Click on the regions on the map to zoom in and locate the mountains.
The regions, with their names and numbering are taken from The Relative Hills of Britain by Alan Dawson.

The Marilyns

A Marilyn is "a hill of any height with a drop of 150 metres (nearly 500 ft) or more on all sides".  So it is a hill which is relatively high compared to its surroundings.

A sub-Marilyn is a hill which just fails (by up to 10m) to qualify on the drop rule, i.e. drop of 140m to 149m on all sides.

The Marilyns are so-called by the list's compiler, Alan Dawson, after the more famous mountain list - the Munros.  The full list of Marilyns includes Scotland.

(Marilyns appear as Class=Ma on this website, and sub-Marilyns as Class=sMa).

My Progress
I have completed 111 (32.7%) of 339 Marilyns of England, Wales and the Isle of Man [Map*]
(112 (7.2%) of 1555 including Scotland [Map*])
(65 (36.7%) of 177 English Marilyns [Map*])
(46 (29.3%) of 157 Welsh Marilyns [Map*])
(0 (0%) of 5 Manx Marilyns [Map*])
(1 (0.1%) of 1216 Scottish Marilyns [Map*])

(* please note that map may be slow to load)

League Table - compare your progress with other members of this site.


Acknowledgements

Thanks to Alan Dawson - I highly recommend his website, and book The Relative Hills of Britain, published by Cicerone Press.  The list of Marilyns are reproduced from this book by his kind permission.