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Dublin/Wicklow Area   Dublin Mountains Subarea
Maximum height for area: 925 metres,   Summits in area: 89,   Maximum prominence for area: 905 metres, OSI/LPS Maps: 28B, 49, 50, 55, 56, 61, 62 For all tops   Highest summit: Lugnaquillia, 925m

Summits in area Dublin/Wicklow:
Cupidstown Hill 379m
Dublin Mountains:   Corrig Mountain 617mGlendoo Mountain 586mKippure 757mKnocknagun 555mPrince William's Seat 555mSaggart Hill 395mSeahan 647mSeefin 621mSeefingan 723mTibradden Mountain 467mTwo Rock Mountain 536m
Wicklow Mountains:   Annagh Hill 454mBallinacor Mountain 531mBallinafunshoge 480mBallineddan Mountain 652mBallycumber Hill 431mBallycurragh Hill 536mBallyteige 447mBaltinglass Hill 382mBarranisky 280mBenleagh 689mBlack Hill 602mBrockagh Mountain 557mBrockagh Mountain SE Top 470mCamaderry 698mCamenabologue 758mCamenabologue SE Top 663mCarrick Mountain 381mCarrickashane Mountain 508mCarrigleitrim 408mCarriglineen Mountain 455mCarrigshouk 573mCarrigvore 682mChurch Mountain 544mCloghernagh 800mCollon Hill 238mConavalla 734mCorriebracks 531mCorrigasleggaun 794mCroaghanmoira 664mCroghan Kinsella 606mCushbawn 400mDerrybawn Mountain 474mDjouce 725mDuff Hill 720mFananierin 426mGravale 718mGreat Sugar Loaf 501mKeadeen Mountain 653mKirikee Mountain 474mKnocknacloghoge 534mLakeen 357mLittle Sugar Loaf 342mLobawn 636mLugduff 652mLugduff SE Top 637mLuggala 595mLugnagun 446mLugnaquillia 925mMaulin 570mMoanbane 703mMoneyteige North 427mMullacor 657mMullaghcleevaun 849mMullaghcleevaun East Top 790mMuskeagh Hill 397mPreban Hill 389mScarr 641mSeskin 344mSilsean 698mSleamaine 430mSlieve Maan 550mSlievecorragh 418mSlievefoore 414mSlievemaan 759mSorrel Hill 599mSpinans Hill 409mSpinans Hill SE Top 400mStoney Top 714mStookeen 420mTable Mountain 701mTinoran Hill 312mTomaneena 681mTonduff 642mTonelagee 817mTonelagee NE Top 668mTrooperstown Hill 430mWar Hill 686m
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Prince William's Seat Mountain Dublin/ Wicklow County In Arderin List

Height: 555m OS 1:50k Mapsheet: 56 Grid Reference: O17688 18278 This summit has been logged as climbed by 384 members
I have climbed this summit: NO (You need to be a logged-in member to change this.)

Longitude: -6.239552, Latitude: 53.202179 Prominence: 63m,   Isolation: 1.3km,   Has trig pillar
ITM: 717612 718307,   GPS IDs, 6 char: PrncWl, 10 char: PrncWlmsSt

Apparently named after William, son of George IV, after a royal visit in 1821. This begs the question: What was it called before that? There must have been a native Irish name. Unfortunately Price provides no answer to this in PNCW. On the map o   Prince William's Seat is the 355th highest summit in Ireland.

Trackback: http://mountainviews.ie/summit/352/
COMMENTS for Prince William's Seat 1 2 3 Next page >>
MountainViews.ie Picture about mountain Prince William
Picture: Bray Lights.
 
Pleasant walk near Dublin with good easterly views.
Short Summary created by simon3  20 Dec 2010 One place to start is from the Glencullen River valley at around O172204 (Point A). Walk SE along the old bog road into the forest following the Wicklow Way signs until the way emerges from the trees at around O1820 1848 (Point B), a good jumping off point. Leave the way and head SW around 300m to the summit.
Another way to get to the same jumping off point is also from the Wicklow Way, this time starting from the south at the car park around O186168 (Point C).
It's also possible to get to the top on a boggy path from Knocknagun to the west.
Views from the top are fairly unimpeded towards the east coast including Bray.
Point A: O172 204 Point B: O1820 1848 Point C: O186 168

