CHAPTER. |
|
PAGE.
|
BOOK III.
|
THE CONFEDERATION AT THE HEIGHT OF ITS MILITARY POWER.
|
I. |
Appenzell and St. Gallen |
193
|
II. |
The Valais and Graubünden |
202
|
III. |
The Conquest of Val Leventina and Aargau |
208
|
IV. |
The First Civil War |
213
|
V. |
The War with Charles of Burgundy |
219
|
VI. |
The Covenant of Stans |
232
|
VII. |
The War against the Empire |
236
|
VIII. |
Switzerland and the Balance of Power in Europe |
239
|
IX. |
The Thirteen Swiss States and the Thirteen American Colonies |
243
|
BOOK IV.
|
THE PERIOD OF THE REFORMATION.
|
I. |
The Rise of the Reformation in Switzerland |
251
|
II. |
Zwingli in Zürich |
259
|
III. |
The Growth of the Reformation |
264
|
IV. |
Calvin in Geneva |
271
|
V. |
Decay of National Life |
278
|
VI. |
The Growth of Aristocracy and the Peaseants’ War |
281
|
BOOK V.
|
THE MODERN CONFEDERATION.
|
I. |
Signs of National Regeneration |
289
|
II. |
The Helvetic Revolution |
295
|
III. |
The Helvetic Republic |
300
|
IV. |
Switzerland the Battle-field of Europe |
308
|
V. |
Napoleon’s Act of Mediation |
313
|
VI. |
The Period of Reactionary Restoration |
319
|
VII. |
Democratic Reforms in the Cantons |
326
|
VIII. |
The War of the Sonderbund and the Constitution of 1848 |
331
|
IX. |
Recent Constitutional Chances in the Cantons |
338
|
X. |
The Constitutions of the Swiss Confederation and of the United States Compared |
346
|
XI. |
The Neutrality of Switzerland |
354
|
XII. |
The Rise of the Swiss Republic |
364
|