Swiss Salvadorans are Salvadoran citizens with Swiss ancestry. There are currently 506 Swiss citizens residing in El Salvador. In El Salvador there are many people with Swiss ancestry.[1]

Swiss Salvadoran
Schweizer Salvadorianer
Switzerland El Salvador
Total population
500+ (2009)
Regions with significant populations
San Salvador, Santa Tecla, Usulután Department, San Miguel
Languages
Salvadoran Spanish, German, French
Religion
Christianity (Protestantism and Roman Catholic)
Related ethnic groups
Swiss people

Immigration

edit

When El Salvador became independent, it was not an attractive destination for Swiss but when the country introduced and made a transition to coffee, many Swiss came to the country. In the 1870s, a Swiss colony was created in El Salvador. In 1880, due to liberal laws that encouraged immigration and the handing over of land for coffee cultivation, many Swiss came to the country seeing these opportunities. In the following years, Switzerland signed agreements with El Salvador; for a commercial coalition, mainly the export of coffee, this attracted many more Swiss. The Swiss settled mainly in places of coffee plantations such as the municipalities of Santiago de María, Berlín, and Alegría, but cities that received the most were San Miguel, San Salvador, and Santa Tecla.[2][3] The majority of Swiss that arrived to El Salvador originated from the canton of St. Gallen, with a few others coming from Bern and Jura.

Bilateral relations Switzerland–El Salvador

edit

In 1883, Switzerland and El Salvador signed a friendship and commercial coalition agreement, years later, in 1913 the federal government appointed the first honorary consul in San Salvador. In 1920, the consulate moved to San Miguel, where some Swiss had settled as coffee growers. In 1948, the position was transferred to the capital San Salvador. In 1959, it was promoted to consulate general and in 1968 to embassy. The latter became involved in the civil war between the left-wing guerrilla and the army in the late 1970s, The assassination of Hugo Wey, Chargé d'Affaires in San Salvador, led to the closure of the embassy in 1979, until in 1982 the federal government reopened a representation in the form of a consular agency (since 1997 honorary consulate general). With the end of the civil war in 1992, bilateral relations improved. Switzerland intensified its development policy. In 1996 both states signed an investment protection agreement.[4]

In trade agreements, the main products that El Salvador exported to Switzerland were coffee and chocolate, and Switzerland exported products such as cheese and watches to El Salvador.

Swiss surnames found in El Salvador

edit

Aeschbacker, Anliker, Arnold, Barem, Bolens, Bolliat, Burkard, Casati, Dürler, Egli, Escher, Euchner, Fickewirth, Forrer, Haltmayer, Heinzelmann, Hemmeler, Herger, Hirlemann, Homberger, Hugentobler, Iseli, Kurz, Langenegger, Langner, Merz, Oberholzer, Roshardt, Rutz, Salomon (Jewish origin), Sickhard, Scheidegger, Schildknecht, Schlageter, Schürmann, Spranger, Stoffel, Sutter, Trachsler, Weiser, Wuntz, Zimmermann, Zoller, etc.

Notable Salvadorans of Swiss descent

edit

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "El Salvador". Retrieved 8 November 2021.
  2. ^ "El Salvador". Retrieved 8 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Ser extranjero en Centroamérica. Génesis y evolución de las leyes de extranjería y migración en El Salvador: siglos XIX y XX". Retrieved 8 November 2021.
  4. ^ "Bilateral relations Switzerland–El Salvador". Federal Department of Foreign Affairs FDFA. Retrieved 8 November 2021.