The territory now known as Switzerland was a contact zone for a range of ethnicities,
linguistic areas and literary influences. There was no such thing as a specifically Swiss literary landscape
in the Latin Middle Ages. Nor did the first beginnings of the formation of a state come into view until the
late Middle Ages. In the western areas, significant influence from Gaul/France can be detected. The south-east
belongs to the Rhaeto-Romance cultural area. In the east, settled by the Alemanni, the environs of Lake
Constance, with the abbeys of St. Gall and Reichenau, were highly productive. Basel was oriented towards the
north and the Upper Rhine. Literature was first produced in monasteries and bishoprics, later increasingly in
towns. The most popular genres were hagiography and regional historiography, followed by spiritual poetry,
theological and profane literature, and didactic poetry.
Article outline
- The specific ethno-linguistic situation
- The transitional period between late antiquity and the early Middle Ages: Focus on the west
- The early Middle Ages / Carolingian period: Focus on the east
- The beginning of the High Middle Ages
- The twelfth century
- Poetry in the late Middle Ages
- Historiography in the late Middle Ages
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