Chapter

Liechtenstein Dynastic Principality & Napoleonic Sovereignty

In 1699, Prince Johann Adam Andreas of Liechtenstein purchased the indebted Herrschaft Schellenberg; in 1712 he added the County of Vaduz. On 23 January 1719, Emperor Charles VI united them as the Principality of Liechtenstein—a dynastic project that gave an old Austrian noble family a sovereign seat in the Holy Roman Empire. Vaduz Castle became the administrative center, though the Princes themselves rarely resided. Napoleon's dissolution of the Empire in 1806 paradoxically secured Liechtenstein's sovereignty: joining the Confederation of the Rhine, the principality emerged as an independent state. The Congress of Vienna (1815) confirmed this status. A limited constitution was granted in 1818, but real governance remained absolutist. The parish of Mariä Himmelfahrt at Bendern—the Unterland's mother parish, dedicated to the Assumption—would later lend its feast day to the National Day, fusing a Marian feast with dynastic celebration. Through all these political upheavals, the parish feast-day cycle continued undisturbed, the liturgical calendar anchoring each community's ritual year beneath changing flags.

1699 - 1866
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spiritual

Cathedral of St. Florin, Vaduz

The Vaduz parish church (founded 1160, current 19th-century structure) was raised to cathedral status on December 12, 1997, when the Archdiocese of Vaduz was erected—the only archdiocese in the world corresponding to a single microstate, making it the liturgical center of a uniquely Liechtenstein-specific church province. Anchor modes: living_ritual; custodian | Search hooks: Cathedral of St. Florin Vaduz; Dom Vaduz; Erzbistum Vaduz Kathedrale; parish feast Vaduz; Archdiocese cathedral 1997

Attend Mass in the cathedral; observe the architectural markers of its elevation from parish church to cathedral; the Archdiocese publishes its liturgical calendar online.

spiritual

Parish of Mariä Himmelfahrt, Bendern

The Unterland's mother parish (spätmittelalterliche Pfarrei), Bendern's dedication to the Assumption (Mariä Himmelfahrt) directly connects to Liechtenstein's National Day on August 15—the religious layer beneath the dynastic and national celebration; its late-medieval parish once spanned both sides of the Rhine. Anchor modes: living_ritual; custodian | Search hooks: Parish of Mariä Himmelfahrt Bendern; Pfarrei Bendern Gamprin; Assumption feast Bendern; Unterland mother parish; Mariä Himmelfahrt August 15

Attend the Assumption Day Mass on August 15 at Bendern—the same feast that anchors the National Day; the parish is active within the Archdiocese of Vaduz.

political

Vaduz Castle

Built in the 12th century as the seat of the Counts of Werdenberg-Sargans, Vaduz Castle became the administrative center of the County of Vaduz from 1342 and the residence of the Princely Family since 1938—on National Day (August 15), the castle meadow opens to the public for the state ceremony, making dynastic space momentarily accessible. Anchor modes: material_layer; living_ritual | Search hooks: Vaduz Castle; Schloss Vaduz; National Day ceremony Schlosswiese; Princely residence Liechtenstein; Staatsfeiertag castle meadow

View the castle from Vaduz (not open for regular tours); on August 15, walk the Schlosswiese during the National Day ceremony and enter the castle garden for the public apéro.

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Chapter

Holy Roman Imperial Counties

1342 - 1699

The County of Vaduz, carved from the County of Werdenberg in 1342, and the Lordship of Schellenberg—defined by 1438—formed the two territorial units that would later become Liechtenstein. Imperial immediacy (Reichsunmittelbarkeit) granted in 1396 placed the County directly under the Emperor, a status visible today in the castles that governed each territory. Vaduz Castle ruled the Oberland; the twin Schellenberg castles (Obere Burg and Untere Burg) commanded the Unterland's Eschnerberg. Gutenberg Castle at Balzers guarded the southern frontier against Swiss expansion, suffering siege in the Swabian War of 1499. The Counts of Hohenems (1613–1699) left a darker mark: Ferdinand Karl was deposed in 1684 for witch hunts that executed approximately 50 people in Schaan alone. Throughout, the parish network remained the stable ritual backbone—Pfrundbauten Eschen (the medieval rectory, origins in the 15th century) housed clergy who maintained the feast-day cycle regardless of which count held political power.

