(in German; in French, Berne), the capital of Switzerland. The administrative center of the Bern canton. Located in the central part of the country, on both sides of the deep valley of the Aare River, at an altitude of 572 m above sea level. Climate, temperate and continental; the average temperature, -0.4° C in January and 20.4° C in July; precipitation, 852 mm a year. Population, 166,800 (1968), 255,000 including the suburbs.
City administration. The agency of local self-government is the Great Council, which is elected in Bern and its suburbs by male citizens. The immediate administration of the city is exercised by an elected Communal Council headed by the city president.
Historical survey. Bern was founded in 1191. It became a free imperial city in 1218 and entered the Swiss confederation in 1353. In 1415 it incorporated Aargau and in 1536 Vaud (Waadt) into its domains. The Reformation took place in Bern in 1528. The struggle of the burghers, the urban plebeians, and the peasants of the territories under Bern’s domain against the city patricians, who had become stronger in the 17th and 18th centuries, gave rise to numerous uprisings (the Peasant War of 1653, the uprising of 1723, Henzi’s conspiracy of 1749), which were cruelly suppressed. With the occupation of Bern by the French troops (1798), the power in the city passed into the hands of bourgeois elements, and Aargau and Vaud received their independence. In 1813 the power of the patricians was restored (it maintained itself until 1830). In 1848 Bern became the capital of Switzerland. In the early 20th century it was a center of the Russian revolutionaries in emigration. V. I. Lenin lived and worked in Bern from September 1914 to February 1916. A conference of the sections of the RSDLP abroad was held in Bern from February 27 until March 4, 1915.
Economy. Bern is an important transportation center (with six radial railroad lines, an airport, and other facilities), and it has significant transit activity. The main functions of the city are administrative, and it is also the seat of several international organizations (such as the bureaus of the Universal Postal Union, the International Telecommunication Union, the International Copyright Society, and the International Rail Transport Committee). The National Bank is located in Bern. Industrially Bern is behind such Swiss cities as Zürich and Basel. Industry is represented by electrical equipment and precision machine-building (telephone equipment, electric apparatus, printing machines, and so on), textiles, knitted goods, food (including canning, flour milling, chocolate, and beer brewing), woodworking, and printing. Bern is a big center of international tourism. It has a university (founded in 1834), the national Swiss library, and Swiss, Alpine, historical, natural history, art, and other museums.
Architecture. The old part of Bern, located on a peninsula formed by the river, has remnants of medieval fortifications (with a clock tower from the 15th century), arcades along narrow parallel streets, residential homes in the baroque style, fountains from the 16th century, and painted statues; this part is connected with the new quarters by numerous bridges. The chief architectural monuments are the late gothic three-nave St. Vincent Cathedral (1421–1588), the city hall (1406–17), the baroque Church of the Holy Spirit (1726–29) and the parliament (1852–1901).