Description
Tynte's Castle is located on the east side of North Main St., Youghal,
in the northeast corner of the walled area that formed the medieval town.
It is a dominating structure on the
streetscape, providing a large presence through its west and north
elevations that front onto the thoroughfares. The castle provides a good
aspect from its upper level of the surrounding medieval town
with the medieval market place.
To the immediate south is the
medieval parish church of St. Mary's. To the northwest, and
town walls to the west on the high Youghal
plateau; town harbour and estuary of the River Blackwater to the east.
The 17th century almshouses, constructed by Richard Boyle,
are almost directly opposite on the other side of the street. The plot
on which the castle is sited is relatively flat, although there is a
perceptible fall in the ground level from west to east. This fall is in
common with the fall of ground within the medieval town. Analysis of the
topographical development of the town would suggest that
development first took place on western side of the Main Street, from at
least the late 12th century. The western side of the street was better
suited for building as it was further up from the shoreline than the
east, which was probably open beach. It appears that building on the
east side of the street occurred later in the medieval period as the
town expanded. This would have seen the reclamation of the beach line on
the eastern side of the Main Street with the construction timber and
stone riverside revetments, progressively pushing the shoreline into the
river. The sites location close to sea level would have made it
susceptible to flooding. The castle was never far from the sea, with the
line of the east boundary wall of the yard following that of the seaward
run of the town wall. Towards the end of the 17th century and especially
the 18th century, a rapid expansion eastward into the river saw the
creation of large tracts of new land behind the castle site, and it came
more into the core of the infrastructure of the town.
Urban Tower Houses
Tower-houses were a feature of the infrastructure of Irish towns and
cities of the 15th and 16th centuries. Ben Murtagh
(1988) has identified 37 surviving urban tower houses or fortified
houses in Ireland, out of a number that was undoubtedly much larger.
Excavations in Carrickfergus, Co. Antrim during the 1970's by Tom
Delaney, revealed foundations of three 16th century tower houses.
Closer to Youghal, the remains of the 15th century tower house
known as Skiddy's Castle were excavated by Dermot Twohig in Cork City in
1974/5.

Tynte's Castle is the only surviving example of several urban tower
houses that were formally to be found in Youghal. An examination of the
illustrated maps of Youghal show that at least six fortified houses are
depicted on the stylised Pacata Hibernia map of Youghal of 1589. Whilst
the more proportioned Hardiman map of 1602 shows two examples, both of
which appear to be sited close to the waterfront and have a quay outwork
on the water side of the town wall; one of these may be Tynte's castle.
As well as Tynte's castle, a further tower house that has been
definitely located is the Magazine, which was located on
the western side of the North Main Street, close to the site of the
Benedictine Priory.
Therefore, Tynte's Castle was part of the custom of building fortified
merchant houses in town settings. In common with the rural tower house,
these urban versions were built as a response to an unstable political
situation and a demonstration of the prestige and wealth of their owners
within the urban setting. It is generally accepted that urban
tower-houses were built by merchants and their families, especially in
coastal towns such as Youghal where they would have been involved in
trade. The towers were not part of the town defences
and were located on the main street or at important junctions in the
town. These tower houses afforded secure storage for
goods, good residential space for the period and an impressive edifice
that enhanced the trade of the merchant. These merchant families were a
growing urban elite that was coming to the fore in urban politics in
14th and 15th century Ireland. These affluent families became civic
office holders in the governing corporations of the towns, positioning
themselves to benefit economically and politically from such positions
as Mayors and Burgesses. By living in towns, they forged business links
and created civic cohesion in a time in which central government was
erratic at best. An important part of this identity was the construction
of urban tower house. These structures were primarily defensive
strongholds for the protection of the merchants family, vassals and
goods; and as a secondary function were a display of the wealth of
ingenuity of their owner.
The urban tower-houses are generally the same in form as their rural
counterparts. However, because of their urban locations they are often
restricted in ground room. The width of the burgage plot on which there
are built dictates their width; thus the castles generally appear to be
long and narrow. Building a tower house turned the disadvantage of these
often-narrow plots into an advantage by allowing vertical growth of the
building. Another plus was that they became very
prominent buildings in the town, especially when sited in locations that
faced onto main streets and market places or where orientated towards
the church. Tynte's Castle occupied a dominant
position in medieval Youghal, facing onto the site of the medieval
market place and having its upper apartments in view of the medieval
parish church.
Both Murtagh (1988) and O'Keeffe (1999) have recognized a distinct
separation of the commercial and residential functions of urban tower
houses. The vaulted lower storeys of the urban tower houses would have
acted as storage and retail space whilst the upper stories were
residential apartments. Movement is generally difficult from the lower
storeys to the upper in these urban tower houses. In Tynte's castle,
current access to the upper apartments is via the mural stairs, through
what is now a low entrance passage. It is possible that the commercial
and residential sides of the urban tower houses were operated
separately; perhaps having the ground floor leased to a merchant while
independent accommodation is maintained above. This may have been the
case with Tynte's castle when it was let by Robert Tynte in 1639.
Tynte's Castle is the only other example of such in County Cork along with Desmond Castle, known as the
French Prison in Kinsale.
Desmond Castle in Kinsale
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