Huttwil | ||
---|---|---|
Huttwil town
|
||
|
||
Coordinates: 47°7′N 7°51′E / 47.117°N 7.850°ECoordinates: 47°7′N 7°51′E / 47.117°N 7.850°E | ||
Country | Switzerland | |
Canton | Bern | |
District | Oberaargau | |
Government | ||
• Mayor | Hansjörg Muralt | |
Area | ||
• Total | 17.24 km2 (6.66 sq mi) | |
Elevation | 638 m (2,093 ft) | |
Population (Dec 2015) | ||
• Total | 4,741 | |
• Density | 280/km2 (710/sq mi) | |
Postal code | 4950 | |
SFOS number | 0954 | |
Localities | Schwarzenbach | |
Surrounded by | Auswil, Dürrenroth, Eriswil, Gondiswil, Rohrbach, Rohrbachgraben, Ufhusen (LU), Wyssachen | |
Website |
www SFSO statistics |
Huttwil is a municipality in the Oberaargau administrative district in the Swiss canton of Bern.
Huttwil is first mentioned in the 9th Century as Huttiwilare.
The Huttwil area was probably first settled in the 7th or 8th century, though it first appears in historic records in the 9th century. Initially it was part of the Upper Aargau lands of the Adalgoze family, though by the 11th and 12th centuries the Counts of Rheinfelden and Fenis-Neuchâtel owned land and rights in Huttwil. In the 12th century Fenis-Neuchâtel donated their Huttwil lands to Erlach Abbey. The village church is first mentioned in 1093 or 1108 when Agnes von Rheinfelden and her husband Berchtold II von Zähringen donated the patronage rights to the Abbey of Saint Peter in the Black Forest. The remainder of the Rheinfelden rights passed to the Zähringens through Agnes' marriage. When the Zähringen family died out in 1218 the Counts of Kyburg acquired the growing town and surrounding lands. In 1313 the Counts of Neu-Kyburg gave Huttwil to their overlord, the Austrian Habsburgs. Following the surprising Swiss Confederation and Bernese victory at the Battle of Laupen in 1339, Bernese troops destroyed the Habsburg town of Huttwil in 1340. Though the town was rebuilt and the Kyburgs remained in power Huttwil came increasingly under the Bernese sphere of influence. Over the following centuries it was owned by a Bernese noble family before being completely absorbed into the Bernese bailiwick of Trachselwald in 1516.