HILL LISTS IN THE BRITISH ISLES
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The 'mountains and hills of Great Britain', and to a lesser extent 'Ireland', are the subject of a considerable number of 'lists' which categorise them by height, topographic prominence, or other criteria. They are commonly used as a basis for peak bagging, whereby hillwalkers attempt to reach all the summits on a given list. The oldest and best known of these lists is that of the Munros, mountains in Scotland over 3,000 feet (914 m); other well-known lists include the Corbetts, Wainwrights and Marilyns.
Main articles: Munro
The 'Munros' are mountains in Scotland over 3,000 feet (914.4 m). The list was originally compiled by Sir Hugh Munro in 1891, and is modified from time to time by the Scottish Mountaineering Club (SMC).[1] Unlike most other lists, the Munros do not depend on a rigid prominence criterion for entry; instead, those which satisfy the subjective measure of being a "separate mountain" are regarded as ''Munros'', while subsidiary summits are given the status of ''tops''. There are 284 Munros and 227 further tops, all of them in the Scottish Highlands.
★ List of Munros
The 'Corbetts' are peaks in Scotland between 2,500 and 3,000 feet (762 and 914.4 m), with a relative height of at least 500 feet (152.4 m). The list was compiled in the 1920s by John Rooke Corbett, a Bristol-based climber and SMC member, and was published posthumously after it was passed to the SMC by his sister. There are 219 Corbetts, many of them in areas of Scotland which have no Munros, notably Moidart, Applecross, the Southern Uplands and the islands of Arran, Jura, Rùm and Harris.
★ List of Corbetts
The 'Donalds' are hills in the Scottish Lowlands over 2,000 feet (609.6 m). The list was compiled by Percy Donald, and is maintained by the SMC. Whether a hill is a Donald is determined by a complicated formula. A hill with a prominence of at least 30 m (98 feet) is automatically a Donald, but one with a relative height of 15 m (49 feet) may be one if it is of sufficient topographic interest. There are 89 Donalds, many of which are also Corbetts or Grahams.
★ List of Donalds
The 'Grahams' are hills in Scotland between 2,000 and 2,499 feet (609.6 and 761.8 m), with a drop of at least 150 m (492.1 feet). The list of hills fitting these criteria was first published by Alan Dawson in ''The Relative Hills of Britain''[2] as the Elsies (LCs, short for Lesser Corbetts). They were later named Grahams after the late Fiona Torbet (née Graham) who had compiled a similar list around the same time. Dawson continues to maintain the list, which contains 224 hills distributed as follows: Highlands south of the Great Glen 92, Highlands north of the Great Glen 84, Central and Southern Scotland 23, Skye 10, Mull 7, Harris 3, Jura 2, Arran 1, Rum 1, South Uist 1.
★ List of Grahams
The 'Murdos' are an attempt to apply strict objective criteria to the Munros and their associated tops. They are all the summits in Scotland over 3,000 feet (914.4 m) with a relative height of at least 30 m (98 feet). There are 444 Murdos, compared to 284 Munros or 511 Munros plus tops. The list was compiled and is maintained by Alan Dawson.[3]
★ TACit Tables: The Murdos — original published list of Murdos by region.
The 'Nuttalls' are hills in England and Wales over 2,000 feet (610 m) with a relative height of at least 15 m (49 feet). There are 443 Nuttalls in total (254 in England and 189 in Wales). The list was compiled by John and Anne Nuttall and published in two volumes, ''The Mountains of England & Wales'' [4] [5].
By including hills that rise by as little as 15 m (49 feet) above their surroundings, the list of Nuttalls is sometimes criticised for including too many insignificant minor tops. The Hewitts (see below) are one attempt to avoid this.
With the exception of Pillar Rock, a rocky outcrop on Pillar in the Lake District, the peaks of all of the Nuttalls can be reached without resort to rock climbing. As of May 2006, 116 people are known to have completed the list.
