place

Seftigen District

Canton of Bern geography stubsFormer districts of the canton of Bern
Karte Bezirk Seftigen 2007
Karte Bezirk Seftigen 2007

Seftigen District was one of the 26 administrative districts in the Canton of Bern, Switzerland. Its capital was the municipality of Seftigen. The district had an area of 189 km² and consisted of 25 municipalities:

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Seftigen District (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Seftigen District
Untere Längenbergstrasse,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Seftigen DistrictContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 46.8833 ° E 7.48333 °
placeShow on map

Address

Untere Längenbergstrasse 17
3086
Bern, Switzerland
mapOpen on Google Maps

Karte Bezirk Seftigen 2007
Karte Bezirk Seftigen 2007
Share experience

Nearby Places

Englisberg
Englisberg

Englisberg is a village in the district of Seftigen in Canton Bern, Switzerland. On January 1, 2004, the independent municipality merged with Zimmerwald to form the new municipality of Wald BE. Situated on the Längenberg, above the valley of the Aare river, it combines the villages of Englisberg and Kühlewil. Englisberg is first documented in 1166 [Endlisperc]. It is believed that Englisberg was created out of the much older village of Kühlewil [Cullenwil, Cullenwilare - originally of Celtic origin] the latter of which having since attained the status of a hamlet of the former. In the 14th century a castle is documented in Englisberg, owned by the family of the same name. It was abandoned by the following 15th century and quickly fell into disrepair and disintegration. The feudal rights over Englisberg were acquired by the von Erlach family of Bern in 1433 and passed in 1542 to the Baumgartner family of the same place. After 1570, these feudal rights were sold to local farming families Guggisberg and Zimmermann which over the course of several generations were split into 70 shares. In the 18th century, these rights were successively purchased by the aristocratic von Graffenried and von Tscharner families seated at the Lohn estate in Kehrsatz only to lose it all when Switzerland was invaded by the French in 1798 that resulted in the abolishment of the ancient order. Englisberg belonged until 1798 to the high court district of Seftigen. Ecclesiastically Englisberg was part of the evangelical reformed parish church of neighboring Belp till 1699 and thereafter was integrated into the newly created parish of Zimmerwald. Census Data: 1764: 223 inhabitants;1850: 275 inhabitants; 1900: 567 inhabitants;1950: 564 inhabitants; 2000: 214 inhabitants Predominant surnames with long-established ancestry preceding 1798: - Balsiger, since the 16th century / - Guggisberg, since the 15th century / - Hosmann and Hossmann since the 17th century / - Streit, since the 16th century / - Zimmermann, since the 16th century Englisberg is the birthplace of former Swiss ice hockey player Mark Streit.