TheFederal Diet of Switzerland (German:Tagsatzung,IPA:[ˈtaːkˌzatsʊŋ];French:Diète fédérale;Italian:Dieta federale) was the legislative and executive council of theOld Swiss Confederacy and existed in various forms from the beginnings of Swiss independence until the formation of theSwiss federal state in 1848.
The Diet was a meeting of delegates from the individual cantons. It was the most wide-reaching political institution of theOld Swiss Confederacy, but its power was very limited, as the cantons were essentially sovereign.
While the composition and functions of the Federal Diet had changed and evolved since its founding in the 15th century, it was most notably reorganised during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic period. The understanding of the Federal Diet can be broken down into three main periods: before the French invasion in 1798, the period of the French invasion and theAct of Mediation, and from its restructuring by the Federal Treaty (Bundesvertrag) of 7 August 1815 to its dissolution after theSonderbund War in 1848.
Organised as a Diet since 1500, the seat of the Swiss legislature was called the Federal Diet. This was not the sole source of authority in the loosely joined country, as each canton had relatively independent diets as well. Though a representative body, it differed from modern constitutional assemblies as its member were drawn almost exclusively from the picked interest of the landed and mercantile elite.[1] The presiding canton of the Federal Diet was known as theVorort and was usually the canton which had called the Diet. The Diet was held in varying locations, withZurich becoming increasingly important following the 16th century. The last three presiding cantons before the French invasion wereBern,Lucerne, andZürich.[2]
Following the invasion and victory of the French Republican forces, theOld Swiss Confederation was disbanded and replaced by theHelvetic Republic. This was a more centralized form of government than the previous and it was widely opposed as revoking the traditional liberties of local powers. Opposition was particularly fierce among the Catholic population, for whom the French imposed government was associated with theradical anti-clericalism of the French Revolution.[3] This opposition eventually lead to theStecklikrieg, which pitted a Swiss rebellion against the forces of theHelvetic Republic. The opposition was successful in forcing theHelvetic Republic to accepting the French negotiatedActs of Mediation in 1803. These acts secured the federal, decentralized nature of Switzerland.[4]
Switzerland was organized according to the terms of theActs of Mediation under the defeat of theFrench Empire in 1815. The "Long Diet" had been in session for over a year until 1815, when the Congress of Vienna decided the shape which Europe would take following the Coalition's victory. The Swiss government maintained its federal structure, though no longer under the forms of the Acts of Mediation and coordinated by a re-named Federal Assembly.[5] This is the system which would govern the Swiss for over three decades, seeing the addition of new, French-speaking cantons. The system showed its weaknesses in 1845, when a league of Catholic cantons joined together in opposition to Federal authority and formed theSonderbund League in 1845.[6] This was the beginnings of a civil war, which lasted through 1848 and saw the Federal forces victorious. Following their victory, a new constitution was adopted and theFederal Assembly of Switzerland was created in its modern form. Bern was chosen as the 'federal city,' or Bundesstadt, in a deliberate avoidance of the term 'capital city,' or Hauptstadt. In its modern form, the Federal Assembly is a true representative body which elects its members according to the votes of the citizens of each canton.[7]