The hill itself is a well-known local landmark visible on the skyline for many miles and is indeed seen as a symbol of
Monmouthshire/
Gwent. It is very popular for
hillwalking and
mountain biking and with tourists who visit
Cwmcarn Forest Drive or walk the
Gwent Ridgeway. It features heavily in local folk legends with tales of a giant buried here, and treasure, supposedly guarded by swarms of
bees. Local legend says that the
druids regarded it as a sacred site and a place of judgement. An example of the use of the term "pimple" came during a boxing commentary on national radio by the BBC's
Raymond Glendenning, who had grown up in Newport. As one of the boxers rose after being floored, Glendenning excitedly announced to the listeners that "he has a lump on his head the size of the pimple on the top of Twm Barlwm!" In years gone by people from Risca, Cwmbran and Newport enjoyed a day out "up the Tump" on Good Friday - Sunday schools, chapels, youth clubs, families and even whole streets would organise to walk to the top of the Tump - some church groups would carry a cross to the top and sing a few hymns. This tradition probably goes back to medieval times when Twmbarlwm was on the route of the Cistercian pilgrimage trail from
Llantarnam to
Penrhys. The march with church banners was certainly continued into the 1970s and attempts have been made to revive the tradition as recently as 2012. Youngsters from neighbouring areas and council estates such as that at
Bettws often walk to the top of Twmbarlwm and back home on
Good Friday, as a sort of tradition amongst friends and youngsters in the community. The hill also is noted in the work of such local writers as
W. H. Davies and
Arthur Machen. Machen described it in his autobiography
Far Off Things (1922): "As soon as I saw anything I saw Twym Barlwm, that mystic tumulus, the memorial of peoples that dwelt in that region before the Celts left the Land of Summer." This description was "borrowed" by
Dylan Thomas for
Llareggub Hill in his
Under Milk Wood. Local historian and folklorist
Fred Hando tells of the "Mountain Organ" produced by the wind on the southern slopes of the hill, and of the nearby "Pool of Avarice" the site of a great house which was swallowed wholesale by a landslip after the mistress of the house had turned away a hungry beggar. The
Cistercian Way (a
waymarked, circular,
long distance footpath developed in 1998) passes through Llantarnam,
Old Cwmbran,
Greenmeadow and
Thornhill before reaching the ancient chapel of
Llanderfel on
Mynydd Maen, and then onwards to Twmbarlwm. In the past 20 years extensive damage has occurred to both the tump and surrounding areas, caused primarily by illegal off-road motorcycles. Several attempts have been made by the local councils to limit this damage by fencing off large areas, but so far all have failed with the fences being destroyed within weeks of erection. ==Gallery==