Conival
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Conival | |
|---|---|
Conival seen from Ben More Assynt. | |
| Highest point | |
| Elevation | 987 m (3,238 ft)[1] |
| Prominence | 101 m (331 ft) |
| Listing | Munro |
| Coordinates | 58°08′09″N 4°53′00″W / 58.13583°N 4.88333°W |
| Naming | |
| Native name | Scottish Gaelic: Conmheall |
| English translation | Adjoining Hill or Hill of Meeting |
| Pronunciation | Scottish Gaelic: [ˈkʰɔn̪ˠəvjal̪ˠ] |
| Geography | |
![]() | |
| Location | Assynt, |
| Parent range | Northwest Highlands |
| OS grid | NC303199 |
| Topo map | OS Landranger 15, OS Explorer 442 |

Conival (Scottish Gaelic: Conmheall [2]) is a Scottish mountain situated in Assynt in the Sutherland area of the Highland Council Area, thirty kilometres (twenty miles) north-northeast of Ullapool.
Conival is a distinct landmark when viewed from the A837 road to the west from where its conspicuous 600-metre-high (2,000 ft) western face is well seen; this flank is made up of light coloured and distinctive Cambrian quartzite rock thickened by geological thrusting.[3] The mountain reaches a height of 987 metres (3,238 feet) and is classified as a Munro. It is connected to the adjoining and better known Munro of Ben More Assynt (Beinn Mhòr Asainn) which lies 1.5 km (1 mi) to the east by a high, rough quartzite ridge. Conival has a rich diversity of attractions on its slopes making it popular not just with walkers but also geologists, biologists and speleologists.
The mountain's name is slightly enigmatic in its meaning. The name does not originate from the Norse language like many of the hills in the Assynt area; it does in fact derive from Gaelic. It was called Conamheall in the original 1891 publication of Munro's Tables,[4] which translates as “adjoining hill”[5] or “hill of meeting”[6] (a reduced form of Gaelic coinneamh "meeting", and in prepositional constructions "opposite, facing", plus meall "round hill") which is probably the correct translation as it describes its close connection to Ben More Assynt. Between 1921 and 1969 the mountain was called Cona-mheall which translates as “enchanted hill”.[7] Since 1974 it has been called by its anglicised name of Conival.

