Slieve Snaght

{{short description|Mountain in Donegal, Ireland}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2021}}

{{Use Irish English|date=April 2021}}

{{Infobox mountain

| name = Slieve Snaght

| other_name = Sliabh Sneachta

| photo = Slieve Snaght - geograph.org.uk - 76651.jpg

| photo_caption = Summit

| elevation_m = 615

| elevation_ref = [http://www.hills-database.co.uk Database of British and Irish Hills.] Retrieved 21 Jan 2012.

| prominence_m = 600

| prominence_ref =

| listing = P600, Marilyn, Hewitt

| location = County Donegal, Ireland

| range =

| map = Ireland

| map_caption = Ireland

| label_position = right

| map_size = 240

| coordinates = {{coord|55.196462|-7.33429|type:mountain_region:IE|display=inline,title}}

| grid_ref_Ireland = C424390

| type =

}}

Slieve Snaght ({{Irish place name|Sliabh Sneachta|snow mountain}})[https://mountainviews.ie/summit/250/ MountainViews.ie] is a mountain in the middle of the Inishowen peninsula of County Donegal, Ireland. It rises to a height of {{convert|615|m|ft}}, making it the highest mountain in Inishowen, and is one of the northernmost mountains of Ireland. It should not be confused with the mountain of the same name in the nearby Derryveagh range. It includes the lesser summits of Slieve Main, Crocknamaddy and Damph.

Name

The mountain is said to be so named because snow lies on its summit until late May. In Cath Maige Tuired ("The Battle of Moytura"), a tale from Irish mythology, Slieve Snaght is called one of the "twelve chief mountains" of Ireland.Augusta, Lady Gregory. [http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/celt/gafm/gafm07.htm Part I Book III: The Great Battle of Magh Tuireadh]. Gods and Fighting Men (1904) at Sacred-Texts.com. There is a tradition of pilgrimage to the top of Slieve Snaght at Lughnasa, and a holy well near the summit, called Tobar na Súl ("well of the eyes"), is said to cure blindness.

History

In 1825, the summit was one of those used as a base for mapping Ireland as part of the Ordnance Survey's Principal Triangulation. The surveyors, which included Thomas Drummond, camped on the summit and built a wall to shield themselves from the weather. Drummond's team shone a limelight from Slieve Snaght towards Thomas Colby's team on Divis {{convert|67|mi|km}} away, the first time a limelight was used for surveying.Hewitt, Rachel. Map of a Nation: A Biography Of The Ordnance Survey. Granta Books, 2011.

See also

References

{{reflist}}

{{Mountains of Great Britain and Ireland|}}

{{British hills}}

{{Mountains and hills of Ulster}}

Category:Mountains and hills of County Donegal

Category:Marilyns of Ireland

Category:Mountains under 1000 metres