Dacre Hamilton Powell was Archdeacon of Cork from 1899 until 1912. [1]
Powell was born in Portarlington and educated at Trinity College, Dublin. [2] He was ordained in 1868 and began his career with a curacy at Carrigaline. He also served at Fermoy, Cork, Macroom and Shandon. [3]
The Book of Dimma is an 8th-century Irish pocket Gospel Book originally from the Abbey of Roscrea, founded by St. Crónán in County Tipperary, Ireland. In addition to the Gospels of Luke and John, it has an order for the Unction and Communion of the Sick. The surviving illumination of the manuscript contains a number of illuminated initials, three Evangelist portrait pages, and one page with an Evangelist's symbol. The pocket gospel book is a distinctively Insular format, of which the Stowe Missal and Book of Mulling are other leading examples.
George Otto Simms was an archbishop in the Church of Ireland.
Roger Boyle was an Irish Protestant churchman, Bishop of Down and Connor and Bishop of Clogher.
William Edward Meade was a Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross.
Thomas Brownell Gibson was Dean of Ferns from 1908 until 1926.
William Joseph Wilson was the Dean of Cloyne from 1908 to 1934.
Horace Townsend Fleming was the Dean of Cloyne from 1884 to 1909.
James Henry Hingston was Archdeacon of Cork from 1948 until 1954.
Thomas Tuckey Hallaran (1830–1915) was Archdeacon of Ardfert from 1915 to 1922.
William Charles Gorman was an Anglican priest in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, who served most notably as Archdeacon of Ossory from 1883 until 1911.
Jonathan Bruce was an 18th-century Anglican priest in Ireland.
George Howse was an Anglican priest in Ireland in the mid-18th century.
Richard Bathoe Jones was an Anglican priest in Ireland.
Arthur William Edwards was a nineteenth century Anglican priest.
Samuel Tarrant Owen Madden was a nineteenth century Anglican priest.
Charles MacFetridge was Archdeacon of Ross, Ireland from 1904 until 1925.
Robert Austen was Archdeacon of Cork from 1785 until his death.
John Quarry was Archdeacon of Cork from 1894 until 1899.
John Pomeroy (1677-1725) was Archdeacon of Cork from 1717 until his death.
Peter Teulon Beamish, DD was Archdeacon of Melbourne from 1878 until 1898.