Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 10.djvu/654

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636
GLA—GLA

 


Besides the works already noticed, Glanvill wrote—Liar Orientalis, 1662 ; Philosophia Pia, or Discourse on Ihr Religious Character, and (he Tendency of Eapcrimcntal Philosophy; Essays on Several Im- portant Subjects in Philosophy and Religion, 1676; An Essay Concerning Preaching; and Sermons. After his death in 1681, there were published other sermons, 620.. in one volume 4to. See lémusat, Hist. do [a Phil. on Anglctcrre, bk. iii. ch. xi.

GLARUS, or Glaris, a canton of Switzerland,is bounded on the N. and NE. by St Gall, on the E. and S. by the Grisons, and on the W. by Fri and Schwyz. Its area is 266 or 267 square miles, its greatest length about 33 miles, and its greatest breadth about 16. A thoroughly Alpine district, sloping northwards from the lofty range which comprises the Todi (11,887 feet), the Biferten Stock (11,237), and the Schcibe (9587), and including within its limits the Gla'rniseh (9584) and the )Iiirtschcn Stock(8012), Glarus is almost completely cut off from the neighbouring cantons, except towards the south. Of the three passes, the Segnes, the Kisten, and the Panix, which communicate with the Grisons, the first and second are over the snow, and the third has only a bridle path ; and the Klausen pass and the Pragel pass, which conduct respectively to Schwyz and Uri, have also mere bridle paths. As far as it is a habitable country it may be said to consist of the valley of the Linth, which extends from the Todi southward to the Wallenstadt Lake along with the lesser valleys of the Sernf (or Sernft) and the Kliin, which branch off to the east and the west. The climate, it need hardly be said, is a severe one, the snow generally remaining, even in the lowlands, till near the beginning of May. The folm at times blows with terrific violence; and, by a law enforced in the town of Glarus, every fire in the place must be extinguished as soon as it sets in. The chief sources of wealth in the canton are the pastures and the manufacturing indus- tries. Though copper, silver, and iron mines were formerly wrought, the only mineral production now of commercial importance is slate, which is extensively quarried in the Plattcnberg. Not more than a fifth of the soil is capable of cultivation by the plough, and the agricultural produce has consequently to be supplemented by foreign supplies. About 9000 or 10,000 head of cattle are pastured iu the canton, and according to the census of 1876 there are 2000 sheep, 6900 goats, and 3000 swine. Neither butter nor ordinary cheese is made in sufficient quantities for the local consumption, but the Schabzeiger, Schotler Ii'r'ise, Kriiuterlcdse, or “ green cheese,” made of skim milk, whether of goats or cows, mixed with butter-milk and coloured with powdered sleinklee (JIelilotus crerulea), is still largely manu- factured. The curd is brought down from the mountain chalets in sacks, which contain about 200 IT) each. After being ground for about 2% hours in a mill along with the .t-lee powder, which is added in the proportion of 3 lb to the 100, the curd is put into shapes, and pressed in the usual way. It grows ripe in about a year and keeps a long time. Large quantities are exported to America. The cotton manufacture is the staple of the canton, and gives support to about a fourth of the population. Formerly distributed through the country as a domestic industry, it is now cou- eentrated in a few factory towns and villages, which in the aggregate keep about 250,000 spindles'going. The cotton goods are sent to the East, America, and Africa. It is not only in their own little country that the people of Glarus find a field for their energies; they have contributed to the industries of many parts of Europe, and their poorer emi- grants have founded three flourishing settlements in Wis- cousin—New Glarus, Vilten, and New Elm. The popula- tion, which in 1851 was 30,213, had increased by 1870 to 35,150, and was estimated in 1876 at 36,179. The vast majority are Protestarts, only 6,888 being Catholics accord- ing to the census of 1870. The constitution of Glarus is of the simplest kind, and extremely democratic. According to the law of 18-12, revised and sanctioned by the federal council in 1851, the government rests in the hands of a Landesgemeinde or assembly of the whole male population above the age of eighteen, which usually meets on the first Sunday in May, and elects the cantonal oflicials, votes the income and poll-taxes, and passes or rejects any laws that may be presented by the cantonal council or Landesrath. The cantonal council consists of 117 members. A council of 45 members, and a committee of 9 members have control of the executive. The landannnan is president of the com- mittee, the executive council, the cantonal council, and the assembly. Justice is administered by five courts completely independent of the Government. Freedom of the press, freedom of religious worship, and freedom of trade and industry are all guaranteed. Aliens are readily naturalized and admitted to the rights of citizens. The canton is divided into 25 communes, only one of which,'that of Glarus, has more than 5000 inhabitants, while 16 have lCSS than 1000, and the smallest has only 231.

