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Part of the book series: The Statesman’s Yearbook ((SYBK))

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Abstract

The Principality of Liechtenstein, lying between the Austrian Land of Vorarlberg and the Swiss cantons of St. Gallen and Graubünden, is a sovereign State consisting of Schellenberg and Vaduz (formerly immediate fiefs of the Roman Empire). The former in 1699 and the latter in 1712 came into the possession of the house of Liechtenstein and, by diploma of January 23, 1719, granted by the Emperor Karl VI., the two lordships were constituted as the Principality of Liechtenstein. After the break-up of the Empire in 1806 the Principality was incorporated in the Rhine Confederation; from 1815 to 1866 it formed part of the German Confederation, since the break-up of which it has joined no similar union.

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Authors

Editor information

John Scott Keltie LL.D. (Formerly Secretary to the Royal Geographical Society, Honorary Corresponding Member of the Geographical Societies of Scotland, Paris Marseilles, Petrograd, Rome, Lisbon, Amsterdam, Brussels, Geneva, Neuchâtel Philadelphia, of the Hungarian Statistical Society, and of the Commercial Geographical Society of Paris, Member of the International Institute of Statistics)M. Epstein M.A., Ph.D. (Fellow of the Royal Geographical, of the Royal Statistical, and of the Royal Economic Societies)

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© 1926 Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited

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Scott Keltie, J., Epstein, M. (1926). Liechtenstein. In: Keltie, J.S., Epstein, M. (eds) The Statesman’s Year-Book. The Statesman’s Yearbook. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230270558_47

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