French preacher Guillaume Farel brings the teachings…
1530 CE
French preacher Guillaume Farel brings the teachings of the Protestant Reformation to the Neuchâtel area in 1530.
Neuchâtel’s first recorded ruler, Rudolph III of Burgundy, mentioned Neuchâtel in his will in 1032.
The dynasty of Count Ulrich von Fenis took over the town and its territories in 1034.
The dynasty prospered and, by 1373, all the lands now part of the canton belonged to the count.
In 1405, the cities of Bern and Neuchâtel entered a union.
The lands of Neuchâtel had passed to the lords of Freiburg in the late fourteenth century as inheritance from the childless Elisabeth, Countess of Neuchâtel, to her nephews, and then in 1458 to margraves of Sausenburg who belonged to the House of Baden.
Their heiress, Jeanne de Rothelin, and her husband, the Duke of Longueville, had inherited it in 1504, after which the French house of Orléans-Longueville (Valois-Dunois).
Neuchâtel's Swiss allies then occupied it from 1512-1529 before returning it to its widowed Countess Jeanne de Hochberg, chatelaine of Rothelin, dowager duchess of Longueville.