Outline of Liechtenstein
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to Liechtenstein:
Liechtenstein is a tiny, doubly landlocked alpine country located in Western Europe, bordered by Switzerland to its west and by Austria to its east.[1] Mountainous, it is a winter-sport destination. It is also a tax haven. Despite this, it is not heavily urbanised. Many cultivated fields and small farms characterise its landscape both in the north (Unterland) and in the south (Oberland). It is the smallest German-speaking country in the world.
General reference
[edit]- Pronunciation:
- Common English country name: Liechtenstein
- Official English country name: The Principality of Liechtenstein
- Common endonym(s):
- Official endonym(s):
- Adjectival(s): Liechtenstein
- Demonym(s): Liechtensteiner
- Etymology: Name of Liechtenstein
- ISO country codes: LI, LIE, 438
- ISO region codes: See ISO 3166-2:LI
- Internet country code top-level domain: .li
Geography of Liechtenstein
[edit]- Liechtenstein is...
- Location:
- Northern Hemisphere and Eastern Hemisphere
- Eurasia
- Time zone: Central European Time (UTC+01), Central European Summer Time (UTC+02)
- Extreme points of Liechtenstein
- Land boundaries: 76 km
- Switzerland 41 km
- Austria 35 km
- Coastline: none[a]
- Population of Liechtenstein: 35,365 (December 31, 2007) – 204th most populous country
- Area of Liechtenstein: 160 km2
- Atlas of Liechtenstein
Environment of Liechtenstein
[edit]- Climate of Liechtenstein
- Renewable energy in Liechtenstein
- Geology of Liechtenstein
- Protected areas of Liechtenstein
- Wildlife of Liechtenstein
Natural geographic features of Liechtenstein
[edit]- Glacial alpine valley
- Mountains of Liechtenstein
- Rivers of Liechtenstein
- Eschnerberg
- World Heritage Sites in Liechtenstein: None
Demography of Liechtenstein
[edit]Regions of Liechtenstein
[edit]Ecoregions of Liechtenstein
[edit]List of ecoregions in Liechtenstein
Administrative divisions of Liechtenstein
[edit]Administrative divisions of Liechtenstein
Municipalities of Liechtenstein
[edit]- Capital of Liechtenstein: Vaduz
- Cities of Liechtenstein
Government and politics of Liechtenstein
[edit]- Form of government: parliamentary representative democratic monarchy
- Capital of Liechtenstein: Vaduz
- Elections in Liechtenstein
Branches of the government of Liechtenstein
[edit]Executive branch of the government of Liechtenstein
[edit]- Head of state: Prince of Liechtenstein, Hans-Adam II
- Head of government: Prime Minister of Liechtenstein, Daniel Risch
- Cabinet of Liechtenstein
Legislative branch of the government of Liechtenstein
[edit]Judicial branch of the government of Liechtenstein
[edit]- Supreme Court of Liechtenstein (Oberster Gerichtshof)
- Princely Superior Court of Liechtenstein (Fürstliches Obergericht)
- Princely Court of Liechtenstein (Fürstliches Landgericht)
- Princely Superior Court of Liechtenstein (Fürstliches Obergericht)
Foreign relations of Liechtenstein
[edit]Foreign relations of Liechtenstein
- Diplomatic missions in Liechtenstein
- Diplomatic missions of Liechtenstein
- Liechtenstein–Switzerland relations
- Liechtenstein–United States relations
International organization membership
[edit]The Principality of Liechtenstein is a member of:[1]
Law and order in Liechtenstein
[edit]- Constitution of Liechtenstein
- Crime in Liechtenstein
- Human rights in Liechtenstein
- Law enforcement in Liechtenstein
Military of Liechtenstein
[edit]- Command
- Forces
- Military history of Liechtenstein
- Military ranks of Liechtenstein
Local government in Liechtenstein
[edit]Municipalities of Liechtenstein
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History of Liechtenstein
[edit]- Timeline of the history of Liechtenstein
- Current events of Liechtenstein
- Military history of Liechtenstein
Culture of Liechtenstein
[edit]- Architecture of Liechtenstein
- Art in Liechtenstein
- Cuisine of Liechtenstein
- Festivals in Liechtenstein
- Languages of Liechtenstein
- Media in Liechtenstein
- National symbols of Liechtenstein
- People of Liechtenstein
- Pfadfinder und Pfadfinderinnen Liechtensteins
- Prostitution in Liechtenstein
- Public holidays in Liechtenstein
- Records of Liechtenstein
- Religion in Liechtenstein
- World Heritage Sites in Liechtenstein: None
Sports in Liechtenstein
[edit]- Liechtensteiner National Badminton Championships
- Football in Liechtenstein
- Liechtenstein at the Olympics
Economy and infrastructure of Liechtenstein
[edit]- Economic rank, by nominal GDP (2007): 147th (one hundred and forty seventh)
- Agriculture in Liechtenstein
- Banking in Liechtenstein
- Communications in Liechtenstein
- Companies of Liechtenstein
- Currency of Liechtenstein: Frank/Franc
- ISO 4217: SUS
- Energy in Liechtenstein
- Health care in Liechtenstein
- Mining in Liechtenstein
- Liechtenstein Stock Exchange
- Tourism in Liechtenstein
- Transport in Liechtenstein
Education in Liechtenstein
[edit]See also
[edit]- Index of Liechtenstein-related articles
- List of Liechtenstein-related topics
- List of international rankings
- Member state of the United Nations
- Outline of Europe
- Outline of geography
Notes
[edit]- ^ Liechtenstein and Uzbekistan are the only two doubly landlocked countries.
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Liechtenstein". The World Factbook. United States Central Intelligence Agency. 2 July 2009. Retrieved 23 July 2009.
External links
[edit]Wikimedia Atlas of Liechtenstein
- www.liechtenstein.li - Official site by the Principality of Liechtenstein
- Tourism Liechtenstein - The official tourism page of Liechtenstein
- Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein - The national Gallery of Liechtenstein
- Hochschule Liechtenstein - University of Applied Sciences Liechtenstein
- History of Liechtenstein: Primary documents
- Liechtenstein travel guide from Wikivoyage
- Photos of Liechtenstein
- "Arukikata" Liechtenstein, Traveller's guide written in Japanese/English
- Russian Portal about Principality of Liechtenstein
- Harry's Mountain Walks in Liechtenstein The only English language guide to routes up and among Liechtensteins fabulous Alpine peaks; also available in German.
- Sarah Lyall, "For Rent: One Principality. Prince Not Included." New York Times, 25 March 2003