"46.80638888888889 8.045555555555556" . . . . . . "46.80638885498047"^^ . . "Die Schlacht bei S\u00F6renberg war eine bewaffnete Auseinandersetzung zwischen Obwalden und dem Entlebuch im heutigen Kanton Luzern im Jahre 1380."@de . "Die Schlacht bei S\u00F6renberg war eine bewaffnete Auseinandersetzung zwischen Obwalden und dem Entlebuch im heutigen Kanton Luzern im Jahre 1380."@de . . . . . . . "POINT(8.0455551147461 46.80638885498)"^^ . . . . . "The Battle of S\u00F6renberg was fought in 1380, between the Entlebuch (at the time subject to the House of Habsburg) and Obwalden (a canton of the early Swiss Confederacy). It was the culmination of a conflict over the right to alpine pastures (alps). The immediate cause was a cattle raid at an alp now known as Schlachtalp, at the slope of the Brienzer Rothorn, above the village S\u00F6renberg."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Battle of S\u00F6renberg"@en . . "6242"^^ . . . . . . "Entlebuch" . . . "Obwalden" . "Schlacht bei S\u00F6renberg"@de . "Battle of S\u00F6renberg"@en . "8.045555114746094"^^ . . . . . . . . . . "1380"^^ . "15212404"^^ . . "968805088"^^ . . . . . . . . "Bitwa pod S\u00F6renbergiem \u2013 konflikt wewn\u0119trzny w Szwajcarii pomi\u0119dzy mieszka\u0144cami Obwalden i Entlebuch w kantonie Lucerny w roku 1380. Do roku 1300 w r\u0119kach Habsburg\u00F3w znalaz\u0142a si\u0119 wi\u0119ksza cz\u0119\u015B\u0107 regionu Wolhusen i Entlebuch. Do roku 1380 sporne ziemie zwr\u00F3cone zosta\u0142y jako zastaw jej prawowitym w\u0142a\u015Bcicielom, kt\u00F3rzy rozpocz\u0119li spory o alpejskie \u0142\u0105ki. W roku 1380 dosz\u0142o do niewielkiej bitwy pomi\u0119dzy mieszka\u0144cami Obwalden i Entlebuch u st\u00F3p szczytu Brienzer Rothorn niedaleko S\u00F6renberg. Wed\u0142ug starych poda\u0144, uzbrojeni mieszka\u0144cy Obwalden napadli na pasterzy z Entlebuch, kt\u00F3rych po uprzednim podtopieniu we wrz\u0105tku pozbawiono \u017Cycia. Przed dalszymi atakami uratowa\u0142 miejscowych Peter von Thorberg, kt\u00F3ry zaoferowa\u0142 naje\u017Ad\u017Acom pobliskie tereny w zastaw. Jednym z bohater\u00F3w starcia pod S\u00F6renberg mia\u0142 by"@pl . . . . . "Brienzer Rothorn photographed from the Tanngrindel"@en . "The Battle of S\u00F6renberg was fought in 1380, between the Entlebuch (at the time subject to the House of Habsburg) and Obwalden (a canton of the early Swiss Confederacy). It was the culmination of a conflict over the right to alpine pastures (alps). The immediate cause was a cattle raid at an alp now known as Schlachtalp, at the slope of the Brienzer Rothorn, above the village S\u00F6renberg. As recorded by Renward Cysat in c. 1600, the cattle raid took place in 1374, and the tensions between Entlebuch and Obwalden continued for several years. Finally, the two sides agreed to send a herald each to meet at the border, who would either declare war or make peace. The two heralds met and were later found to have killed each other. As the heralds did not return, both sides assumed the other had taken their herald, and mobilised for war. The two forces met at Schlachtalp. The Entlebuch side was victorious and took the Obwalden banner, which was kept until modern times in the tower at Sch\u00FCpfheim. Cysat reports that the banner was lost because the banner bearer of Obwalden believing the battle was already won climbed on top of a rock, challenging any man of Entlebuch to come and take the banner. A man called Ring R\u00FCegk (Ring R\u00FCegg) of Entlebuch climbed the rock, killed the banner bearer