When viewed from
Lucerne, the Bürgenstock has the typical mountain shape of a
Stock. In the German-speaking part of Switzerland, the term
Stock is used for a number of mountains whose shape of summits are clearly set off from the bulk. The term
Bürgenstock, composed of the descriptive words "Bürgen" and "Stock", has evolved since the mid-19th century into the geographical name for the distinctive mountain on the "Bürgen"
peninsula as seen from Lucerne. From the early
Middle Ages on, the mountain on this peninsula was called
Bürgenberg , an arbitral settlement from the year 1378, putting an end to over 38 years of dispute between the Lucerne and Nidwalden estates about the affiliation of the region extending from Kehrsiten to Mattgrat, uses the name
Bürgenberg in its records. Old maps and frontier records of the Corporation of Lucerne, which mention the – in those times – disputed forest call it the
Stadtwald am Bürgenberg (town forest on the Bürgenberg) or
Bürgenbergwald (Bürgenberg forest). On the
Dufourkarte (Dufour Map), the
topographic map of Switzerland from 1844 to 1864, the mountain ridge as a whole had no name. The highest crest was referred to as
Hametschwand. Aloys Businger first documented the geographical name Bürgenstock in 1836 in his book
Der Kanton Unterwalden. Businger calls the entire
Bürgen peninsula the
Bürgenberg. However, he refers to the highest elevation both as
Hammetschwand and
Bürgenstock. In addition, the director of the Lucerne Teachers' Training College, Niklaus Rietschi, published a private map in 1850, in which the terms
Bürgenstock together with the term
Hammetschwand are recorded for the summit. continued from 1870 until 1926. The name
Bürgenstock appears on sheet 377 of the Siegfried Map and dates back to 1896. Around 1900, the designation
Bürgenstock established itself as a general colloquial term for the entire mountain ridge, from Stansstad in the West to "Untere Nase" in the East. A corresponding entry in the "Geographischen Lexikon der Schweiz" (Geographical Dictionary of Switzerland) can be found in 1910. In the Swiss maps of our days, the name
Bürgenstock designates the mountain ridge – with the term
Hammetschwand as an alternative – as well as the location of the hotel and residential complex.
Bürgenstock, as a geographical name, can be found twice in the official Swiss index of cities and towns. The locality
Bürgenstock is listed in the postal code listing of Switzerland under the postal code 6363. Today, the residential streets of the valley communities Stansstad and Ennetbürgen, connecting the entire mountain ridge, carry the name
Bürgenstockstrasse. visible on the top == Geographical situation ==