Castell y Gwynt: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
|height=3,041 feet | |height=3,041 feet | ||
|os grid ref=SH656583 | |os grid ref=SH656583 | ||
|latitude=53.104914 | |||
|longitude=-4.009048 | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''Castell y Gwynt''' is a mountain in [[Snowdonia]], in [[Caernarfonshire]], often classified not as a mountain in itself but as a top belonging to [[Glyder Fach]]. Castell y Gwynt rises to 3,041 feet. | '''Castell y Gwynt''' is a mountain in [[Snowdonia]], in [[Caernarfonshire]], often classified not as a mountain in itself but as a top belonging to [[Glyder Fach]]. Castell y Gwynt rises to 3,041 feet. | ||
The name "Castell y | The name "Castell y Gwynt" is Welsh, and means "Castle of the Wind". | ||
The top is included in the "Nuttall" list, but with its relative prominence measured at just | The top is included in the "Nuttall" list, but with its relative prominence measured at just 5½ feet, it is not usually classified as an independent hill (and was only included on the Nuttalls list after re-surveying in 2007). | ||
The top of Castell y | The top of Castell y Gwynt is a spiky, rocky outcrop<ref>,Nuttall, John & Anne (1999). The Mountains of England & Wales - Volume 1: Wales (2nd edition ed.). Milnthorpe: Cicerone. ISBN 1-85284-304-7.</ref> which gives it some fame as a feature perhaps more than as a summit in itself. | ||
==Trivia== | ==Trivia== |
Latest revision as of 08:47, 6 October 2017
Castell y Gwynt | |||
Caernarfonshire | |||
---|---|---|---|
Castell y Gwynt (middle-ground) from Glyder Fach | |||
Range: | Snowdonia | ||
Summit: | 3,041 feet SH656583 53°6’18"N, 4°-0’33"W |
Castell y Gwynt is a mountain in Snowdonia, in Caernarfonshire, often classified not as a mountain in itself but as a top belonging to Glyder Fach. Castell y Gwynt rises to 3,041 feet.
The name "Castell y Gwynt" is Welsh, and means "Castle of the Wind".
The top is included in the "Nuttall" list, but with its relative prominence measured at just 5½ feet, it is not usually classified as an independent hill (and was only included on the Nuttalls list after re-surveying in 2007).
The top of Castell y Gwynt is a spiky, rocky outcrop[1] which gives it some fame as a feature perhaps more than as a summit in itself.
Trivia
Castell y Gwynt and the Cantilever Stone on Glyder Fach were used in Walt Disney's film The Dragonslayer.[2]
References
Outside links
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Fach Castell y Gwynt) |