and took the banner, turning the battle in favour of Entlebuch. Later legend adds additional elements. The hero of Entlebuch now appears under the name Windtr\u00FCeb (also Wintr\u00FCeb, Wintr\u00FCb). In the cattle raid, the Obwalden invaders are said to have thrown the tenant of Schlachtalp into his cauldron of boiling rennet, killing him. They then collected the cattle and drove it away.Windtr\u00FCeb, the tenant of the neighboring Blattalp, is said to have pursued the invaders, catching up with them at M\u00F6rhalp, back in Obwalden territory beyond the Glaubenb\u00FChl Pass. The raiders were drunk from celebrating, and Wintr\u00FCeb entered the stable unnoticed and managed to steal back the cattle. The legend goes on to report a deception carried out by Windtr\u00FCeb involving cow bells, which for the 14th century is an anachronism.In the battle, the same Windtr\u00FCeb is said to have killed the Obwalden banner bearer. In this legendWindtr\u00FCeb was assassinated by the Obwalden party a few years later, in 1384, at Steinibach, halfway between Fl\u00FChli and Sch\u00FCpfheim. In the aftermath of the battle, the Entlebuch sought an alliance with Lucerne, and became a subject territory of that city, and by extension part of the Swiss Confederacy, in 1385. At the Battle of Sempach in 1386, Obwalden and Entlebuch fought side by side. A memorial stone at Steinibach (Krutacker) marked the site of Wintr\u00FCeb's assassination.The memorial stone to Windtr\u00FCeb at Steinibach remained standing into the 17th century. In the Swiss peasant war of 1653, as the peasants were uniting under , the people of Fl\u00FChli rallied at the stone for their battle prayer, vowing to build a chapel at the spot should they return victorious. They were defeated and killed without exception, and the stone has since been weathered away.An undated wooden plaque exhibited at Schlachtalp has an inscription mentioning the discovery of a document (Schrift) discovered when the previous wooden building was torn down which explained the name Schlacht.A modern Wintr\u00FCeb monument was erected at the bridge of Fl\u00FChli in 1980."@en . . . . "Battle of S\u00F6renberg"@en . . . "Bitwa pod S\u00F6renbergiem"@pl . . . . "Bitwa pod S\u00F6renbergiem \u2013 konflikt wewn\u0119trzny w Szwajcarii pomi\u0119dzy mieszka\u0144cami Obwalden i Entlebuch w kantonie Lucerny w roku 1380. Do roku 1300 w r\u0119kach Habsburg\u00F3w znalaz\u0142a si\u0119 wi\u0119ksza cz\u0119\u015B\u0107 regionu Wolhusen i Entlebuch. Do roku 1380 sporne ziemie zwr\u00F3cone zosta\u0142y jako zastaw jej prawowitym w\u0142a\u015Bcicielom, kt\u00F3rzy rozpocz\u0119li spory o alpejskie \u0142\u0105ki. W roku 1380 dosz\u0142o do niewielkiej bitwy pomi\u0119dzy mieszka\u0144cami Obwalden i Entlebuch u st\u00F3p szczytu Brienzer Rothorn niedaleko S\u00F6renberg. Wed\u0142ug starych poda\u0144, uzbrojeni mieszka\u0144cy Obwalden napadli na pasterzy z Entlebuch, kt\u00F3rych po uprzednim podtopieniu we wrz\u0105tku pozbawiono \u017Cycia. Przed dalszymi atakami uratowa\u0142 miejscowych Peter von Thorberg, kt\u00F3ry zaoferowa\u0142 naje\u017Ad\u017Acom pobliskie tereny w zastaw. Jednym z bohater\u00F3w starcia pod S\u00F6renberg mia\u0142 by\u0107 niejaki Windtr\u00FCeb, o kt\u00F3rym przypomina pomnik postawiony w wiosce Fl\u00FChli, a tak\u017Ce tablica upami\u0119tniaj\u0105ca w Krutacher. Sp\u00F3r o alpejskie \u0142\u0105ki zako\u0144czy\u0142 si\u0119 ostatecznie w roku 1381 zawarciem wzajemnego porozumienia pomi\u0119dzy gminami."@pl . . . .