Bishop Wilton Wold is the highest point of the Yorkshire Wolds in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. The summit, known as Garrowby Hill, lies about five miles (eight kilometres) north of Pocklington.
As with most of the wolds, it is wide, flat and agricultural in nature. The A166 road passes right by the top. However, it is a Marilyn (having topographic prominence of at least 150 m or 492 ft 2 in). There is a trig point, two covered reservoirs and an aerial.
Topography detailed from LIDAR info, in the database of British Hills, gives the summit as 247.9 metres (813 ft) on the tumulus north of the A166 road just to the east of the 246-metre (807 ft) OS map height given for the triangulation pillar that is within the reservoir.
The British artist David Hockney painted the view from the summit in 1998.
By elevation Garrowby Hill is
# 1 out of 77 in East Riding of Yorkshire
By prominence Garrowby Hill is
# 71 out of 12948 in the England Hills # 71 out of 13057 in England # 1 out of 77 in East Riding of Yorkshire
We use GPS information embedded into the photo when it is available.
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