The tiny, obscure alpine principality of Liechtenstein seems to exist as mainly a repository of arcane distinctions:
- At 160.4 sq. km (62 sq. mi), Liechtenstein is one of the smallest independent countries in the world (#189 out of 194 according to Nationmaster).
- In Europe, however, it is one of the bigger mini-states; San Marino, Monaco and Vatican City are smaller.
- But Liechtenstein is the smallest German-speaking country in the world, in population as well as size (there are only about 35,000 Liechtensteiners). It is also the only German-speaking country not to recognise officially any other language next to German (1).
- It is also the smallest country bordering more than one other country; Liechtenstein is hemmed in by Switzerland to the west, and Austria to the east.
- The country took its name from the dynasty that ruled it (usually it’s the other way round). The dynasty got its name from somewhere, of course, i.c. faraway Castle Liechtenstein (”bright stone”) at the edge of the Wienerwald, south of Vienna.
- By disbanding its 80-man strong army in 1868, Liechtenstein may have been the first country in the (modern) world without an organised military force.
- Prince Franz I (born 1853, ruled 1929-1938) was married to a Viennese noblewoman of Jewish descent – probably the only Jewish crowned head in Europe, an especially poignant position in those especially anti-semitic times. Franz I abdicated in 1938 because he couldn’t bear the thought of the Nazis invading while he was on the throne. As it happened, they respected the principality’s neutrality (although the local Nazi sympathisers agitated against Franz I’s wife).
- After World War II, Liechtenstein offered asylum to 500 Russian soldiers who fought on the German side – a staggeringly high number, considering the small population had difficulties feeding itself. Argentina eventually agreed to take them in.
- During the Cold War, all Liechtensteiners were forbidden entry into Czechoslovakia, which had nationalised huge tracts of land formerly held by the Liechtenstein dynasty.
- Although landlocked, Liechtenstein’s lenient banking regulations have made it such a fiscal paradise that it is often included in the top lists of ‘offshore’ tax havens.
- In 2003, the ruling prince Hans-Adam threatened to leave the country if he lost a referendum on expanding his powers. He won, making Liechtenstein the only European country in modern history where the monarchy’s power increased. The prince can now veto laws and dismiss governments – making the principality the closest thing present-day Europe has to an absolutist monarchy.
Another distinction is visible only when seeing a map of the borders of Liechtenstein’s Gemeinden (communes) such as this one. Liechtenstein as a whole has an unremarkable teardrop shape, but the subnational entities are fragmented to such an extent that, internally, Liechtenstein looks like a crazy patchwork quilt. It must be the most exclave-rich country in the world, at least relative to the rather small number of subnational entities.
I use the word ‘exclave’ instead of the more currently used term ‘enclave’. The meanings of these terms overlap, but only partially (2). And the distinction is particularly clear in these cases.
While many of these Liechtensteinian fragments might be considered exclaves, most also border more than one other territory, and consequently only three can be considered enclaves (which are totally surrounded by only one other territory): the communes of Schaan and Planken each contain an enclave of each other within their main territory (each enclave in this case naturally also being an exclave), Schaan also containing an enclave of Vaduz (which, from the point of view of Vaduz, is an exclave, of course).
- Vaduz, the capital of the country, is the most fragmented of Liechtenstein’s 11 communes. It consists of 6 distinct territorial units, one of which is a true enclave within the commune of Schaan. The name Vaduz might derive from aquaeductus (’aqueduct’) or from vallis thiudisk (’valley of the [German] people’), its either/or origin reflecting that, linguistically, Liechtenstein was in a contact zone between romance and germanic cultures.
- the commune of Balzers consists of three incontiguous areas.
- Triesenberg, consisting of two separate parts, is the largest commune of the principality.
- Schaan, the most populous commune, is all over the place, with three large chunks of territory in the north, centre and south of the principality – plus two exclaves in Planken.
