Neha Patil (Editor)

Mynydd Llangeinwyr

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Listing
  
sub-HuMP, County top

OS grid
  
SS 912947

Prominence
  
90 m

Location
  
Bridgend, Wales

Elevation
  
568 m

Translation
  
Llangeinor hill (Welsh)

Topo map
  
OS Landranger 170 / Explorer 166

Similar
  
Craig y Llyn, Og Castle, Pen y Fan

Mynydd Llangeinwyr is the highest hill in the county borough of Bridgend in the coalfield of South Wales. It forms a long north-south ridge between the valleys of Cwm Garw to the west and Cwm Ogwr Fawr to the east. The highest point of the ridge is the 568-metre flat dome known as Werfa which is crowned by a trig point and prominent masts. A secondary trig point is sited at a height of 530 m near to the ancient cairn of Carn-yr-hyrddod. The hill is named from the village of Llangeinor below its southern tip.

Contents

Map of Mynydd Llangeinwyr, Blaengarw, Bridgend, UK

GeologyEdit

The hill is formed from Pennant Sandstone overlying a thick suite of South Wales Coal Measures rocks which have been heavily mined in the past. Many NW-SE aligned faults cut through the area. Numerous small landslips affect the steeper slopes of the hill.

AccessEdit

Almost all of the upper slopes of the hill are mapped as open country under the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000 and thereby open to largely unfettered public access on foot. In addition numerous public footpaths give access onto the hill from the communities in the surrounding valleys and a public bridleway runs southwest from the A4107 road across the summit plateau then steeply down to Blaengarw.

GeodesyEdit

Werfa, under the name of Llangeinor, was the origin (meridian) for the 6 inch and 1:2500 Ordnance Survey maps of all the old welsh counties except Pembroke, Denbigh and Fflint: Anglesey, Carnarvon, Merioneth, Montgomery, Cardigan, Radnor, Carmarthen, Brecknock, Glamorgan and Monmouth. It also was the origin for Shropshire and Hereford.

References

Mynydd Llangeinwyr Wikipedia