Roger Cradock, O.F.M was a bishop in the second half of the 14th Century. [1]
Craddock was appointed Bishop of Waterford on 2 March 1350. [2] He received possession of the temporalities on 17 August 1350 and again 10 May 1352. [3] Cradock was translated to Llandaff in December 1361; [4] and died on 22 June 1382. [5]
The Bishop of Meath is an episcopal title which takes its name after the ancient Kingdom of Meath. In the Roman Catholic Church it remains as a separate title, but in the Church of Ireland it has been united with another bishopric.
The Archbishop of Armagh is an archiepiscopal title which takes its name from the city of Armagh in Northern Ireland. Since the Reformation, there have been parallel apostolic successions to the title: one in the Roman Catholic Church and the other in the Church of Ireland. The archbishop of each denomination also holds the title of Primate of All Ireland.
Roger Boyle was an Irish Protestant churchman, Bishop of Down and Connor and Bishop of Clogher.
Thomas Barrett was a fifteenth-century Bishop of Annaghdown.
Hugh Gore DD (1613-1691) was a seventeenth century Anglican Bishop of Waterford and Lismore in Ireland who founded Swansea Grammar School.
Robert Howard, D.D. was an Anglican prelate who served in the Church of Ireland as the Bishop of Killala and Achonry (1727–1730) and Bishop of Elphin (1730–1740).
Thomas Otway was an Anglican bishop in Ireland.
William Murray was an Anglican bishop in the first half of the Seventeenth century.
Thomas Winter was a priest in Ireland in the early seventeenth century.
Thomas Wetherhead was Archdeacon of Cork and of Cloyne then Bishop of Waterford and Lismore from 1589 until 1592.
Anthony Martin was an Anglo-Irish Anglican priest who served as Provost of Trinity College Dublin from 1645 to 1650. during the first half of the 17th-century.
Edward Young was an English Anglican priest in the eighteenth century: his senior posts were in Ireland.
Joseph Story was an 18th-century Anglican bishop in Ireland.
Denis Campbell was a Scottish Anglican priest in Ireland.
Robert Maxwell was a 17th-century Anglican bishop in Ireland.
Thomas Ram was an Anglican priest in the early seventeenth century.
George Andrews, MA (1576–1648) was an Anglican priest in the early seventeenth century.
Joseph Palmer (1749–1829) was an Irish Anglican priest in the late 18th century and the first decades of the 19th.
Eugene McCaghwell, was a bishop in Ireland in the early 16th century: he was Dean of Clogher until 1505, and bishop from then until his death in 1515. His brother William McCaghwell succeeded him as dean.
John Edmund de Courcy OFM was an English Bishop in Ireland in the late 15th and early 16th centuries: he was Bishop of Clogher. He was appointed Bishop of Clogher on 14 June 1484; and Bishop of Ross on 26 September 1494, a position he resigned in 1517. He died on 14 March 1519.