Chapter

Swiss Alignment & Constitutional Monarchy

1866 - 1938

After leaving the German Confederation in 1866, Liechtenstein drifted toward Switzerland. The 1862 constitution introduced a Landtag, and the landmark 1921 constitution established a constitutional monarchy with partial parliamentary democracy. The customs treaty of 1924 (building on the 1920 adoption of the Swiss franc) tied the economy to Switzerland—a lifeline during the world wars. This era also saw a heritage revival: Vaduz Castle was restored between 1904 and 1920 under Prince Johann II, and Gutenberg Castle was rebuilt by architect Egon Rheinberger from 1905 to 1912, rescued from ruin after being quarried for building stone since a 1795 fire. Parish churches were renewed too: the current Eschen St. Martin was built in 1894/1895, and Schaan's new St. Laurentius was consecrated in 1893. These 19th-century rebuildings preserved medieval dedications and feast-day patterns beneath neo-Gothic shells—the Patrozinium cycle continuing in renovated spaces.

Chapter

Alemannic Settlement & Early Medieval Christianization

400 - 1342

As Roman authority faded, Alemannic settlers moved into the Rhine valley from the north, overlaying the Romansh-speaking population with Germanic language and clearing names (-ried, -schwand, -brand). In Schaan, a Romanized community around St. Peter's church coexisted with an Alemannic community at Specki—a dual heritage still reflected in the alpine cooperatives Gritsch (Alemannic) and Guschg (Rhaeto-Romanic). Christianization took root parish by parish: Eschen's St. Martin traces to the 9th century, Balzers' St. Nikolaus und Martin to the early medieval period, and Schaan's St. Laurentius was established around 1100, eventually surpassing the older St. Peter's. The Walser migration from Valais in the 12th–13th centuries added a second Alemannic wave—settlers who brought their own dialect (Walserditsch) and alpine farming practices to Triesenberg and Planken, creating a subregional cultural layer that persists today. Each parish became the custodian of its patron feast (Patrozinium) and church-dedication anniversary (Kirchweih)—the oldest continuously observed local festivals.

Chapter

WWII Neutrality & Postwar Financial Transformation

1938 - 1990

Prince Franz Joseph II took up residence at Vaduz Castle in 1938—the first reigning Prince to live in the principality. When war came, Liechtenstein clung to Swiss neutrality, applying Swiss war-economy laws and refusing Nazi annexation demands. In 1940, the government instituted the Staatsfeiertag (National Day) on August 15, fusing the Catholic feast of the Assumption (Mariä Himmelfahrt) with the day before the Prince's birthday—a triple layering of religious, dynastic, and national identity. Fireworks at Vaduz Castle since 1941 carried the motto "Für Gott, Fürst und Vaterland." On the night of May 2, 1945, around 500 soldiers of the First Russian National Army crossed the border at Hinterschellenberg seeking asylum; the government refused Soviet repatriation demands—a story marked by the Russian Monument erected in 1980. Postwar, low taxes and banking secrecy transformed the agrarian principality into a financial center. Organized Fasnacht emerged: FC Schaan launched the first parade in 1952; the Narrenzunft Schaan was founded on September 20, 1965, structuring parades, Guggenmusik (from 1970 onward), and the Kindermaskenball into scheduled civic events atop older diffuse customs. Funkensonntag—burning a tall Funken pyre crowned with a Funkenhexe (straw witch) on the first Sunday after Ash Wednesday—continued as a community fire rite, now organized by local Funkenzünfte.