Gabriel Maturin, D.D. was an Irish Anglican Dean. [1]
Educated at Trinity College, Dublin, [2] he was Dean of Kildare from 1737 to 1745 [3] and Dean of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, from 1745 [4] until his death on 9 November 1746. [5]
Peter Drelincourt, was Dean of Armagh. He was the sixth son of Charles Drelincourt, minister of the reformed church in Paris, and graduated M.A. at Trinity College, Dublin, 1681, and LL.D. 1691.
Nicholas Synge was an 18th-century Irish Anglican priest.
Henry Rider was an 18th-century Anglican bishop in Ireland.
John Shepherd was an Irish Anglican priest in the last decades of the seventeenth and the first ones of the eighteenth centuries.
Walter O'Neale, D.D. was an Irish Anglican priest.
Francis Corbet, D.D. was an Irish Anglican Dean.
Michael Jephson, M.A. was an Irish Anglican priest.
John Worth, B.D. (1648-1688) was an Irish Anglican Dean.
Alexander Craike, B.D. was a 16th-century Scottish priest.
Geoffrey Fyche was Dean of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin from his election on 9 March 1529 until his death on 8 April 1537.
Henry Jenney, was Archdeacon of Armagh from 1733 to 1738.
Benjamin Phipps, D.D. was a 17th-century Anglican Dean in Ireland.
Robert Wilson was a 17th-century Anglican Dean in Ireland.
John Owen (1686–1760) was an Anglican priest in Ireland during the 18th century.
Theophilus Harrison was an Anglican priest in Ireland during the late 17th and early 18th centuries.
William Burley was an Anglican priest in Ireland during the 17th century.
Richard Bourne was an Anglican priest in Ireland during the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
Daniel le Tablere was an Anglican priest in Ireland during the late decade of the 18th century and the first four of the 19th.
Robert Stannard was an Anglican priest in Ireland in the 17th century.
Barnaby Bolger was an Anglican priest in Ireland during the seventeenth century.