★ List of Hewitts and Nuttalls in Wales
★ List of Hewitts and Nuttalls in England
The 'Hewitts' are 'H'ills in 'E'ngland, 'W'ales and 'I'reland over 'T'wo 'T'housand feet (609.6 m), with a relative height of at least 30 m (98 feet). The English[6] and Welsh[7] lists were compiled and are maintained by Alan Dawson; the Irish[8] list is by Clem Clements. The list addresses one of the criticisms of the Nuttalls by requiring hills to have a relative height of 30 m (98 feet), thus excluding the 125 least prominent Nuttalls from the list.
There are 525 Hewitts in total: 178 in England, 137 in Wales and 211 in Ireland. (Black Mountain is counted in both England and Wales.) Scotland is excluded from the list of Hewitts as it would add a vast number of relatively minor Scottish hills to the list. (A survey has recently been completed listing all the hills in Scotland that otherwise meet the criteria for Hewitts. The list was published in three parts: the Murdos, the Corbett Tops[9], and the Graham Tops[10]. If all these were added to the list of Hewitts, it would contain 2,638 hills.)
★ List of Hewitts and Nuttalls in England
★ List of Hewitts and Nuttalls in Wales
The 'Wainwrights' are hills (locally known as ''fells'') in the English Lake District National Park that have a chapter in one of Alfred Wainwright's ''Pictorial Guides to the Lakeland Fells''. There are 214 hills in the seven guides. There are no height or distance qualifications to these hills; they are simply the ones he thought worthy of inclusion. A further 116 hills were included in the supplementary guide, ''The Outlying Fells of Lakeland''.
★ List of Wainwrights
Main articles: Marilyn (hill)
The 'Marilyns' are hills in the British Isles that have a relative height of at least 150 m (492 feet), regardless of distance, absolute height or other merit. There are currently 1,554 Marilyns in Great Britain: 1,214 in Scotland, 179 in England, 156 in Wales and 5 on the Isle of Man. (Black Mountain is on the border between England and Wales, but counted in Wales.) There are a further 453 Marilyns in Ireland. The list was compiled and is maintained by Alan Dawson.
In the Lake District especially, there is a tradition of finding the maximum number of tops, including all the major summits, which can be visited in a 24 hour period - see Lakeland 24 hour record. This usually requires fell running, and a support team. The pre-war record, set by Bob Graham, of 42 tops, has become a standard round, which has been repeated by over 1,000 people.
1. Munro's Tables, , D.A., Bearhop, Scottish Mountaineering Club & Trust, 1997, ISBN 0-907521-53-3
2. The Relative Hills of Britain, , Alan, Dawson, Cicerone Press, 1992, ISBN 1-85284-068-4
3. The Murdos, , Alan, Dawson, TACit Press, 1995, ISBN 0-9522680-3-5
4. The Mountains of England & Wales - Volume 1: Wales, , John & Anne, Nuttall, Cicerone, 1999, ISBN 1-85284-304-7
5. The Mountains of England & Wales - Volume 2: England, , John & Anne, Nuttall, Cicerone, 1990, ISBN 1-85284-037-4
6. The Hewitts and Marilyns of England, , Alan, Dawson, TACit Press, 1997, ISBN 0-9522680-7-8
7. The Hewitts and Marilyns of Wales, , Alan, Dawson, TACit Press, 1997, ISBN 0-9522680-6-X
8. The Hewitts and Marilyns of Ireland, , E.D. 'Clem', Clements, TACit Press, 1998, ISBN 0-9522680-8-6
9. Corbett Tops and Corbetteers, , Alan, Dawson, TACit Press, 1999, ISBN 0-9534376-1-2
10. Graham Tops and Grahamists, , Alan, Dawson, TACit Press, 2004, ISBN 0-9534376-2-0
The 'mountains and hills of Great Britain', and to a lesser extent 'Ireland', are the subject of a considerable number of 'lists' which categorise them by height, topographic prominence, or other criteria. They are commonly used as a basis for peak bagging, whereby hillwalkers attempt to reach all the summits on a given list. The oldest and best known of these lists is that of the Munros, mountains in Scotland over 3,000 feet (914 m); other well-known lists include the Corbetts, Wainwrights and Marilyns.