- Planken, which counts less than 400 inhabitants, is the least populous of Liechtenstein’s communes. It consists of two larger bits of territory, and two smaller exclaves, one of which is also an enclave in Schaan.
- Eschen, in the north, is made up of a large, medium and small portion. Its neighbour Gamprin is made up of two parts.
- The communes of Ruggell, Schellenberg, Mauren and Triesen consist of (only) one part each.
This map found in the Atlas of Liechtenstein at Wikimedia Commons.
PS – the map looks a bit iffy just above where the name PLANKEN is printed. I assumed the corridor linking what looks like a second exclave of Schaan to that commune’s main territory is part of Schaan itself, making that exclave contiguous (and therefore not an exclave). This was consistent with the information I have on the number and location of communal enclaves. Two comments convinced me that the Schaan corridor is in fact a Vaduz exclave. Any more info, please send.
(1) See comments for more on official languages in Germany other than German.
(2) Map nerd alert: When the distinction between enclave and exclave is less important or not relevant, imprecision can be avoided by syncopating either term to ‘clave.


“The prince can now veto laws and dismiss governments – making the principality the closest thing the world has to an absolutist monarchy.”
This is a bit of an overstatement. Many monarchies in the Middle East lack even the basics of an elected parliament. Saudi Arabia, for example, is far more absolutist than Liechtenstein. It’s more fair to say it’s the closest thing to an absolutist monarchy in Europe.
Fascinating map, btw!
Comment by Barliman — October 24, 2008 @ 1:01 am
if I lived there, I’d ride my bicycle from border to border every day just for the fun of answering “you know, crossed the country…” if somebody asked where I was in the past 15 minutes :D
Comment by pascal — October 24, 2008 @ 1:24 am
you missed the fact Lichtenstein is one of only two doubly-landlocked countries…
Comment by mgh — October 24, 2008 @ 1:28 am
The “Planken corridor” looks dark bluish-green, and is therefore part of Vaduz. Thus, the purple thing is a ‘clave. So Vaduz has 6 parts and Schaan has 5 parts.
Comment by Clay Smalley — October 24, 2008 @ 1:35 am
Actually, the Wiki page on Vaduz has a map that shows this little zone above the Planken name as a part of Vaduz, making that Schaan morsel an exclave.
The complexity of the feudal reasons for such a weird division astounds and intrigues me.
Comment by EcureuilMatrix — October 24, 2008 @ 1:36 am
Curses! I have been beaten to the punch!
Comment by EcureuilMatrix — October 24, 2008 @ 1:38 am
very cool and interesting post.
more power to you! :D
Comment by Al — October 24, 2008 @ 2:21 am
Iceland is without an organised military force as well …
Comment by Björn — October 24, 2008 @ 8:00 am
I think, Vatican is even officially an absolute monarchy. (And even smaller than Liechtenstein.)
Also, in Liechtenstein, the people has the right to abolish monarchy by means of a referendum (Article 113), and the municipalities can leave the country (Article 4) (by referendum in the municipality).
Comment by Paŭlo Ebermann — October 24, 2008 @ 10:07 am
So what’s the other official language of Germany?
Comment by Tom — October 24, 2008 @ 10:16 am
In a really dull moment I once created a table of FIFA (international football) ranking points per head of population – top of the table was Liechtenstein.
Comment by Matt Penny — October 24, 2008 @ 11:20 am
Other officially recognized languages are Danish, Low German, Romany and Frisian (only used by minorities).
Comment by ak — October 24, 2008 @ 12:05 pm
@Tom: Sorbisch, in the east, around Bautzen and Cottbus.
Comment by Gérard — October 24, 2008 @ 12:05 pm
“So what’s the other official language of Germany?”
The german states are required to allow official correspondence in sorbian (Brandenburg), danish (Schleßwig-Holstein), low german and friesian (i.e. Niedersachsen).
