Lake Starnberg Explained

Lake Starnberg
Basin Countries:Germany
Type:Natural lake
Catchment:314km2
Inflow:Steinbach or Ostersee-Ach
Outflow:Würm
Area:58.36km2
Length:20.2km (12.6miles)
Max-Depth:127.8m (419.3feet)
Volume:2998e6m3
Elevation:596m (1,955feet)
Residence Time:21 years
Coords:47.9039°N 11.3072°W
Pushpin Map:Germany#Germany Bavaria
Cities:Starnberg, Ammerland, Seeshaupt, Tutzing, Feldafing, Possenhofen

Lake Starnberg, or Starnberger See pronounced as /de/) — called Lake Würm or Würmsee pronounced as /de/ until 1962 — is Germany's second-largest body of fresh water, having great depth, and fifth-largest lake by area.[1] It and its surroundings lie in three different Bavarian districts, or Landkreise. The lake is property of the state and accordingly managed by the Bavarian Administration of State-Owned Palaces, Gardens and Lakes.

Located in southern Bavaria 25km (16miles) southwest of Munich, Lake Starnberg is a popular recreation area for the city and, since 1976, one of the wetlands of international importance protected by the Ramsar Convention. The small town of Berg is famous as the site where King Ludwig II of Bavaria was found dead in the lake in 1886. Because of its associations with the Wittelsbach royal family, the lake is also known as Fürstensee (Prince's Lake). It is also mentioned in T. S. Eliot's poem The Waste Land.

Overview

The lake, lying in a zungenbecken or glacial hollow, was created by ice age glaciers from the Alps, and extends 21km (13miles) from north to south and has a width of 3–5 km (2-3.5 miles) from east to west. It has a single small island, the Roseninsel, and a single outlet, the Würm river (because of this river the lake was called the Würmsee until 1962). Its major inflow comes from a small river called the Steinbach or Ostersee-Ach, which flows through a chain of small lakes to the south, the Osterseen. The lake's water is of excellent quality due to the introduction in the 1960s of a circular sewerage system which collects wastewater from the settlements around the lake and transports it to a treatment plant below the lake's outlet at Starnberg. Bronze fish-hooks and a dugout dating to the 9th or 8th century BCE have been discovered at the lake, and there are still some professional fishers, most of them continuing a family tradition.

Hikers and cyclists can circumnavigate the lake using a path approximately 49km (30miles) long. Access to the lake shore is not possible everywhere, since it is mostly private property. Passenger ferries and excursion ships have operated on the lake since 1851. Today they are operated by the Bayerische Seenschifffahrt company, using modern diesel-engined ships.[2] [3]

Name

The earliest surviving mention of the lake, as Uuirmseo, is in an 818 document referring to Holzhausen, now part of Münsing.[4] This name became Wirmsee, already recorded during the reign of the Holy Roman Emperor Louis the Bavarian (1314 - 1347).[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bayregio . The lake Starnberger See . BAYregio-Starnberger-See.de . 8 August 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110825075624/http://www.bayregio-starnberger-see.de/starnberger-see-english.php . 25 August 2011 . dead .
  2. Web site: Lake Starnberg . Bayerische Seenschifffahrt GmbH . 2018-12-24.
  3. Web site: Geschichtliche Hintergründe . de . Historical Background . Bayerische Seenschifffahrt . 2011-07-11 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111210004130/http://www.seenschifffahrt.de/de/unternehmen/geschichte.asp . 2011-12-10 .
  4. Würmsee, in: Arbeitskreis für Ortsgeschichteforschung der Würmregion, Materialien zur Ortsgeschichtsforschung in der Würmregion, Gauting 2001, p. 245.
  5. Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, S. 289, Regesten Kaiser Ludwigs des Bayern - Die Urkunden aus Klöstern und Stiftsarchiven im Bayerischen Hauptstaatsarchiv und in der Bayerischen Staatsbibliothek, ed. Menzel, 1996 This name is derived from the Wirm, now spelt Würm], the only river which flows out of the lake, at Starnberg; in the 19th century, the spellings were changed to Würm and Würmsee.

    In the late 19th century, a railway connection between Munich and Starnberg made the lake an accessible destination for trips from the city. Trains departed from a wing of the Munich Central Station which was known as the 'Starnberg branch station' (Starnberger Flügelbahnhof) and the lake came increasingly to be known as Lake Starnberg; its name was finally officially changed in 1962.

    Settlements

    Clockwise from the north, the following settlements about the lake:

    Off the western shore, south of Possenhofen, is the small Roseninsel (Rose Island), the site of a royal villa of Ludwig II.

    Further reading

    • Martinus Fesq-Martin, Amei Lang and Michael Peters (Eds.). Der Starnberger See - Natur und Vorgeschichte einer bayerischen Landschaft. Munich, 2008.
    • A. Link. Der Starnberger See und seine Umgebung vom Würmtal bis zum Alpenrand. Gauting-Buchendorf, 1982.
    • Susanne Westendorf. Das Starnberger-SeeBuch - eine Tour um den See, kleiner Führer. Munich, 1995.
    • Lorenz von Westenrieder. Beschreibung des Wurm- oder Starenbergersees und der umherliegenden Schlösser, samt einer Landkarte. 1783, repr. Dachau: Bayerland, 2006.
    • Oskar Weber and Josef Wahl. Am Starnberger See und die Würm entlang. Dachau, 1995.

    External links