Castles of Westeros · The Iron Islands

Pyke

Seat of House Greyjoy, Lords Reaper of Pyke

Region
The Iron Islands
Raised by
Raised by the ironborn in the Dawn of Days, and half-eaten by the sea since
Age
As old as the ironborn kings, and crumbling

The stones themselves

Pyke is a castle the sea is slowly reclaiming. What was once a single stronghold on a headland has been gnawed apart by the waves until it stands in pieces — a gatehouse and outer ward on the failing cliff, and beyond them towers perched on bare stacks of rock rising from the water, joined only by rope-and-plank bridges that sway sickeningly in the wind. The Sea Tower, oldest and proudest, clings to the outermost spur, wet with spray. It is a grim, salt-eaten seat, and the Greyjoys would have it no other way.

Famous halls and features

Sieges and history

Where the story of Pyke touches the great chronicle of the realm — follow each thread back into the timeline.

A legend of Pyke

The ironborn tell of the Grey King, who ruled for a thousand years and a day, took a mermaid to wife, and slew Nagga, a sea dragon whose bones — they say — still stand as the ribs of a hall on nearby Old Wyk. It is the founding myth of the ironborn and their Drowned God both. The bones are real enough; whether they were ever a dragon, or merely a whale grown large in the telling, the maesters decline to guess.

In the textsA Game of ThronesA Clash of Kings

Common questions

Why is Pyke falling into the sea?

Pyke was built on a headland that the waves of the Iron Islands have eroded over centuries. The land between its towers collapsed, leaving them stranded on isolated sea-stacks connected by bridges, with the castle slowly crumbling into the water.

When was Pyke besieged?

Pyke was stormed during the Greyjoy Rebellion of 289 AC, when King Robert Baratheon's forces put down Balon Greyjoy's bid for independence. The south tower of the castle was breached in the assault.

Who was the Grey King?

The Grey King is the legendary founder-hero of the ironborn, said to have ruled for over a thousand years, wed a mermaid, and killed the sea dragon Nagga. His myth underpins ironborn identity and the worship of the Drowned God.

What are the words of House Greyjoy?

House Greyjoy's words are 'We Do Not Sow,' reflecting the ironborn creed of the Old Way — that they take by raiding and reaving rather than earn by labour, paying the iron price rather than the gold.