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by darrenf  15 Jul 2009 While staying in the fine an oige hostel at knockree on Friday night last I pondered where to head for the following day. Maulin, Djouce and Prince Willams Seat were all in the running.....but with the weather in the early 20s I decided that crone would be a little too congested for my liking. Headed off from the hostel early saturday morning and followed the WW right up and around knockree hill. The WW will take you right around knockree hill and onto the surrounding third class road which will eventually lead you through to the woods at curtlestown. Onwards and upwards toward prince williams seat you go. It should be noted that you must eventually leave the WW and make your own way to the summit cairn. An extended lunch stop was enjoyed on this particularly intense summers afternoon. The views over to Dalkey, Dun Laoighaire and Howth made for a nice back drop. Once the farmers tan was topped up headed straight down prince williams and pushed our way through the young spruce forest onto a number of forest trackes. Sheet 56 seems accurate with its depeciation of these tracks. Continued down on various lonsome tracks (disturbing numerous red deer on the way) until we hit the carpark at cloon wood and from there walked along the road to enniskerry before picking the WW up once again and retraced our steps back to the hostel for a deserved break. A very enjoyable little outing I must admit, and having not crossed a soul all day perhaps one of the lesser explored hills in the area...
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Glencullen Mountain?
by barryd  23 Jan 2011 Prince William's Seat and Knocknagun. These are the OS names for two popular hills between Glencullen & Glencree and people often enquire as to the identity of Prince William. It has been suggested that it's named after William, son of George IV, after a royal visit in 1821. Whilst it's possible that there might be a connection with this, in the mind of the official responsible for collecting names at the time, I think it's probable that there is an older origin... Though it's impossible to be 100% definitive, the evidence points to another mix up here by the OS. If we look at maps that predate the OS survey, the situation is different.
For the detailed explanation of this with maps, please refer to the Placenames & Heritage part of my website at http://www.eastwestmapping.ie/placenames-heritage#p10 and scroll to the bottom. In summary, I think the evidence points to the hill labelled by the OS as Prince William's Seat should 'properly' be called Glencullen Mountain and the hill labelled by the OS as Knocknagun should be Cloghnagun with the name (Fitz)Williams Seat for the large granite tor there known as Cloch na gCon.
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MountainViews.ie Picture about mountain Prince William
by padodes  28 Dec 2007 A Christmas bouquet placed by someone at the foot of the trig pillar on Prince William's Seat: even without memorials, people are remembered in the mountains. I have noticed of late that a noticeable amount of work is being done on all sides of Glencree Valley. A stretch of the Wicklow Way, passing between Prince William's Seat and Raven's Rock is being "upgraded" with a somewhat raised surface of pounded earth and sand, cut by drainage channels at intervals. Further down, on the Curtlestown side, where the way had been all but obliterated by tree felling, this development is welcome, but it isn't altogether obvious why a reasonably valid path higher up needed "improvement". At Cloon, also on the north side of the valley, ample parking space is now provided on both sides of the road, and a wide forestry track takes strollers almost up to Glencree itself. On the south side, the car park at Crone has been greatly widened and a new path has been laid out from close to Ride Rock, overlooking Powerscourt Waterfall, right across the lower forested, north-facing slope of Maulin. The intention would seem to be to improve the recreational value of all these forest areas, which, being so close to Dublin, are popular at weekends and good starting points for more strenuous hillwalks. It's true that the erosion on the adjacent Djouce and Maulin is considerable, but perhaps not all the remedial work that is being undertaken by volunteers is the best. A few months ago, I met a group of people on the path leading up to Maulin from Glensoulan who were assiduously flattening every protruding stone they could find. In the end, the only thing the path will need will be a bit of tarmacadam.
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MountainViews.ie Picture about mountain Prince William
 
by simon3  20 Jan 2003 According to the Ordnance Survey this mountain is named after the visit of Prince William in 1821 with his father, the reprobate George IV. To the west is Lugnagun, reached by an unpleasantly eroded and boggy track. Certainly there is a fine view from the top which, as you can see from the picture below, has a trig pillar. The view includes the east of Howth Head, looking over Dublin Bay and Dun Laoghaire.
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MountainViews.ie Picture about mountain Prince William
Picture: View south from Prince William's Seat
by wicklore  15 Sep 2008 Photo taken from near the summit of Prince William's Seat with Djouce, War Hill, Maulin and Tonduff visible above the misty clouds.
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COMMENTS for Prince William's Seat 1 2 3 Next page >>
(End of comment section for Prince William's Seat.)

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