Comment by Nils — October 24, 2008 @ 12:14 pm
How can Vatican City “officially” be called an absolutist monarchy when it isn’t a even monarchy? I mean the title of “Pope” is an elected one and isn’t, and indeed couldn’t be, hereditary.
Comment by Unlucky Irish — October 24, 2008 @ 2:58 pm
THANK YOU!! I’ve been obsessed with Lichtenstein since I was a child. I didn’t realize the complexity of the ‘claves until now. Keep up the wonderful posts!
Comment by tk — October 24, 2008 @ 3:26 pm
@15: There have been plenty of elective monarchies in history. The Holy Roman Emperor was elected by a college of dignitaries; the kings of Macedon were elected by the army, those of Sparta by the assembly of elders (in both cases from within specified families). The Scots monarchy was originally elective, and the list goes on.
Comment by chris y — October 24, 2008 @ 3:39 pm
Great post from an outstanding blog.
Having small countries made up of smaller provinces must be a sort of tradition in central Europe. Switzerland follows exactly the same pattern (26 cantons), even though (to complicate matters even more) its geographic position united 3 languages (4 if you count the local dialect) in one country.
Comment by jp — October 24, 2008 @ 3:49 pm
[...] always intriguing Strange Maps has a very useful map pf Liechtenstein showing the eleven enclaves (some of which are possibly [...]
Pingback by Carpentry In Liechtenstein at Hooting Yard — October 24, 2008 @ 4:49 pm
An 1871 European map of German-speaking lands would reveal a similar patchwork of small provinces. What did it take – two world wars to “fix” the enclaves/exclaves of Germany and of Austria……
The national currency is the Swiss Franc…… Isn’t the Liechtenstein economy heavily dependent on the Swiss economy. It makes you wonder how such tiny countries are able to survive.
Comment by bourgoises pig — October 24, 2008 @ 7:07 pm
@ Barliman:
You are right, of course. Amending…
@ Clay Smalley, EcureuilMatrix:
It looks like you are correct. Will review the post.
@ Bjorn:
Indeed, but Iceland was under Danish sovereignty (at least formally) until 1944. So Liechtenstein was earlier.
@ Paulo Ebermann:
You may be right about the Vatican, but it is basically a sovereign bureaucracy, not a state with a ‘real’, ‘native’ population.
Thanks for the extra info on Liechtenstein!
Comment by strangemaps — October 24, 2008 @ 8:27 pm
Denmark was an elective monarchy, too, until about 1660 (by then it had been in the same family for generations, though).
I’m reminded of some of the old maps of my own and neighbouring parishes. Quite a few farms here and there belonging to other parishes than the ones they were geographically in. I even think they’re called enclaves, too.
Story goes that the local squires used the farms when the stakes went high in their cardgames.
Comment by Sili — October 24, 2008 @ 8:55 pm
How did the family of Liechtenstein obtain this area?
Interesting to know Czechoslovakia had nationalised the estates of the family of Liechtenstein.
You have a very nice exhibition in Vienna, at the Liechtenstein Museum.
I was this summer in Vienna.
However, I didn’t visit this museum.
http://www.liechtensteinmuseum.at
Comment by Edwin — October 24, 2008 @ 9:14 pm
[...] The exclaves of Lichtenstein — A bit of comic opera cartographic weirdness from one of the world’s smallest countries. [...]
Pingback by [links] Link salad for a Friday morning | jlake.com — October 24, 2008 @ 10:19 pm
Re the corridor above Planken: If you look on Mapquest and zoom in, you can see the boundaries of the local communities (Gemeinden), and even though it doesn’t state what belongs to what, it is very clear that the Green bit above Planken is separate from the main purple bit to the left of it and from the little purple bit to the right of it, and it is not a connecting corridor.
