With Napoleon acting as a mediator, representatives of the Swiss cantons met in Paris to end the conflict and officially dissolve the Helvetic Republic. When the Act of Mediation was produced on 19 February 1803 it attempted to address the issues that had torn the Republic apart and provide a framework for a new confederation under French influence. Much of the language of the Act was vague and unclear, which allowed the cantons considerable room for interpretation. and explained his role as a mediator. The next 19 sections covered the 19 cantons that existed in Switzerland at the time. The original 13 members of the old Confederation were restored and 6 new cantons were added. Two of the new cantons (
St Gallen and
Graubünden or Grisons) were formerly "associates", while the four others were made up of subject lands (i.e. controlled by other cantons) that had been conquered at different times —
Aargau (1415),
Thurgau (1460),
Ticino (1440, 1500, 1512), and
Vaud (1536). Five of the six new cantons – Graubünden was the exception – were given modern
representative governments. However, in the 13 original cantons many of the pre-revolutionary institutions remained in place. The
landsgemeinden, or popular assemblies, were restored in the democratic cantons, the cantonal governments in other cases being in the hands of a
great council (legislative) and the
small council (executive). Overall, the powers granted to the state were extremely broad. The cantons guaranteed to respect each other's constitutions, borders and independence. The highest body of government was the
Tagsatzung or Diet which was held in one of the six
vororten (or leading cities, which were:
Fribourg,
Bern,
Solothurn,
Basel,
Zürich and
Lucerne) each year. The Diet was presided over by the
Landammann der Schweiz who was the chief magistrate of the
vorort in which the Diet met during that year. In the Diet, six cantons which had a population of more than 100,000 (Bern, Zürich, Vaud, St Gallen, Graubünden and Aargau) were given two votes, the others having but one apiece. Two amendments to the Act, containing 13 and 9 articles, addressed the transition from the failed Republic to the new Confederation.
Louis d'Affry, the appointed
Landammann der Schweiz during the transition, was given extensive powers until the Diet could meet. Within the cantons, the local governments were run by a seven-member commission until new elections could be held. The closing statement of the Act declared that Switzerland was an independent land and directed the new government to protect and defend the country. ==End of the Mediation==