Ysgyryd Fawr

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Ysgyryd Fawr
File:Ysgyryd Fawr Geograph.jpg
Ysgyryd Fawr from the north
Highest point
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Parent peak Sugar Loaf
Listing Marilyn
Naming
Translation Great shattered [hill] (Welsh)
Pronunciation Welsh: [ɐsˈɡɐɾɪd ˈvæuɾ]
Geography
Location Monmouthshire, Wales
Parent range Black Mountains
OS grid SO331182
Topo map OS Landranger 161

Ysgyryd Fawr is an easterly outlier of the Black Mountains in Wales, and forms the easternmost part of the Brecon Beacons National Park. The name is often anglicised to The Skirrid or Skirrid Fawr, and the mountain is also known as Holy Mountain or Sacred Hill. The spelling Skyrrid is also encountered in older literature. The lower hill of Ysgyryd Fach or 'Little Skirrid' (270m) lies about 4.5 km / 2.5 mi to the south.

It is 486 m or 1594 feet high and lies just to the north-east of Abergavenny [1], Monmouthshire, about 10 miles from the English border. The Beacons Way passes along the ridge .[1]

Geology

The distinctive shape of this Old Red Sandstone hill comprises a long ridge oriented nearly north–south, with a jagged western side resulting from ice age landslips .[2] The upper slopes of the hill are composed of Devonian age sandstones assigned to the Senni Formation (formerly known as the 'Senni Beds'). These overlie weaker mudstones of the St Maughans Formation - a situation which has contributed to the instability of the hill's steep flanks, resulting in a very large landslip at the northern end of the mountain, although the British Geological Survey map of the area (Abergavenny sheet) shows the landslide extending along the whole of the west side of the mountain. There are numerous other landslips of a similar nature on the nearby hills, although that on the Skirrid is perhaps the most well known owing to its visibility from several directions. There are also numerous rock tables on the hill, some of which were formed by the landslide, and have attracted names such as the "Devil's table".[3] The ridge is very similar in its rocky edge to that found on the Black Hill (Herefordshire) to the north in Herefordshire.

Cultural associations

Ysgyryd is a word describing the hill's shape, signifying that which has shivered or been shattered [2]. There is a rich mythology attached to the mountain ,[4][5] including a distinctive stone known as the Devil's Table. According to legend, part of the mountain is said to have been broken off at the moment of the crucifixion of Jesus. There was a local tradition that earth from the Skirrid was holy and especially fertile, and it was taken away to be scattered on fields elsewhere, on coffins, and in the foundations of churches.[6] Pilgrimages were made, especially on Michaelmas Eve, to the summit.

History

File:The Sugar Loaf and Skyrrid mountains, Monmouthshire (3375060).jpg
Engraving c 1830 of The Sugar Loaf and Skyrrid mountains
The large landslip at the north end of the mountain

The ruins of an iron–age hill fort and a mediæval Roman Catholic church, dedicated to St. Michael, lie at the summit. Rudolf Hess used to walk here when he was held prisoner at nearby Maindiff Court during the early 1940s. [4] There is an old inn to the north of the mountain, which may be one of the oldest in Wales, and is known as The Skirrid Inn. This mountain site "..a stark barren monolith.." is also mentioned in the recent book by Pete "Snapper" Winner, Soldier 'I' - The Story of an SAS Hero[7] as part of Sickener 2, his Selection for the SAS.

Ownership and access

Ysgyryd Fawr has belonged to the National Trust since 1939. The summit [3] offers views of the Sugar Loaf to the west, and Blorenge to the south [4], and the ridge is easily accessed on foot from the car park beside the B4521 Ross Road shown on the Ordnance Survey maps. The ascent is steep initially through woods, but gradual thereafter as open ground is reached, and a fine walk along the spine of the mountain to the highest point at the north end of the mountain at the trig point and chapel; allow two hours for the completion and return in good weather. A rough path follows the perimeter of the hill at a much lower level, and can be used as a circular route.

References

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  3. British Geological Survey: memoir to Abergavenny geological map sheet 232
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  6. Roy Palmer, The Folklore of (old) Monmouthshire, 1998, ISBN 1-873827-40-7
  7. ISBN 978-1-84603-995-9; pp 39

External links

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