| | Overview (Source: Frommers) | Switzerland's largest city is surely among the most beautiful in all of Europe, and even today, Zurich retains much of its 19th-century charm. Situated on the northern shore of Lake Zurich in the heart of the country, the city is both large enough to offer all amenities to its visitors and small enough for you to discover on your own. Zurich is the capital of a canton of the same name that joined the Swiss Confederation in 1351. Most of the more than 375,000 residents speak a form of German called Schwyzerdütsch (Schweizerdeutsch, in standard German). A former seat of the Reformation, Zurich is a staunchly Protestant -- some say Puritan -- city. Zurich is less industrialized today than in recent decades, its economy having shifted away from heavy industry and toward the service industries, high-tech computer development, banking, insurance, and diplomacy. The factories that remain within the city limits run on electricity, and as a result, the city's skies remain relatively unpolluted. Zurich is also a major center of international finance; the headquarters of at least five major banks are on Bahnhofstrasse, in the heart of the city. The bankers are sometimes referred to as gnomes because many of the banks store mountains of gold in underground vaults. Zurich produces one-fifth of the nation's income, but it's far from being a dreary city of commerce. It's long been a great center of liberal thought, attracting such scholars as Lenin, Jung, Joyce, and Mann. The
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