| Contents |
| Scotland |
| Munros |
| Corbetts |
| Donalds |
| Grahams |
| Murdos |
| Outside Scotland |
| Nuttalls |
| Hewitts |
| Wainwrights |
| Marilyns |
| Peak bagging culture |
| References |
Scotland
Munros
Main articles: Munro
The 'Munros' are mountains in Scotland over 3,000 feet (914.4 m). The list was originally compiled by Sir Hugh Munro in 1891, and is modified from time to time by the Scottish Mountaineering Club (SMC).[1] Unlike most other lists, the Munros do not depend on a rigid prominence criterion for entry; instead, those which satisfy the subjective measure of being a "separate mountain" are regarded as ''Munros'', while subsidiary summits are given the status of ''tops''. There are 284 Munros and 227 further tops, all of them in the Scottish Highlands.
★ List of Munros
Corbetts
The 'Corbetts' are peaks in Scotland between 2,500 and 3,000 feet (762 and 914.4 m), with a relative height of at least 500 feet (152.4 m). The list was compiled in the 1920s by John Rooke Corbett, a Bristol-based climber and SMC member, and was published posthumously after it was passed to the SMC by his sister. There are 219 Corbetts, many of them in areas of Scotland which have no Munros, notably Moidart, Applecross, the Southern Uplands and the islands of Arran, Jura, Rùm and Harris.
★ List of Corbetts
Donalds
The 'Donalds' are hills in the Scottish Lowlands over 2,000 feet (609.6 m). The list was compiled by Percy Donald, and is maintained by the SMC. Whether a hill is a Donald is determined by a complicated formula. A hill with a prominence of at least 30 m (98 feet) is automatically a Donald, but one with a relative height of 15 m (49 feet) may be one if it is of sufficient topographic interest. There are 89 Donalds, many of which are also Corbetts or Grahams.
★ List of Donalds
Grahams
The 'Grahams' are hills in Scotland between 2,000 and 2,499 feet (609.6 and 761.8 m), with a drop of at least 150 m (492.1 feet). The list of hills fitting these criteria was first published by Alan Dawson in ''The Relative Hills of Britain''[2] as the Elsies (LCs, short for Lesser Corbetts). They were later named Grahams after the late Fiona Torbet (née Graham) who had compiled a similar list around the same time. Dawson continues to maintain the list, which contains 224 hills distributed as follows: Highlands south of the Great Glen 92, Highlands north of the Great Glen 84, Central and Southern Scotland 23, Skye 10, Mull 7, Harris 3, Jura 2, Arran 1, Rum 1, South Uist 1.
★ List of Grahams
Murdos
The 'Murdos' are an attempt to apply strict objective criteria to the Munros and their associated tops. They are all the summits in Scotland over 3,000 feet (914.4 m) with a relative height of at least 30 m (98 feet). There are 444 Murdos, compared to 284 Munros or 511 Munros plus tops. The list was compiled and is maintained by Alan Dawson.[3]
★ TACit Tables: The Murdos — original published list of Murdos by region.
Outside Scotland
Nuttalls
The 'Nuttalls' are hills in England and Wales over 2,000 feet (610 m) with a relative height of at least 15 m (49 feet). There are 443 Nuttalls in total (254 in England and 189 in Wales). The list was compiled by John and Anne Nuttall and published in two volumes, ''The Mountains of England & Wales'' [4] [5].
By including hills that rise by as little as 15 m (49 feet) above their surroundings, the list of Nuttalls is sometimes criticised for including too many insignificant minor tops. The Hewitts (see below) are one attempt to avoid this.
With the exception of Pillar Rock, a rocky outcrop on Pillar in the Lake District, the peaks of all of the Nuttalls can be reached without resort to rock climbing. As of May 2006, 116 people are known to have completed the list.
