Richard Lapp was Archdeacon of Cork from 1688 until 1690. [1]
Lapp was born in Bandon, County Cork and educated at Trinity College, Dublin. [2] He held incumbencies at Templequinlan and Rathclarin. He was also Prebendary of Templebryan in Ross Cathedral from 1686 to 1687; and Treasurer of Cork from 1687 to 1688. [3]
Roger Boyle was an Irish Protestant churchman, Bishop of Down and Connor and Bishop of Clogher.
Nicholas Synge was an 18th-century Irish Anglican priest.
William Cameron (1688–1765) was an Eighteenth Century Irish Anglican priest: the Archdeacon of Ardfert from 1738 until 1765.
Francis Lauder (1688-1765) was an eighteenth century Irish Anglican priest: the Archdeacon of Ardfert from 1724 until 1738.
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.
Michael Jephson, M.A. was an Irish Anglican priest.
John Worth, B.D. (1648-1688) was an Irish Anglican Dean.
Giles Eyre (1689–1749) was an Anglican priest in Ireland in the eighteenth century.
Edward Edmund Burton (1737-1817) was an Anglican priest in Ireland during the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
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.
Southwell Rickard (1703–1748) was Archdeacon of Cloyne from 1731 to 1735.
John Moore was Archdeacon of Cloyne from 1665 until 1687.
Hugh Dunsterville was Archdeacon of Cloyne from 1661 until 1665.
Edward Browne (1699–1777) was an Anglican priest in Ireland.
Richard Wight was an Anglican priest in Ireland in the 18th century.
Alexander La Milliere was Archdeacon of Cork from 1796 until his death.
Thomas Russell (1693-1745) was Archdeacon of Cork from 1725 until his death.
William Reader (1704-1774) was Archdeacon of Cork from 1745 until his death.
Richard Synge (1648–1688) was Archdeacon of Cork from 1674 until his death.