Lake Brienz 
(German:
Brienzersee, Swiss Standard German pronunciation: [ˈbriːntsərˌzeː]) is a lake just north of the Alps, in the
Canton of Bern 
in
Switzerland 
. It has a length of about 14 kilometres (8.7 mi), a width of 2.8 kilometres (1.7 mi) and a maximum depth of 260 metres (850 ft). Its area is 29.8 square kilometres (11.5 sq mi); the surface is 564 metres (1,850 ft) above the sea-level. It is fed, among others, by the upper reaches of the
Aare 
at its eastern end, the
Giessbach 
at its southern shore from steep, forested and rocky hills of the high
Faulhorn 
and Schwarzhoren more than 2,000 metres (6,600 ft) above the lake, as well as by both headwaters of the
Lütschine 
, the
Schwarze Lütschine (Black Lütschine) flowing from
Grindelwald 
, and the
Weisse Lütschine (White Lütschine) from the Lauterbrunnen Valley, at its southwestern corner. Not far north from Lütschine's inflow, the lake drains into a further stretch of the Aare at its western end. The culminating point of the lake's drainage basin is the
Finsteraarhorn 
at 4,274 metres above sea level.