Wales
Mynydd Maendy
301M
988FT
About Mynydd Maendy
Standing at a modest 301m near Llanharan, Mynydd Maendy is less a jagged peak and more a historical sentinel. Home to an Iron Age hillfort, it offers panoramic views of the South Wales Valleys for the price of a very short, slightly soggy walk.
Key Statistics
Rank
804th Highest in Wales
Parent Range
Brecon Beacons
Prominence
?
135m
Nearest Town
Minehead
Geology
Ordovician Volcanics
Nearby Fells
Find It
OS Grid Reference
SS980861
Latitude
51.5645°N
Longitude
3.4729°W
Did You Know?
- •The summit is crowned by an Iron Age hillfort, a scheduled monument that served as a strategic lookout long before the M4 motorway dominated the southern horizon.
- •Archaeological excavations have revealed evidence of Bronze Age activity, including flint tools and burial sites, suggesting the local commute has been uphill for thousands of years.
- •The fell's name translates to 'Stone House Mountain,' though these days you are far more likely to encounter a stray sheep than any actual ancient masonry.
- •It occupies a prime spot on the border of Rhondda Cynon Taf, providing a bird's-eye view of the coalfield's industrial legacy without the need for a headlamp or a cage.
- •At exactly 988 feet, it remains stubbornly twelve feet short of official mountain status. It is the topographical equivalent of a participation trophy—offering 'summit' glory with significantly less risk of developing a personality based entirely on Gore-Tex.
