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Fribourg| City in west Switzerland, capital of the canton of Fribourg, on a loop of the Sarine River about 30 km/19 mi southwest of Bern; population (2000) 35,500. It is renowned for its food products, especially the cheese of the Gruyère district and chocolate. Other industries include breweries, metal-working, and chemicals. |
| It is the seat of a bishopric and the centre for Swiss Catholicism. The main building is the Gothic cathedral of St Nicholas with a famous organ of 7,900 pipes. There are many other notable churches, a 16th-century town hall, and the Catholic state university founded in 1889. The medieval part of the city lies high above the river. |
Fribourg| Canton in southwest Switzerland, bordering Lake Neuchâtel; area 1,670 sq km/645 sq mi; population (1999 est) 234,300. It lies in the foothills of the Alps, the highest point being 2,395 m/7,858 ft. The chief rivers in the canton are La Broye and La Sarine. Gruyère cheese is made in Fribourg, its capital. |
| Fribourg is on the French–German linguistic frontier of Switzerland; two-thirds of its inhabitants speak French and they are almost entirely Roman Catholic. Fribourg is essentially a rural canton; market gardening and fruit farming are important in the north, whereas industry is mainly concentrated in the city of Fribourg. Tourism is also highly developed. |
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