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Thierachern

Thierachern
Coat of arms of Thierachern
Coat of arms
Thierachern is located in Switzerland
Thierachern
Thierachern
Thierachern is located in Canton of Bern
Thierachern
Thierachern
Coordinates: 46°45′N 7°34′E / 46.750°N 7.567°E / 46.750; 7.567Coordinates: 46°45′N 7°34′E / 46.750°N 7.567°E / 46.750; 7.567
Country Switzerland
Canton Bern
District Thun
Government
 • Mayor Hans Jörg Kast
Area
 • Total 7.52 km2 (2.90 sq mi)
Elevation 610 m (2,000 ft)
Population (Dec 2015)
 • Total 2,414
 • Density 320/km2 (830/sq mi)
Postal code 3634
SFOS number 0941
Surrounded by Amsoldingen, Längenbühl, Thun, Uebeschi, Uetendorf
Twin towns Sezimovo Usti (Czech Republic)
Website www.thierachern.ch
SFSO statistics

Thierachern is a municipality in the administrative district of Thun in the canton of Bern in Switzerland.

Thierachern is first mentioned in 1250 as Tierachern.

The area around Thierachern was occupied during the neolithic era, the Bronze Age and the La Tène era. The remains of a Roman era settlement and graves were discovered under the village church. Additional Roman or early medieval stone lined cists were found near Egg. Other graves, of an indeterminate age, have been found in Oberen Hasliholz, by Halterain and by Wahlen. All the prehistoric artifacts indicate that the area has had a long history of human habitation.

The village first appears in historic records as a part of the Herrschaft of Strättligen. The village church of St. Martin was first mentioned in 1228 as one of the 12 Lake Thun churches in the Strättliger Chronicle. The current church dates to 1706-08 when Abraham Dünz the Younger rebuilt the old building. When the Strättligen family died out in 1349, the village was inherited and sold to several lords over the following centuries. In 1594 the von May family from Bern acquired the village. They sold it to Bern in 1607 and the village became part of the Bernese Thun District. In 1841 the village sold a large Allmend or common field (about 23% of the total land area) to the Swiss Army for a training ground for the barracks at Thun.

In the 1960s commuters began to move into the village to escape the growing city of Thun. To house the growing population several new housing developments grew up in the municipality. Today over 80% of the population commutes to jobs in Thun. Of the jobs remaining in the municipality, about 35% are in agriculture, while only 13% are in industry.


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