Territet

Territet (Montreux)
Location of Territet (Montreux)
Map
Territet (Montreux) is located in Switzerland
Territet (Montreux)
Territet (Montreux)
Territet (Montreux) is located in Canton of Vaud
Territet (Montreux)
Territet (Montreux)
Coordinates: 46°25′N 6°55′E / 46.417°N 6.917°E / 46.417; 6.917
CountrySwitzerland
CantonVaud
DistrictRiviera-Pays-d'Enhaut
Elevation
400 m (1,300 ft)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (Central European Time)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (Central European Summer Time)
ISO 3166 codeCH-VD
Websitehttp://www.territet.ch
Profile (in French),

Territet (Montreux) is a locality which is part of the Montreux commune, in the Vaud canton, Switzerland.

Geography[edit]

Aerial view (1968)

Territet is located between the city center of Montreux and the village of Veytaux, within the municipality of Montreux, on the lake Geneva shore.

History[edit]

Territet unites several formerly separate hamlets. While the lower part (below the main road) was always called Territet, there were two other localities on the higher ground called Collonge and la Veraye.

While the very first hotel of the region was opened in neighbouring Veytaux in 1829, other hotels were soon built in Territet, like the "Chasseur des Alpes" in 1840 which became in 1855 the Hôtel des Alpes-Grand Hôtel. The current Montreux city centre consisting of rich farmland was developed only later, which is why the Orient Express train would stop in the Territet station and not in Montreux. Foreign tourists started to stay in Territet from 1848 onwards and their numbers picked up from 1861 when the train station was opened. A number of VIPs visited Territet in the following years, among whom emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria in 1893 and his wife Empress Elisabeth of Austria (Empress Sissi) who came on her own four times.[1]

In 1879 the first phone to be installed in Switzerland was installed in à Territet. Territet also had the first tennis court in Switzerland. It was created in 1894, exclusively for the use of the English tourists (Swiss or other nationalities weren't allowed to access this tennis court!). The Territet–Glion funicular railway, one of the oldest in Switzerland, was opened in 1883.[2]

In 1931 representatives of two branches of exiled Spanish Borbons signed in Territet a draft agreement, intended to mend the dynastic feud; named Pact of Territet, it has never been implemented.

Monuments[edit]

Territet is home to three museums, the Swiss national audiovisual museum (French: musée national suisse de l'audiovisuel), the new Ruzo museum and the carriage museum (French: musée de la calèche). There are several important monuments, among which the French: Hôtel des Alpes-Grand Hôtel which is listed as a cultural property of national significance in Switzerland, an Anglican Church, St. John’s Montreux (built 1875-78) and a statue of Empress Sisi of Austria created by Italian sculptor Antonio Chiattone [de] in 1902.

Key celebrities[edit]

Statue of Empress Sisi of Austria by Antonio Chiattone [de], inaugurated in 1902

Transport[edit]

Territet can be reached by:

A second funicular with 4 intermediate stations operated from 1910 to 1992: Funiculaire Territet–Mont Fleuri.[3]

Teaching institutions[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Evelyne Lüthi-Graf, Article on Territet in Dictionnaire historique de la Suisse online, version of 5 July 2000
  2. ^ Lausanne, Riviera suisse, by Laure de Gonneville, Guide Petit Futé 2008–2009, p.230
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference fmsw was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

Other source s[edit]

  • Gilbert de Montmollin, Le Grand-Hôtel et Hôtel des Alpes de Territet, Audiorama Musée suisse de l'audio-visuel, 1994, 10 pages
  • Dave Lüthi, Le Grand-Hôtel et Hôtel des Alpes à Territet (1840–1975): Reflet du développement de Montreux au XIXe siècle : Historique et description, Musée du Vieux-Montreux, 1998
  • Most of the information in this article was translated from the French Wikipedia pages fr:Territet and fr:Hôtel des Alpes-Grand Hôtel on 9 September 2015.

External links[edit]

Media related to Territet (Vaud) at Wikimedia Commons