Arthur M'Gynd was a Roman Catholic priest in Ireland in the 16th century. [1] He was Archdeacon of Dromore from 1518 until 1529, [2] and Rector of Tullylish and prebendary of Lann in Dromore Cathedral from 1526. [3]
Roger Boyle was an Irish Protestant churchman, Bishop of Down and Connor and Bishop of Clogher.
Thomas Winter was a priest in Ireland in the early seventeenth century.
John Whitcombe, D.D. was an Anglican bishop in Ireland in the 18th century.
Nicholas Synge was an 18th-century Irish Anglican priest.
Robert Downes DD was a Church of Ireland bishop in the mid 18th century.
Edward Young was an English Anglican priest in the eighteenth century: his senior posts were in Ireland.
William Smyth was a seventeenth century Anglican bishop in Ireland. He was the ancestor of the prominent landowning family of Barbavilla Manor, Collinstown, County Westmeath.
George Synge (1594–1652) was Bishop of Cloyne from 1638 until his death in 1652.
Denis Campbell was a Scottish Anglican priest in Ireland.
Robert Maxwell was a 17th-century Anglican bishop in Ireland.
Robert Grave was an Anglican priest in the last years of the sixteenth century.
Thomas Ram was an Anglican priest in the early seventeenth century.
Henry Jenney, was Archdeacon of Armagh from 1733 to 1738.
Thomas Wilson was a priest in Ireland during the first half of the 17th century: he was Dean of Lismore from 1611 until 1614 and Dean of Dromore from 1621 until 1622.
John Eeles (1658–1722) was an Anglican priest in Ireland in the late 17th and early 18th centuries.
Giles Eyre (1689–1749) was an Anglican priest in Ireland in the eighteenth century.
Henry Sharpe was an Anglican priest in Ireland in the first third of the 17th-century.
Daniel O'Morrey was an Anglican priest in Ireland in the 17th-century: a prebendary of Carncastle in Connor, he was Archdeacon of Dromore from 1609 until 1663.
James Mahon was an Anglican priest in Ireland during the late decade of the 18th century and the first four of the 19th.
Thomas Fairfax was an Anglican Archdeacon in Ireland in the 17th century.