Grisons |
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Grisons (grih.zonz'), German Graubünden (grow.bÜn'dûn), Italian Grigioni (gree.jo'nee), Romansh Grischun (grih.zhoon'), French Grisons (gree.zong'), is the largest and easternmost Swiss canton. It has a population of 167,000 and a surface area of 7,100 km².
The canton is entirely mountainous, comprising the highlands of the Rhine and Inn valleys. It borders on Liechtenstein (N), Austria (NW), Italy (SW), and the confederate cantons of St. Gallen[?] (NE), Glarus[?], Uri (E), and Ticino (SW.) The capital city is Chur. Other towns are the world-famous resorts of Davos and St. Moritz[?].
The languages spoken in the Grisons are German in the NW (54%), Romansh - a language of the Ladin[?] group - in the Engadin and around Disentis/Mustér (31%), and Italian in the valleys Mesolcina/Misox, Calanca, Bregaglia/Bergell, and Poschiavo/Puschau (15%). The name Graubünden means "The Gray Leagues." The Grisons were established in the 14th century from the merging of three defensive leagues, the Gray League[?] (Grauer Bund) , the League of God's House[?] (Cadi, Gottes Haus, Ca' di Dio), and the League of the Ten Jurisdictions[?] (Zehngerichtebund). A "perpetual ally" of Switzerland, the country became a canton in 1803. |
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