In 1891, a Scottish gentleman with a pair of sturdy boots and a methodical mind sat down with a map and counted every mountain in Scotland over 3,000 feet. He found 283. What he could not have anticipated was the obsession he was about to unleash.

Who Was Hugh Munro?
Sir Hugh Thomas Munro was a founding member of the Scottish Mountaineering Club. In 1891, he published a meticulous survey called Munro’s Tables — a list of every Scottish summit reaching at least 3,000 feet (914 metres).
He categorised them into “Munros” — proper, distinct mountain tops — and “tops,” the high points along a Munro’s ridge. The distinction seems simple. It has been argued about ever since.
Munro himself never completed his own list. He died in 1919, still a handful of summits short. He had saved Càrn Cloich-mhuilinn for last, thinking it beneath his efforts. He kept putting off the Inaccessible Pinnacle on Skye, hoping the weather would improve. It never quite did.
What Counts as a Munro?
To qualify, a mountain must be in Scotland and reach at least 3,000 feet. But it must also stand as a distinct summit — not merely a high shoulder on a larger ridge. That judgment call has fuelled debates for over a century.
The official list, maintained by the Scottish Mountaineering Club, has been revised multiple times as surveying technology improves. Peaks have been added and removed. What counts as “sufficiently distinct” remains gloriously subjective.
Today there are 282 Munros — one fewer than Munro counted himself, after a 1997 revision reclassified a summit in Mull as a mere “top.” Munroists grumbled. They usually do.
The First Person to Climb Every One
The Reverend A.E. Robertson became the first known person to complete every Munro, finishing in 1901. He did much of his travelling by bicycle, hiking to each summit from whatever road he could reach — in tweeds.
For decades, completions were rare. Then, in the 1980s and 1990s, outdoor culture surged across Britain. Hill-walking became mainstream. The Scottish Mountaineering Club began formally registering “Rounds,” and the numbers climbed.
Thousands of people have now completed every Munro. Many have done it more than once. Some in winter conditions only. The oldest known completer was in their 80s. A few have run the entire list in under 40 days.
The One That Stops Everyone
Of all 282 Munros, one mountain stops most walkers in their tracks: the Inaccessible Pinnacle on the Isle of Skye. Unlike every other Munro — most of which need nothing more than boots and determination — the “In Pinn” requires a rope, a partner, and a head for heights.
It is a near-vertical blade of rock jutting from the Black Cuillin ridge like a broken tooth. Many Munroists save it for last. Others hire a guide specifically for this one summit. Some spend years circling the idea before finally committing.
It was this peak, more than any other, that gave Munro himself pause. He knew it was there. He never quite got round to it.
Why People Keep Coming Back
Finishing the Munros rarely means stopping. Many Munroists move straight on to the Corbetts — Scotland’s mountains between 2,500 and 2,999 feet. Some repeat the whole round in winter, when snow turns every ridge into something harder and more beautiful.
Scotland maintains a remarkable network of unlocked mountain shelters for those caught out by the weather. These remote stone bothies are part of what makes multi-day mountain trips possible for ordinary walkers.
And the landscape itself rewards the effort. When you walk on ground that dates back three billion years, the effort feels earned differently. Scotland’s high mountains are not dramatic young peaks. They are worn, patient, and enormous in a quiet way that takes time to understand.
What Hugh Munro Actually Created
Hugh Munro gave Scotland something he almost certainly never intended: a reason for thousands of people to return, year after year, until the last summit is ticked off and the list is done. And then, quite often, to start again.
The mountains were indifferent to him and his tables. They are indifferent to all of us. That, perhaps, is exactly why it works. The list gives you a purpose. The hills provide the rest.
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