and Template:Lang, contrasting with the virtues of Template:Lang (not shown in the painting).

On 14 September 1672, a monumental baroque play by Johann Caspar Weissenbach was performed in Zug, entitled Template:Lang. The play is full of allegories illustrating the rise of Helvetia and her decadence after the Reformation. In the 4th act, the Template:Lang or "Waning Helvetia" is faced with Template:Lang and Template:Lang while the old virtues leave her. In the final scene, Christ appears to punish the wayward damsel, but the Mother of God and Bruder Klaus intercede, and the contrite sinner is pardoned.

Identification of the Swiss as "Helvetians" (Template:Lang) becomes common in the 18th century, particularly in the French language, as in François-Joseph-Nicolas d'Alt de Tieffenthal's very patriotic Template:Lang (1749–1753) followed by Alexander Ludwig von Wattenwyl's Template:Lang (1754). Helvetia appears in patriotic and political artwork in the context of the construction of a national history and identity in the early 19th century, after the disintegration of the Napoleonic Helvetic Republic, and she appears on official federal coins and stamps from the foundation of Switzerland as a federal state in 1848.

Name of Switzerland

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File:Fünffranken (cropped).jpg
A Swiss five-franc coin with the Latin inscription Template:Lang

The Swiss Confederation continues to use the name in its Latin form when using any or all of its four official languages is inappropriate or inconvenient. Thus, the name appears on postage stamps, coins, and other uses; the full name, Template:Lang, is abbreviated for uses such as the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 and vehicle registration code CH, and the ccTLD, .ch.

Notably, translations of the term Helvetia still serve as the name for Switzerland in languages such as Irish, in which the country is known as Template:Lang, Greek, in which it is known as Template:Lang (Template:Lang) and Romanian, in which it is known as Template:Lang. In Italian, Template:Lang is seen as archaic, but the demonym noun/adjective Template:Lang is used commonly as a synonym of Template:Lang. In French, Swiss people may be called Template:Lang. The German word Template:Lang is used as well as a synonym of Template:Lang and has a higher poetic value. Template:Lang is also more common in Germany; the German-speaking Swiss use Template:Lang or Template:Lang as poetic synonyms for their country.

See also

References

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Bibliography

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