Jona, Switzerland Explained

Subject Name:Jona
Within Municipality:Rapperswil-Jona
Municipality Type:former
Imagepath Coa:Jona SG-Wappen2.png
Imagepath Flag:Flag of Jona.gif
Canton:St. Gallen
Iso-Code-Region:CH-SG
District:See-Gaster
Coordinates:47.2167°N 57°W
Postal Code:8645
Municipality Code:3335
Area:20.43
Elevation:409
Population:17799
Populationof:December 2006
Website:www.rapperswil-jona.ch
Places:Bollingen, Busskirch, Curtiberg, Kempraten-Lenggis, Wagen
Neighboring Municipalities:Altendorf (SZ), Bubikon (ZH), Eschenbach, Freienbach (SZ), Hombrechtikon (ZH), Kempraten, Lachen (SZ), Rapperswil, Rüti (ZH), Schmerikon, Tuggen (SZ), Wangen (SZ)

Jona is a former municipality and since January 2007 part of the municipality of Rapperswil-Jona in the Wahlkreis (constituency) of See-Gaster in the canton of St. Gallen in Switzerland. Before the merger with Rapperswil, the former municipality of Jona comprised the villages of Jona, Bollingen, Busskirch, Curtiberg, Kempraten-Lenggis, and Wagen.

Geography

The former municipality of Jona extended from the eastern shore of the main part of Lake Zürich (Kempraten) to the northern shore of Obersee, the upper or eastern division of Lake Zurich (Bollingen, Busskirch). The former village of Jona is located on the River Jona, which flows into the Obersee.

History

The River Jona flows through the former Jona municipality in the Obersee (upper Lake Zürich). The settlement is named after the river, first recorded in Latinized form Johanna in AD 834, as super Johannam fluvium. The Middle High German form Jonun is recorded 1243.[1] The river name was likely adapted into Alemannic (Old High German) around the 8th century from a Gallo-Roman *Jauna as a weakly inflecting feminine *Jōna(n), yielding modern dialectal Jōne(n).

In 1350, Rapperswil and its castle was widely destroyed by Rudolf Brun, and the Herrschaft Rapperswil – Rapperswil and some surrounding villages including Jona – was acquired by the Habsburg family.

After 1803's Act of Mediation, Rapperswil and Jona joined the canton of St. Gallen, and the former Herrschaft Rapperswil was split into the municipalities Rapperswil and Jona. Jona, as municipality, was established in 1803 around the former boundaries of the city of Rapperswil, comprising the small rest of the former Herrschaft Rapperswil and the villages of Bollingen, Busskirch, Curtiberg, Kempraten-Lenggis, Wagen and Wurmsbach.

In the early 19th century, Jona river's hydropower was used for a larger number of watermills along the small river. As a renewable source, the river was important for industrialization of the rapidly growing village.

On January 1, 2007, the municipalities of Rapperswil and Jona merged to form a new political entity: Rapperswil-Jona has a population of 25,777 (as of December 2007). This makes it the second largest town in the canton after the capital St. Gallen itself.

Transport

The town's bus service, Stadtbus Rapperswil-Jona,[2] is provided by the Verkehrsbetriebe Zürichsee und Oberland (VZO)[3] since 2008. In addition, operates line 622 to Wagen (continues to St. Gallenkappel/Wattwil) and line 621 to Buech/St. Dyonis.

The main railway station of the former Jona municipality is, which is served by S-Bahn trains of the Zürich S-Bahn (lines S5 and S15, combined quarter-hourly service between and). Jona railway station and adjacent bus station were renovated between 2013 and 2015.

Two other railway stations in the former Jona municipality, and, are served by the S6 of St. Gallen S-Bahn (hourly service to /) and S7 of Zürich S-Bahn (half-hourly service to, and), respectively. Another railway station,, is disused since 2004. The largest railway station of the Rapperswil-Jona municipality is .

Notable people

Gallery and maps

Literature

External links

Notes and References

  1. Daniel Gut, Lunnern. Londons Zwilling im Reusstal: Eine sprach- und kulturgeschichtliche Verortung von Siedlungsnamen (2013), S. 48.
  2. Web site: Stadtbus Rapperswil-Jona .
  3. Web site: Marktgebiet . de . Market area . VZO . 2013-10-02 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131004082654/http://www.vzo.ch/marktgebiet_de.cfm . 2013-10-04 . dead .
  4. Web site: European Chitue Candidates. tibetanpoliticalreview.org. Phuntsok Yangchen. 2010-11-24. 2015-11-30.
  5. Web site: Federer gets caught up in lake access debate .