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Why does Switzerland have "CH" as its identifying letters?
You know, the ones you get on stickers on the backs of cars: "E" for Spain (Espana), "GB" for Great Britain, and so on.... Why "CH"...?
14 Answers
- 1 decade agoFavorite Answer
Confœderatio Helvetica is the Latin name for Switzerland. Therefore, CH is used. You also see it in CHF, the Swiss Franc
See Swissworl.org
- ServetteLv 61 decade ago
For historical reasons, Switzerland's official name is still the "Swiss Confederation". In Latin this is Confoederatio Helvetica, from which the country's international abbreviation, CH, is derived. However, this is in fact a misnomer: a confederation is an alliance of autonomous entities. Since 1848 Switzerland has been a federation: a grouping of entities with a central authority.
The word Helvetica refers to the Helvetians, one of the many Celtic tribes living in what is now Switzerland at the time of the Roman conquest.
- 1 decade ago
When all the letters for the nations were being given out , the anyone that could have been good for Switzerland, were taken ,so they ended up using the Ch which is helvation for Switzerland: But after living in Switzerland for 17 years I convinced the Swiss people the Ch derived from CHeese.
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- RolfLv 61 decade ago
The code allocated to Switzerland originates from the Latin name "Confederatione Helvetica"--Helvetian Confederation.
- 1 decade ago
Its Confederatio Helvetia. Its on all their coins and the swiss franc is shown as CHF.
- Anonymous1 decade ago
Because Sweden already took "S".
"CH" is next after "S" in Schweitz, German for Switzerland.
- 1 decade ago
it means "confederatio helvetica" which means helevtic confederation. we swiss call ourselves helvetics.
- ocean.denisLv 51 decade ago
Its not the "Latin" name though, its in Romanche, which is one of the oficial Swiss languanges, spoken by very few...
Sounds latin mixed with german, its very weird.