The fragmentation is not so weird if one takes into account their rationale. Territorial contiguity in these areas is not an issue. What IS an issue is that every commune has controls some mountainous timber land and some alpine meadows for cattle grazing, in addition to the agricultural areas in the lowlands near the villages. And that’s what most of those exclaves are.
it would have been interesting to point out that a more important administrative division divides Liechtenstein into a northern (”lower”) and a southern (”higher”) part. These names have nothing to do with their elevation, but with elevation of the territory as a whole, but with the elevation of their lower and most populated areas along the Rhine. This line passes between separate Eschen and Gamprin and everything north of them, from Planken and Schaan and everything south of them. It is noteworthy that there are NO exclaves across that line.
Comment by Shunra — October 25, 2008 @ 1:00 am
These maps don’t show much.
You can only see some kind of a division, the actual landscape, and the structure, are not visible.
You cannot see any densely populated areas.
Comment by Edwin — October 25, 2008 @ 10:57 am
Die Gründung der Rheinischen Republik
die Vereinigte Rheinische Bewegung
Treuebekenntnis zum Deutschen Reich
Comment by Edwin — October 25, 2008 @ 2:01 pm
Who said “no man is an island”? It looks like every man is an island in Liechtenstein.
Comment by Cappy — October 25, 2008 @ 3:25 pm
Meaning
Human beings do not thrive when isolated from others. Donne was a Christian but this concept is shared by other religions, principally Buddhism.
Origin
This is a quotation from John Donne (1572-1631). It appears in Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions, Meditation XVII:
“All mankind is of one author, and is one volume; when one man dies, one chapter is not torn out of the book, but translated into a better language; and every chapter must be so translated…As therefore the bell that rings to a sermon, calls not upon the preacher only, but upon the congregation to come: so this bell calls us all: but how much more me, who am brought so near the door by this sickness….No man is an island, entire of itself…any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind; and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.”
Comment by Edwin — October 26, 2008 @ 2:50 pm
Before the Capetians, France was an elective monarchy, as well.
Great post.
Comment by Carl — October 26, 2008 @ 5:15 pm
I remember Lichtenstein playing England at home at football (soccer). The ‘national stadium’ resembled a village playing field!
Also, Lichtenstein participates in the reciprocal arrangemnts for medical care that exist within the European Economic Area (the EU plus the remaining former EFTA countries). Apart from the fact that you cannot choose which hospital to go to in Lichtenstein (because there’s only one), what foreign nationals covered by the reciprocal arrangements have to do to claim back their medical fees is to take the appropriate form along to the Ministry of Finance itself in Vaduz. Nothing quite like going straight to the top, is there?
Comment by Robert Day — October 26, 2008 @ 11:21 pm
Aren’t you forgetting Andorra? Smaller than Liechtenstein and also borders two countries.
Rgds,
Jos.
Comment by Jos. — October 27, 2008 @ 7:19 am
Many kingdoms in Central and Eastern Europe were elective monarchies.
Like the Polish and the Hungarian.
Comment by Edwin — October 27, 2008 @ 5:48 pm
Liechtenstein is recognized by neither the Czech Republic nor Slovakia due to Liechtenstein’s refusal to recognize them.
Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_unrecognized_countries
Comment by Magnus — October 28, 2008 @ 9:51 am
@ Edwin: I added a relief to the map, check http://img379.imageshack.us/my.php?image=liechtensteinadministrasd5.jpg
It’s interesting to see that many ‘claves are somewhere high up in the mountains where nobody lives. Do they bring up there their stock in summer?
Comment by Lars — October 28, 2008 @ 11:33 am
[...] the featuring of the internal political structure of Lichtenstein on the Strange Maps blog, Brian Hayes asks for the chromatic number of [...]
Pingback by Michi’s blog » Blog Archive » On the chromatic number of Lichtenstein — October 28, 2008 @ 6:41 pm
“Liechtenstein is recognized by neither the Czech Republic nor Slovakia due to Liechtenstein’s refusal to recognize them.”
