Mark Pagett was a Seventeenth century Irish Anglican priest.
A graduate of Trinity College, Dublin [1] and Prebendary of Kileedy [2] and Chancellor of Cork [3] from 1632 to 1639 [4] was the Dean of Ross, Ireland until 1661. [5]
Roger Boyle was an Irish Protestant churchman, Bishop of Down and Connor and Bishop of Clogher.
James Howie (1804–1884) was a priest of the Church Of Ireland.
Rowland Davies (1649–1721) was Church of Ireland dean of Cork.
Valentine French, a graduate of Trinity College, Dublin and Prebendary of Cork, was an eighteenth century Irish Anglican priest: he was Dean of Ross, Ireland from 1717 until 1739.
Arthur St. George, a graduate of Trinity College, Dublin and the Chancellor of Clogher, was a Seventeenth century Irish Anglican priest: he was Dean of Ross, Ireland from 1743 until 1772.
Walter O'Neale, D.D. was an Irish Anglican priest.
Arthur William Edwards was a nineteenth century Anglican priest.
Horatio Townsend Newman was a nineteenth century Anglican priest.
Thomas Deane (1645–1713) was an Anglican priest in Ireland in the second half of the 17th century and the first two decades of the eighteenth.
John Moore was Archdeacon of Cloyne from 1665 until 1687.
Edward Browne (1699–1777) was an Anglican priest in Ireland.
Joseph Weld was Archdeacon of Ross from 1777 to his death in 1781.
Wensley Bond (1742–1820) was an Irish Anglican priest in the second half of the 18th century and the first two decades of the 19th.
James Forward Bond (1785–1829) was an Irish Anglican priest in the first half of the 19th-century.
Edward St. Lawrence was an Anglican priest in Ireland in the 19th century.
Robert Austen was Archdeacon of Cork from 1785 until his death.
Alexander La Milliere was Archdeacon of Cork from 1796 until his death.
John Forsayeth was Archdeacon of Cork from 1782 until his death.
Richard Lapp was Archdeacon of Cork from 1688 until 1690.
Richard Synge (1648-1688) was Archdeacon of Cork from 1674 until his death.