Main Page | See live article | Alphabetical index

Gruyères


Main street, looking towards the castle

Gruyères (2002 pop. 1,530) is a small town in the district of Gruyère, canton Fribourg, Switzerland. The town and district are famous for their Gruyere cheese.

Gruyères is situated on a small ridge overlooking the valley, its original town walls still intact. It is known from at least 923, and was the capital of a county until it was divided between Fribourg and Bern in 1555. The castle, which dates from 1493, was then the residence of a governor until 1848, when it was acquired by the Bovy family of Geneva.

The castle became the property of the canton in 1938, and has been made into a museum.

The commune includes the villages of Epagny and Pringy.

External link


Gruyères is also a commune in the Ardennes département in France.