Biel/Bienne


Biel/Bienne (official bilingual wording; German: [biːl], French: [bjɛn]; Italian: Bienna; Romansh: Bienna; Latin: Belna) is a town and a municipality in the Biel/Bienne administrative district in the canton of Bern in Switzerland.

Biel/Bienne lies on the language boundary between the French-speaking and German-speaking parts of Switzerland, and is bilingual throughout. Biel is the German name for the town; Bienne its French counterpart. The town is often referred to in both languages simultaneously. Since 1 January 2005, the official name has been "Biel/Bienne". Until then, the town was officially named Biel.[4]

The town lies at the foot of the first mountain range of the Jura Mountains area, guarding the only practical connection to Jura, on the northeastern shores of Lake Biel (Bielersee, Lac de Bienne), sharing the eastern tip of the lake with its sister town, Nidau. The towns Neuchâtel, Solothurn, and Bern (the capital of Switzerland) lie southwest, northeast and southeast of Biel/Bienne. They all can be reached within about 30 minutes by train or car.

In 2012, Biel/Bienne had about 55,000 inhabitants, and together with the surrounding district almost 106,000.[5] The town has been an industrial and watchmaking heart of Switzerland since the 19th century.

The shoreline of Lake Biel has been inhabited since at least the neolithic. The remains of two neolithic settlements were found at Vingelz in 1874. The remains of the settlements became the Vingelz / Hafen archaeological site, which is now part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site. East of the Vingelz site, a late Bronze Age settlement was also discovered.[6] After the Roman conquest, the region was part of Germania Superior. During the Roman era the Roman road from Petinesca to Pierre Pertuis or Salodurum (now Solothurn) passed through the village of Mett, which is now part of Biel/Bienne. The foundations of buildings and a 4th-century cemetery in Mett come from a late Roman or an early medieval military guard station.[7]

A theory holds that the toponym is derived from the name of Belenus, probably from a Roman era sanctuary of that deity at a sacred spring nearby. However, no surviving records or inscriptions confirm this theory. Another theory states that the town grew up around a late Roman fortress. While no trace of the fortress has been found, the foundations of several Roman buildings have been found east of the medieval town.[8]


Logo
Biel/Bienne in 1546
Biel/Bienne in 1642
The City Church is one of the most important late-gothic buildings in the Canton of Bern
Biel/Bienne in 1805, while part of the First French Republic
The Volkshaus/Maison du Peuple (People's House) is a symbol of the Social Democratic era of the town in the 1930s
town map from 1906
Aerial view by Walter Mittelholzer (1925)
Lake Bienne with part of Biel in the background

The Conseil deville/Stadtrat of Biel/Bienne for the mandate period of 2021–2024

  JS/JUSO (3.3%)
  POP/PdA (1.7%)
  SP (16.7%)
  PSR (10%)
  LesVerts/Grüne (13.3%)
  Passarelle (3.3%)
  pvl/glp (6.7%)
  PEV/EVP (3.3%)
  BDP / CVP (3.3%)
  FDP (11.7%)
  PRR (6.7%)
  UDC/SVP/DE (18.3%)
  UDF/EDU (1.7%)
Apartments and street market near the train station
Small apartments in the Mösliquartier/Petit-Marais
Bilingual street sign
Candino building in Biel/Bienne
Rolex building in Biel/Bienne
Bern University of Applied Sciences (BFH) Bienne, building of the architecture, wood and civil engineering department, rue de Soleure in Bienne
National Exposition in 2002
Biel/Bienne's central railway station
Eduard Bloesch
René Felber
Franz Hohler, 2008
Ares, 2010
Martina Kocher, 2016
Daniel Gisiger, 2011