That is probably because those two countries (or their predecessors) stole all Liechtenstein territory within their borders
Comment by Art — October 28, 2008 @ 6:48 pm
[...] more than one other territory, and consequently only three can be considered enclaves… [Strange Maps blog] « Emoticons from the [...]
Pingback by Really Sarah Syndication » Blog Archive » Word of the Day — October 28, 2008 @ 7:41 pm
Hello Lars,
Thanks for your industry.
The relief map makes things much more clear.
It improves the picture, the image of the country.
I’d like to read more about Liechtenstein and the relations with other regions in Europe.
For instance, the estates in the Czech and Slovak Republics.
Comment by Edwin — October 29, 2008 @ 5:35 pm
Liechtenstein’s communes are an inheritance from feudal times, when maps showing different lordships throughout Europe would be similar because a family might own land here and there, sometimes in places very far apart. It is a system we might think of going back to – not the feudalism, but different countries having exclaves and enclaves within each others’ borders – as a cure for the horrors of nationalism.
Comment by Axel — October 30, 2008 @ 5:07 pm
31: “I remember Lichtenstein playing England at home at football (soccer). The ‘national stadium’ resembled a village playing field!”
my mother once remarked that the only qualification needed to get into their national team was the ability to play uphill :)
Comment by Kaktus — October 31, 2008 @ 2:31 pm
Some pictures of this “village playing field” called Rheinpark Stadion – offering more then 6000 seats and often hosting teams like German or Italian national teams and their top players:
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Rheinpark-Stadion
FC Vaduz is playing in the Swiss! top league this season.
Comment by Lars — October 31, 2008 @ 3:12 pm
Territorial integrity is een belangrijk leerstuk binnen de studie van Internationale Betrekkingen.
Hoewel het een verzinsel is.
Comment by Edwin — October 31, 2008 @ 6:52 pm
Lars,
your maps is quite an improvment. Is the relief map in the background from some open source? If so, you might consider contributing it to Wikipedia, too.
Comment by Till — November 5, 2008 @ 8:22 pm
I have always admired this small country. I visited it in 2005 and I really liked it too, amazing landscape. The entire country looked like a bunch of villages though, not much going on there I quess. I bought my wallet from there, it still says Fürstentum Liechtenstein on it, although a bit worn down.
Comment by h2ppyme — November 8, 2008 @ 10:42 am
Your post quotes ‘Nationmaster’ as the source for the countrylist. That’s actually Wikipedia, as is stated in very small print at the far bottom of the page you refer to :-)
Comment by Martijn — November 26, 2008 @ 1:10 pm
[...] The ‘claves of Liechtenstein, en Strange Maps. [...]
Pingback by Los enclaves de Liechtenstein « Fronteras — November 26, 2008 @ 4:13 pm
[...] why I found this article here on Strange Maps more than interesting. Check out Liechtenstein and how they [...]
Pingback by Welcome to Liechtenstein : Bockscar — November 29, 2008 @ 8:17 am
No one mentioned that it is the last remaining piece of the Holy Roman Empire.
Comment by Adam — December 17, 2008 @ 7:54 am
очень полезно!!! Автор просто красавец!!!
Comment by Аделина — January 1, 2009 @ 9:48 pm
When someone tell me abou Europуб I remeber Vaduz Castle – unforgetable!
Comment by DomoBlogger — January 8, 2009 @ 8:23 pm
Interesting fact about 500 Russian soldiers. I didn’t know about that.
Other thins are also interesting!
Thank you.
Comment by Webdsgn — January 8, 2009 @ 8:29 pm
[...] few days ago the strange and wonderful Strange Maps blog called attention to this map of the Principality of [...]
Pingback by Pro Information Center » Blog Archive » The Chromatic Number of Liechtenstein — January 27, 2009 @ 2:49 am
Vielen Dank
Comment by moon — July 3, 2009 @ 5:28 am
Muchas gracias
Comment by sun — July 4, 2009 @ 7:51 am