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Därstetten, Bern One Place Study

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Location: Därstetten, Bern, Switzerlandmap
Surnames/tags: One_Place_Studies Bern Switzerland
This page has been accessed 265 times.
Boltigen | Därstetten | Diemtigen
Erlenbach im Simmental | Lenk im Simmental | Oberwil im Simmental
St. Stephan | Wimmis | Zweisimmen

Contents

Därstetten, Bern One Place Study

This profile is part of the Därstetten, Bern One Place Study.
{{One Place Study|place=Därstetten, Bern|category=Därstetten, Bern One Place Study}}

Name

Därstetten owes its name to the 2,079 m high Turnen mountain.[1] It was first mentioned in the directory of the Bishop of Lausanne in 1228 as "Tarenchat" (in the shadow of Mount Turnen). The name then developed into Terenchatten, then Thern Schatten, and finally Därstetten.[2]

Geography

Därstetten
Continent: Europe
Country: Switzerland
Canton: Bern
GPS Coordinates: 46.67202, 7.48831
Elevation: 1360.0 m or 4462.0 feet


Geographical Location

Därstetten is part of a string of villages along the alpine valley floor of the Simmental in the canton of Bern in Switzerland. The Simmental comprises the municipalities of Lenk im Simmental, St. Stephan, Zweisimmen, Boltigen, Oberwil im Simmental, Därstetten, Erlenbach im Simmental, Diemtigen and Wimmis.[3]

Neighboring Communities

Neighboring communities are (clockwise starting from the north): Blumenstein, Pohlern, Stocken-Höfen, Erlenbach im Simmental, Diemtigen, Oberwil im Simmental, and Rüschegg.

Community Structure

The municipality has 10 parts (the settlement type is given in parenthesis):

History

Castle

Weissenburg Castle is a ruined hill castle which dates back to the 13th century and was the residence of Freiherr von Weissenburg.

Population

Year Residents
1764 535
1850 1,046
1860 921
1870 979
1880 975
1888 942
1900 897
1910 831
1920 832
1930 841
1941 878
1950 885
1960 900
1970 887
1980 759
1990 854
2000 879
2010 834
2020 862
[4]

Church

Därstetten Church

According to the 2000 Census, the majority of the population of Därstetten (about 85%) belonged to the Swiss Reformed Church, while 5.3% were Roman Catholic. The remaining 9.7% practiced other religions, did not belong to a church, or declined to answer.

Cemeteries

The area of land used for cemeteries in Switzerland has remained the same for many years. There is no extra ground to expand them thus forcing them to cycle through their various plots. Many cemeteries have headstones that only date back 25 years, but varies according to location. Seldom will you find a headstone dating back more than 40 years unless it is a headstone of a pastor or very prominent citizen in their town. Even in smaller, more rural communities the headstones are not older than about 30 years.[5]

Resources

Sources

  1. Därstetten Weissenburg (https://www.daerstetten.ch/de/portrait/wussten-sie-das : accessed 1 January 2023). "Did you know that ... ?".
  2. Därstetten Weissenburg (https://www.daerstetten.ch/de/portrait/geschichte : accessed 1 January 2023). "Story".
  3. Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simmental : accessed 1 January 2023). "Simmental".
  4. Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Därstetten : accessed 1 January 2023). "Därstetten".
  5. FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/Switzerland_Cemeteries : 1 January 2023), "Switzerland Cemeteries".




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