Glarus, the capital of the canton, is a flourishing little town on the left bank of the Linth, about 1495 feet above the sea-level. Its environment is a remarkable one: to the S. the Gl'zirnisch rises 6153 feet; to the NAV. the Wiggis, 6033; and to the E. the Schild, 6010. The fire of 1861 devastated the greater part of the town, destroying its Gothic churchof the 10th century, the casino, the Govern- ment houses, and all its principal buildings; 2000 of the inhabitants were rendered houselcss, and property to the value of 8,000,000 francs was destroyed. Contributions however were sent in from far and near to the amount of 2,754,606 francs, the federal authorities of Switzerland voted a loan of 1,000,000 at two per cent, and the canton furnished a subsidy at 3 per cent; the town was rapidly rebuilt in a substantial and regular style, and the public edifices restored. The church is used in common by the Protestants and the Roman Catholics. The high school accommodates 700 pupils. Most of the population, which in 1870 numbered 5516, are supported by the cotton manu— facture carried on in the town and the vicinity. A certain trace of rustic life is still maintained, as the operatives have each a bit of ground in the “ahnem.” On the opposite side of the river lies the industrial village of Enneda.


In the end of the 5th century an Irisn monk, l"ridolin, the founder of the convent of Seekingen on the Rhine, built a church on the site of the present town, and the name of St llilarius, which he gave it in honour of his patron the bishop of I'oitiers, in course of time became corrupted to Glarus or Glaris. The whole vallcy was reckoned to the estates of the abbey of Seekingen, and it was governed by a mayor or bailill' whose nomination was vestcd ultimately in the llapslnn‘g family. The tyranny of these ofliecrs constrained the people of (:Iarus to join the IIL-lvetic eonfcdcratimr in 1352, and in 1388 they secured their imlepcndcncc by a victory over the Austrians at Nafels, the anniversary of which is still celebrated on the second Thursday of April. Zwingli the Reformer was curate of Glarns from 1506 to 1516, and by 1530 the new doctrines had been accepted by five-sixths of the population of the canton. The two religious parties, though they were happily prevented from appealing to arms, continued long in a state of mutual alienation and suspicion; the Protestants, for example, would have nothing to do with the Gregorian calendar because it was introduced by the papal party. At length a settlement of a peculiar kind was effected in 1683. Each confession was allowed to have a cantonal assembly, a. cantonal council, and otlicials of its own; while for all matters in which both parties were interested there was a cantonal assembly and a cantonal council for discussion and administration in common. It was in the beginning of the 18th century that the present prosperity of the canton received its original impulse. t‘otton- spinning was introduced in 1712 by Heidegger of Zurich, and weaving and calico-printing followed before 1750. The popula- tion of the canton incrcaScd from 15,000 to 20,000 during the century. The effects of the great Revolution were beneficially experienced, and the early part of the 19th century was marked by numerous improvements, political and social. Till 1811 the lower course of the Linth was extremely irregular, and its inundations had gradually turned a large stretch of country into a swamp ; but, under the patronage and direction mainly of Escher (von der Linth,