List of Provosts of Trinity College, Dublin
The following persons have been Provost of Trinity College, Dublin.
List of Provosts of Trinity College, Dublin[1] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
No. | Name | Tenure | Notes | |
1 | Adam Loftus | 1592–1594 | (c.1533–1605). Also was Archbishop of Armagh, Archbishop of Dublin and Lord Chancellor of Ireland. | |
2 | Walter Travers | 1594–1598 | (c.1548–1634) | |
3 | Henry Alvey | 1601–1609 | ||
4 | Sir William Temple | 1609–1627 | (c.1555–1627) | |
5 | William Bedell | 1627–1629 | (c.1571–1642). Later became Bishop of Kilmore and Ardagh in 1629. | |
6 | Robert Ussher | 1629–1634 | Later became Bishop of Kildare 1636–1642. | |
7 | William Chappell | 1634–1640 | (c.1582–1649). Also was Bishop of Cork and Ross 1638–1649. | |
8 | Richard Washington | 1640–1641 | ||
9 | Anthony Martin | 1645–1650 | (died 1650). Also was Bishop of Meath 1625–1650 | |
10 | Samuel Winter | 1652–1660 | (c.1603–1666) | |
11 | Thomas Seele | 1661–1675 | (c.1611–1675). Also was Dean of St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin 1666–1675 | |
12 | Michael Ward | 1674–1678 | (c.1643–1681). Later became Bishop of Ossory in 1678, transferred to Derry in 1680. | |
13 | Narcissus Marsh | 1679–1683 | (c.1638–1713). Later became Bishop of Ferns and Leighlin 1683, then Archbishop of Cashel in 1690, Archbishop of Dublin in 1694, and Archbishop of Armagh in 1703. | |
14 | Robert Huntington[2] | 1683–1692 | (c.1636–1701). Later became Bishop of Raphoe from July to September 1701. In Huntington's absence from 1688, James II appointed Michael Moore, Catholic vicar-general of Dublin, for a short period from 1689; he was later Rector of the University of Paris.[3] | |
15 | St George Ashe | 1692–1695 | (c.1658–1718). Later became bishop of Cloyne in 1695, translated to Clogher in 1697, and finally to Derry in 1717. | |
16 | George Browne | 1695–1699 | (c.1649–1699) | |
17 | Peter Browne | 1699–1710 | (c.1665–1735). Later became Bishop of Cork and Ross 1710–1735. | |
18 | Benjamin Pratt | 1710–1717 | (c.1669–1721). Later became Dean of Down 1717–1721. | |
19 | Richard Baldwin | 1717–1758 | (c.1668–1758) | |
20 | Francis Andrews | 1758–1774 | (c.1718–1774). He left £3,000 to found the Dunsink Observatory and the Andrews chair of astronomy. | |
21 | John Hely-Hutchinson | 1774–1794 | (c.1724–1794) | |
22 | Richard Murray | 1795–1799 | (c.1726–1799) | |
23 | John Kearney | 1799–1806 | (c.1742–1813). Later became Bishop of Ossory 1806–1813. | |
24 | George Hall | 1806–1811 | (c.1753–1811). Later became Bishop of Dromore 17–23 November 1811. | |
25 | Thomas Elrington | 1811–1820 | (c.1760–1835). Later became Bishop of Limerick, Ardfert and Aghadoe in 1820, then translated to Ferns and Leighlin in 1822. | |
26 | Samuel Kyle | 1820–1831 | (c.1771–1848). Later became Bishop of Cork and Ross 1831–1835, and Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross 1835–1848 | |
27 | Bartholomew Lloyd | 1831–1837 | (c.1772–1837) | |
28 | Franc Sadleir | 1837–1851 | (c.1774–1851) | |
29 | Richard MacDonnell | 1851–1867 | (c. 1787–1867) | |
30 | Humphrey Lloyd | 1867–1881 | (c.1800–1881) | |
31 | John Hewitt Jellett | 1881–1888 | (c.1817–1888) | |
32 | George Salmon | 1888–1904 | (c.1819–1904). Also was Chancellor of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin 1871–1904. | |
33 | Anthony Traill | 1904–1914 | (c.1838–1914) | |
34 | Sir John Pentland Mahaffy | 1914–1919 | (c.1839–1919) | |
35 | John Henry Bernard | 1919–1927 | (c.1860–1927). Formerly Dean of St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin 1902–1911, Bishop of Ossory, Ferns and Leighlin 1911–1915, and Archbishop of Dublin 1915–1919. | |
36 | Edward John Gwynn | 1927–1937 | (c.1868–1941) | |
37 | William Thrift | 1937–1942 | (c.1870–1942) | |
38 | Ernest Alton | 1942–1952 | (c.1873–1952) | |
39 | Albert Joseph McConnell | 1952–1974 | (b. 1903) | |
40 | F. S. L. Lyons | 1974–1981 | (c.1923–1983) | |
41 | William Arthur Watts | 1981–1991 | (1930–2010) | |
42 | Thomas Mitchell | 1991–2001 | ||
43 | John Hegarty | 2001–2011 | ||
44 | Patrick Prendergast[4] | 2011– |
References
- ↑ Former Provost of Trinity College, Dublin. Retrieved on 18 September 2009.
- ↑ "Huntington, Robert". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
- ↑ "Moor, Michael". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
- ↑ Biography. Retrieved on 2 April 2011.
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