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The Alpine Rhine Valley () is a alpine valley, formed by the ( ), the part of the between the confluence of the and at Reichenau and . It covers three countries, with sections of the river demarcating the borders between Austria and Switzerland and between and Switzerland. The valley is 93 km long. In the upper 9 km stretch, the valley width is 1.5 km with narrow (60 m) incised channel. For the next 71 km, the valley floor varies between 3 and 4 km; on approach to Lake Constance the valley widens up to 15 km.


Geography
The Alpine Rhine Valley is flanked by the Alps and its mountain ranges (especially , Plessuralpen, Rätikon Calanda, the and the ), some higher than . The highest mountain, , commences next to . At , it is the highest peak of the canton of St. Gallen, bordering the valley to its southeast.

From Reichenau, the Alpine Rhine flows east, passing and turning north, before it turns north-east at Landquart, and then roughly north, east of . From here, the Alpine Rhine forms the border between the canton of St. Gallen of Switzerland on the left, west side, and the Principality of on the east side. About further down, the Rhine then meets the federal state and finally flows into , south of (Germany), which is no longer part of the Rhine Valley. The Swiss-Austrian border follows the historical bed of the Rhine, but today the river follows an artificial within Austria for the final , parallel to the also canalised . The border also still follows the old river bed at . The Rhine Valley's upper third has the character of an Alpine valley, enclosing a bottom plain of about across. Downstream of , the valley widens considerably, developing into a broad plain, measuring some across at its lower end along the southeastern shores of Upper Lake Constance. The latter is separated from the Lower Lake Constance by a short stretch of the Rhine, called the (). From the point of the Rhine's emergence from Lower Lake Constance, it is known as the (Hochrhein).

Right tributaries of the Alpine Rhine are the Plessur in Chur, the Landquart in the town of the same name, the Ill and on the Upper Land of the Austrian plain near Feldkirch. Several rivers in drain into a canal, which carries the water to the Alpine Rhine. The Alpine Rhine has no major left tributaries; creeks joining it from the left are the Oldisbach at Chur, Cosenz at , Säge at , Tamina at , Saar at , Tobelbach at Buchs, Simml at . Though all left tributaries in the St. Gall Rhine Valley are collected by the Rheintaler Binnenkanal, which flows into Lake of Constance by , and never meets the Alpine Rhine anymore.


Subdivisions
Geographical parts of the Alpine Rhine Valley are: Upper half:
  • Chur Rhine Valley, or Grisonian Rhine Valley (): The name refers to the town of Chur, or its canton of Graubünden, respectively. It starts at Rhäzüns/ and ends east of (SG).

Lower half:

To the north, the Bündner Rheintal crosses into the Rhine valley between Sargans and Lake of Constance, where it largely forms the border between the canton of St. Gallen on the west side and Liechtenstein and Austria on its east side. The valley is simply called the Rhine Valley on either side. The Swiss sometimes also call it the St. Gall Rhine Valley in order to distinguish it from its upper half.
*St. Gall Rhine Valley (): On its western side, the Rhine Valley is politically further divided into Werdenberg (Wahlkreis) and Rheintal (Wahlkreis), though geographically it is separated by the Hirschensprung near Rüthi (SG).
*Eastern side:
**On its eastern side, the upper half of the valley is called the ().
**Vorarlberg Rhine Valley (): The lower half is also called the Vorarlberg Rhine Valley, since it belongs to the Austrian federal state . It is further divided into an upper and lower part and referred to as the Upper and Lower Lands (). The Lower Lands, sometimes also called Vorderland, stretches from the shores of Lake Constance to the small hill Kummaberg to the south, the upper part lies south of it.


Culture
The Alpine Rhine Valley is characterised by a very active culture scene. The Bregenzer Festspiele as well as the Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein have great significance and popularity beyond the region. From a regional perspective, there are many platforms, events and projects that enhance the cultural life of the inhabitants and the local actors. In , the only international artistic gymnastics tournament for male juniors and seniors in Switzerland takes place. It's named after the Alpine Rhine Valley.

An example of cross-border cooperation in the Alpine Rhine Valley is the cultural axis of the cities , St.Gallen, and : The Kunsthaus Bregenz, the Kunstmuseum St. Gallen, the Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein and the Bündner Kunstmuseum in have been cooperating since 2001. Visible signs of this cooperation of the four institutions from three countries are the joint presentations on the "ART BODENSEE" each year.


History

Middle Ages
The valley was part of the ancient province of . The settled the lower Rhine Valley in the early Middle Ages. Under the , the Rheintal between Montstein and Hirschensprung was given to the Rhinegraviate (the county of the ), and its first recorded mention is in 891; the area between and Montstein was a part of the .