★ List of Hewitts and Nuttalls in Wales
★ List of Hewitts and Nuttalls in England
Hewitts
The 'Hewitts' are 'H'ills in 'E'ngland, 'W'ales and 'I'reland over 'T'wo 'T'housand feet (609.6 m), with a relative height of at least 30 m (98 feet). The English[6] and Welsh[7] lists were compiled and are maintained by Alan Dawson; the Irish[8] list is by Clem Clements. The list addresses one of the criticisms of the Nuttalls by requiring hills to have a relative height of 30 m (98 feet), thus excluding the 125 least prominent Nuttalls from the list.
There are 525 Hewitts in total: 178 in England, 137 in Wales and 211 in Ireland. (Black Mountain is counted in both England and Wales.) Scotland is excluded from the list of Hewitts as it would add a vast number of relatively minor Scottish hills to the list. (A survey has recently been completed listing all the hills in Scotland that otherwise meet the criteria for Hewitts. The list was published in three parts: the Murdos, the Corbett Tops[9], and the Graham Tops[10]. If all these were added to the list of Hewitts, it would contain 2,638 hills.)
★ List of Hewitts and Nuttalls in England
★ List of Hewitts and Nuttalls in Wales
Wainwrights
The 'Wainwrights' are hills (locally known as ''fells'') in the English Lake District National Park that have a chapter in one of Alfred Wainwright's ''Pictorial Guides to the Lakeland Fells''. There are 214 hills in the seven guides. There are no height or distance qualifications to these hills; they are simply the ones he thought worthy of inclusion. A further 116 hills were included in the supplementary guide, ''The Outlying Fells of Lakeland''.
★ List of Wainwrights
Marilyns
Main articles: Marilyn (hill)
The 'Marilyns' are hills in the British Isles that have a relative height of at least 150 m (492 feet), regardless of distance, absolute height or other merit. There are currently 1,554 Marilyns in Great Britain: 1,214 in Scotland, 179 in England, 156 in Wales and 5 on the Isle of Man. (Black Mountain is on the border between England and Wales, but counted in Wales.) There are a further 453 Marilyns in Ireland. The list was compiled and is maintained by Alan Dawson.
Peak bagging culture
In the Lake District especially, there is a tradition of finding the maximum number of tops, including all the major summits, which can be visited in a 24 hour period - see Lakeland 24 hour record. This usually requires fell running, and a support team. The pre-war record, set by Bob Graham, of 42 tops, has become a standard round, which has been repeated by over 1,000 people.
References
1. Munro's Tables, , D.A., Bearhop, Scottish Mountaineering Club & Trust, 1997, ISBN 0-907521-53-3
2. The Relative Hills of Britain, , Alan, Dawson, Cicerone Press, 1992, ISBN 1-85284-068-4
3. The Murdos, , Alan, Dawson, TACit Press, 1995, ISBN 0-9522680-3-5
4. The Mountains of England & Wales - Volume 1: Wales, , John & Anne, Nuttall, Cicerone, 1999, ISBN 1-85284-304-7
5. The Mountains of England & Wales - Volume 2: England, , John & Anne, Nuttall, Cicerone, 1990, ISBN 1-85284-037-4
6. The Hewitts and Marilyns of England, , Alan, Dawson, TACit Press, 1997, ISBN 0-9522680-7-8
7. The Hewitts and Marilyns of Wales, , Alan, Dawson, TACit Press, 1997, ISBN 0-9522680-6-X
8. The Hewitts and Marilyns of Ireland, , E.D. 'Clem', Clements, TACit Press, 1998, ISBN 0-9522680-8-6
9. Corbett Tops and Corbetteers, , Alan, Dawson, TACit Press, 1999, ISBN 0-9534376-1-2
10. Graham Tops and Grahamists, , Alan, Dawson, TACit Press, 2004, ISBN 0-9534376-2-0
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