Tynte baronets
There have been two baronetcies created for persons with the surname Tynte, one in the Baronetage of England and one in the Baronetage of Ireland. Both are extinct.
The Tynte Baronetcy of Halswell, Somerset, was created in the Baronetage of England for Halswell Tynte on 26 Jan 1674.
The Tynte Baronetcy of Dunlavin, County Wicklow was created in the Baronetage of Ireland for James Stratford Tynte on 24 August 1778. He was the only son of Robert Tynte and Lady Elizabeth Stratford, daughter of John Stratford, 1st Earl of Aldborough. He had one daughter but no male heir.
Tynte family origins
One of the legends that surround the families who have lived in Halswell House is that of the first Tynte who, as a young knight of the Arundel Family, is said to have gone on the Third Crusade with King Richard the Lionheart. He was singled out for his bravery at the 1192 battle of Ascalon. The King observing him is supposed to have said:".. the maiden knight had borne himself like a lion, and had done work enough for six crusaders"
For which service to the Christian cause the King is said to have conferred on the young Knight his armorial bearings, a lion argent on a field of gold between six crosslets of the first and the motto Tynctus Cruore Saraceno. Examples of the Tynte family crest can be seen in the church of St Edwards in Goathurst, and the inn The Tynte Arms in nearby Enmore.
However, later historians have concluded that the Tyntes only rose from the yeomanry in the late 16th century.
Tynte baronets, of Halsewell, Somerset (1674)
- Sir Halswell Tynte, 1st Baronet MP for Bridgwater 1679–89
- Sir John Tynte, 2nd Baronet
- Sir Halswell Tynte, 3rd Baronet MP for Bridgwater 1727–30
- Sir John Tynte, 4th Baronet
- Sir Charles Kemys Tynte, 5th Baronet MP for Monmouth 1745–47 and Somerset 1747–74.
Tynte baronets, of Dunlaven, County Wicklow (1778)
- Sir James Stratford Tynte, 1st Baronet. Baronetcy extinct on his death.
Anglo-Irish background
A friend of Richard Boyle, 1st Earl of Cork, Tynte was married in 1612 to Richard Boyle's cousin Elizabeth, widow of Sir Edmund Spenser the poet. In time, Tynte's son Robert had two daughters, Catherine who married William Hyde of Carrigoneda, and Jane, who married Major Nicholas Pyne of Mogeely, son of the highly successful English settler Henry Pyne, and was the mother of Sir Richard Pyne, Lord Chief Justice of Ireland. Tynte's other son Henry would marry Sir Percy Smyth's eldest daughter, Mabel. Sir Robert Tynte outlived Henry by two years, dying in 1663. He was buried at Kilcredan graveyard, near Ladysbridge.