Cnicht

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Elevation691[1] m (2,267 ft)
Prominence105 m (344 ft)
English translationknight
Cnicht
Cnicht from the south-west
Highest point
Elevation691[1] m (2,267 ft)
Prominence105 m (344 ft)
ListingHuMP, Hewitt, Nuttall
Naming
English translationknight
Language of nameWelsh
PronunciationWelsh pronunciation: [ˈknɪχt]
Geography
LocationGwynedd, Wales
Parent rangeMoelwynion
OS gridSH645466
Topo mapOS Landranger 115
Listed summits of Cnicht
NameGrid refHeightStatus
Cnicht North Top690 m (2,260 ft)Nuttall

Cnicht is a mountain in Snowdonia which forms part of the Moelwynion mountain range.[2][3][4]

Its appearance when viewed from the south-west, i.e., from the direction of Porthmadog, has earned it the sobriquet the "Matterhorn of Wales", albeit being 3,787 metres lower. In reality, Cnicht is a long ridge and, at 691 m, is the fifth-highest peak in the Moelwynion mountain range. It can be easily ascended from Croesor, the village at its foot, or, with more difficulty, from Nant Gwynant to the northwest.

Although regarded by some as a mountain in its own right, Cnicht does not have the required 150m of topographic prominence to be classed as a Marilyn.

Toponymy

The mountain's name is thought to derive from the English surname Knight, the name of a family who were formerly merchants in Caernarfon. When borrowed into Welsh, the consonants represented by K and gh were still[when?] pronounced in English, and these are retained in the Welsh name Cnicht as C (/k/) and ch (/χ/).[5]

In fiction

References

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