Rule of the Rhine Valley was fragmented throughout the Middle Ages, with the Holy Roman Emperor, the Bishop of Constance, the Abbot of St Gall and the counts of Bregenz and Werdenberg all claiming various portions of the valley. It was not until 1348 that the Rheintal was united, under the county of Werdenberg-Heiligenberg. From when the acquired the county of Tyrol in 1363, they gradually began to gain control of the Rhine Valley, gaining the whole valley through a combination of conquest and purchase by 1395.


Vogtei Rheintal
By 1424, the Rhine Valley was largely in the hands of the counts of Toggenburg. After their extinction, Appenzell reconquered the Rheintal with Rheineck in the Old Zürich War in 1445. In 1464, Appenzell protected the Rheintal from the territorial claims of the of St Gall, particularly in a series of battles at the time of the "Rorschacher Klosterbruch", the for the St Gallerkrieg between 28 July 1489 and the spring of 1490. Nevertheless, Appenzell was forced to cede the governing protectorship of the Valley to the warring powers—the Abbey and the four cantons of Glarus, Lucerne, Schwyz, and Zürich—bringing the bailiwick into the ambit of the Old Swiss Confederation as a Gemeine Herrschaft (condominium).


Early modern history

Swiss Reformation
In 1528, the Protestant Reformation was accepted in the ; whilst minorities remained, only Altstätten, , Kriessern and Rüthi had a Catholic majority. Through the defeat of the Catholic hegemony over Switzerland and the end of the lengthy religious disputes that had riven the Confederacy, the 11 August 1712 Peace of Aarau () established , allowing both faiths to coexist in legal equality—a concept relatively common to the Holy Roman Empire since the Peace of Westphalia in 1648.


Liechtenstein
The Liechtenstein dynasty was able to arrange the purchase of the minuscule Herrschaft ("Lordship") of and county of (in 1699 and 1712 respectively) from the . On 23 January 1719, after the lands had been purchased, Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor, decreed that Vaduz and Schellenberg were united and elevated the newly formed territory to the dignity of Fürstentum ( ) with the name "Liechtenstein" in honour of "his true servant, Anton Florian of Liechtenstein". It was on this date that Liechtenstein became a sovereign member state of the Holy Roman Empire. It is a testament to the pure political expediency of the purchases that the Princes of Liechtenstein did not set foot in their new principality for over 120 years.


Napoleonic era
As a result of the , by 1806 the Holy Roman Empire was under the control of French emperor Napoleon I. Napoleon dissolved the empire; this had broad consequences for Liechtenstein: imperial, legal and political mechanisms broke down. The state ceased to owe obligations to any feudal lord beyond its borders.

In 1798, the Vogtei Rheintal unilaterally declared its independence. In the aftermath of the collapse of the Old Swiss Confederation (resulting from it being completely overrun by the French Revolutionary Armies), on 26 March 1798, a in Altstätten promulgated a constitution and elected both a magistrate () and a council (). Within weeks, however, this nascent independence was quashed with the inclusion of the Rheintal into the Helvetic canton of Säntis, with the exception of Rüthi and Lienz, assigned to canton of Linth.

With Napoleon's Act of Mediation on 19 February 1803, the Helvetic Republic and its cantonal boundaries were abolished, with the Rheintal reunited as a district of the canton of St. Gallen, stretching from to Lienz and with its capital alternating monthly between Altstätten and Rheineck.


Modern history
The was split in twain in 1831, creating , with its capital in Altstätten, and , with its capital alternating between Rheineck and Berneck, St. Gallen. This division persisted until 2003, when a constitutional revision created the modern constituency (Wahlkreis]]), with the loss of Thal to the adjacent Wahlkreis of Rorschach.


Transportation
There is no shipping on the Alpine Rhine.

Within Switzerland, the river is followed (from south to north) by the Landquart–Thusis railway line (on the right bank side between and ) and the Chur–Rorschach railway line (between and on the right bank side and between and on the left bank side). Between St. Margrethen and , the line follows the .

The Vorarlberg Railway line runs in north-south direction through the portion of the Alpine Rhine Valley. It connects and and continues northwards to (Germany).

Two cross-border railway lines traverse the Alpine Rhine. The St. Margrethen–Lauterach line (between St. Margrethen and ) and the Feldkirch–Buchs railway line (between and , continues across the Austria–Liechtenstein border to Feldkirch).

Regional train services are provided by , , St. Gallen S-Bahn and Vorarlberg S-Bahn.


See also
  • Geography of the Alps
    • List of valleys of the Alps
  • International Rhine Regulation Railway


Sources

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