1934 in Switzerland
| |||||
Decades: |
| ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
See also: |
The following is a list of events, births, and deaths in 1934 in Switzerland.
Incumbents[]
- Federal Council:
Tournaments[]
- 1933–34 Nationalliga
- FIBT World Championships 1934 took place in Switzerland
- FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1934 took place in Switzerland
- 1934-35 Nationalliga
Establishments[]
Events by Month[]
January[]
- January 12-William Tell, a film, is released
February[]
March[]
April[]
May[]
June[]
July[]
- July 14-July 29-Zürich 1934 chess tournament took place
August[]
- August 26-1934 Swiss Grand Prix took place in Switzerland[1]
September[]
October[]
- October 2-, a documentary, is released[2]
November[]
December[]
Other[]
- Via Mala is published
- The Berne Trial is in progress, until 1935
- The Swiss Banking Act of 1934 majorly affects bank secrecy[3]
Births[]
- Kurt Müller, a sports shooter
- February 11 – Hans Bässler, a fencer
- February 14 – Michel Corboz, conductor
- February 15 – Niklaus Wirth, a computer scientist
- February 18 – Peter Zeindler, journalist, novelist and playwright.[4]
- June 30 – Ursula Bagdasarjanz, violinist
- August 13 – Karl Elsener, a football (association football) goalkeeper (d. July 27, 2010)
- October 19 – Ernst Hürlimann, a rower
- November 19 – Paul Glass, an American-Swiss composer
Deaths[]
- César Roux, a surgeon
- August 26-Hugh Hamilton, a British racing driver, is killed at the Swiss Grand Prix
References[]
- ^ Author, Kolumbus, date of publication, Unknown, "1934 Grand Prix" date accessed June 16, 2013. Archived 2013-06-19.
- ^ Author, IMDb, date of publication, Unknown, "Switzerland the Beautiful(1934)" date accessed June 16, 2013
- ^ Author, BBC, date published May 21, 2013, "Clock ticks on Swiss banking secrecy", date accessed June 16, 2013
- ^ "Zeindler Peter" (in German). Solothurn: Stiftung Bibliomedia. Archived from the original on 19 February 2014. Retrieved 27 January 2014.
Categories:
- 1934 in Switzerland
- 1934 in Swiss sport
- 1934 in Europe
- Years of the 20th century in Switzerland