Classroom lesson · Festival · 🇨🇭 Switzerland

Swiss National Day - 1 August

Bonfires on the mountains and lanterns in the streets

A bonfire glowing on a Swiss mountainside on 1 August

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Every year on 1 August, Switzerland celebrates its national day - the day people remember the moment, over 700 years ago, when three small mountain communities promised to be friends and help each other. Today the day is celebrated with bonfires on the mountain peaks and paper lanterns in towns.

Tell me more

The story begins in 1291. Three communities - Uri, Schwyz and Unterwalden - met in a meadow called Rütli, beside a lake, and promised to look after each other. That promise is the moment Switzerland is said to have begun. The country's name, in fact, comes from one of the three communities: Schwyz.

On 1 August, the high peaks of Switzerland are lit up by hundreds of bonfires. The tradition began long ago, when people used signal fires to send news from one mountain to another. Today the fires are lit purely for the celebration - one bonfire on each peak, blazing in the dark.

Children in many Swiss towns walk in evening parades carrying paper lanterns with the Swiss cross cut out of them, so the candle inside shines through the shape. Lots of communities hold concerts, picnics in parks, and free sausage barbecues. Lots of houses fly the Swiss flag - a white cross on a red square.

The Swiss flag is one of only two square flags in the world (the other is the flag of Vatican City). Almost every other country's flag is a rectangle. The cross stands for friendship and helping each other, not for any religion. The red cross of the Red Cross charity is based directly on the Swiss flag - just with the colours swapped.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Switzerland began with three communities promising to help each other. What kind of promises do groups of friends make to each other today?
  2. 02Why might bonfires on the mountains be a moving thing to see?
  3. 03Most countries' flags are rectangles. Switzerland's is a square. If you designed your own country's flag, what shape and pattern would it be?
Try this

Classroom activity

Make a class lantern. Take a paper cup, cut a shape into the side (a flag, a star, a moon), and put a little battery tea-light inside. Switch off the classroom lights and walk slowly around the room together. Imagine doing this on a mountain village street on 1 August.