The Malvern Hills are a range of hills in the English counties of Worcestershire and Herefordshire. It has been designated by the Countryside Agency as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
There are two passes through the hills, the Wyche cutting (Wyche means salt) and the A449 road just north of Herefordshire Beacon. The Herefordshire Beacon is also known as the British Camp, as the remains of an iron age hill fort can be found at the summit.
The Malvern hills are made of some of the most ancient rock in England, mostly igneous and metamorphic rocks from the late pre-Cambrian, around 600 million years old.
There is a tiny cave near the ridge of the hills called Clutter's Cave (or Giant's Cave or Waum's Cave, after the spring that once lay beneath it).
| Hill | Elevation (ft) | Elevation (m) |
|---|---|---|
| End Hill | 1,079 ft | 329 m |
| Table Hill | 1,224 ft | 373 m |
| North Hill | 1,303 ft | 397 m |
| Sugarloaf Hill | 1,207 ft | 368 m |
| Worcestershire Beacon | 1,394 ft | 425 m |
| Summer Hill | 1,253 ft | 382 m |
| Perseverance Hill | 1,066 ft | 325 m |
| Jubilee Hill | 1,073 ft | 327 m |
| Pinnacle Hill | 1,174 ft | 358 m |
| Black Hill (north) | 1,011 ft | 308 m |
| Black Hill (south) | 886 ft | 270 m |
| Herefordshire Beacon (British Camp) | 1,109 ft | 338 m |
| Millennium Hill | 1,073 ft | 327 m |
| Broad Down | 958 ft | 292 m |
| Hangman's Hill | 906 ft | 276 m |
| Swinyard Hill | 889 ft | 271 m |
| Midsummer Hill | 932 ft | 284 m |
| Hollybush Hill | 794 ft | 242 m |
| Raggedstone Hill (east top) | 820 ft | 250 m |
| Raggedstone Hill (west top) | 833 ft | 254 m |
| Chase End Hill | 625 ft | 191 m |
In 1884 the Malvern Hills Conservators were established through act of Parliament to preserve the natural aspect of the hills and protect them from encroachments.
English composer Edward Elgar, who was from the area, often walked, cycled, and reportedly flew kites on these hills. He wrote a cantata in 1898 entitled Caractacus, which employs the popular legend of his last stand at British Camp. In 1934, during the composer's final illness, he told a friend: "If ever after I'm dead you hear someone whistling this tune (the opening theme of his cello concerto) on the Malvern Hills, don't be alarmed. It's only me."
The poet W.H. Auden taught for three years at the Downs School, Colwall, in the Malvern Hills. He spent three years at the school in the 1930s and wrote some of his finest early love poems there, including: This Lunar Beauty; Let Your Sleeping Head; My Love, Fish in the Unruffled Lakes; and Out on the Lawn I Lie in Bed. He also wrote a long poem about the hills and their views, called simply The Malverns.
Archaeological sites in England | Prehistoric sites in England | Herefordshire | Hills of Worcestershire | Mountains and hills of England | Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty in England | Visitor attractions in Herefordshire | Malvern
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"Malvern Hills".
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