A Chronological Table of the Catholic Primates of Ireland

With the Years in Which They Succeeded to the Metropolitan Sees of Armagh, Dublin, Cashell and Tuam

ARCHBISHOPS OF ARMAGH.

Names. Number. Year of Succession.
St. Patrick 1 433
Bineen 2 465
Jarlath 3 465
Cormack 4 482
Dubtach I. 5 497
Ailild I. 6 513
Ailild II. 7 526
Dubtach II. 8 536
David McGuire 9 548
Feidlimid 10 551
Cairlan 11 578
Eochaid 12 588
MacLaisir 13 610
Thomian 14 623
Segene 15 661
Flanfebla 16 688
Suibhny 17 715
Congusa 18 730
Cele-Peter 19 750
Ferdachry 20 758
Fœndelach 21 768
Dubdalethy 22 778
Affiat 23 793
Cudiniscus 24 794
Conmach 25 798
Torlach 26 807
Nuad 27 808
Flangus 28 812
Artrigius 29 823
Eugenius 30 833
Faranan 31 834
Diarmuid 32 848
Facthna 33 852
Ainmire 34 874
Catasach I. 35 875
Maelcob 36 883
Mael-Brigid 37 885
Joseph 38 927
Mael Patrick 39 936
Catasach II. 40 937
Muredach 41 957
Dubdalethy II. 42 966
Murechan 43 998
Maelmury 44 1004
Amalgaid 45 1021
Dubdalethy III. 46 1050
Cumasach 47 1065
Mælisa 48 1065
Donald 49 1092
Celsus 50 1106
Maurice 51 1129
Malachy 52 1134
Gelasius 53 1137
Cornelius 54 1174
Gilbert 55 1175
Mælisa O'Carrol 56 1184
Amlave 57 1185
Thos. O'Connor 58 1186
Eugene 59 1206
Luke Nettervill 60 1220
Donat Fidobara 61 1227
Albert of Cologn 62 1249
Reiner 63 1247
Abm. O'Connelan 64 1257
P. O'Scanlain 65 1262
Nicholas M'Melissa 66 1272
John Taaf 67 1311
Walter de Jorse 68 1306
Roland Jorse 69 1306
Stephen Segrave 70 1332
David Hiraghty 71 1334
Richd. Fitzralph 72 1347
Milo Sweetman 73 1361
John Colton 74 1382
Nichs. Fleming 75 1404
John Swayne 76 1417
John Prene 77 1439
John Mey 78 1444
John Bole 79 1457
John Foxalls 80 1475
Ed. Connesburg 81 1477
Octav. de Palatio 82 1480
John Kite 83 1513
Geo. Cromer 84 1522
George Dowdall 85 1543
Robert Wauchop 86 1552
Richard Creagh 87 1585
E. M'Gauran, m. 88 1598
Peter Lombard 89 1625
Hugh M'Cawell 90 1626
Pat. Fleming 91 1631
Hugh O'Reilly 92
Edward O'Reilly 93
Oliv. Plunket 94
Dom. M'Guire 95 1708
Hugh M'Mahon 96 1737
Bernard M'Mahon 97
Ross M'Mahon 98
Nic. O'Reilly 99 1758
Anthony Blake 100 1787
Richard O'Reilly 101
Patrick Curtis 102

BISHOPS OF DUBLIN.

Names. Number. Year of Succession.
Livinus 1 633
St. Wiro 2 650
Disibod 3 675
Gualafer 4
St. Rumold 5 775
Sedulius 6 785
Cormac 7 unk
Donat 8 1074
Patrick 9 1084
Dn. O'Haingley 10 1095
Sm. O'Haingley 11 1121

ARCHBISHOPS OF DUBLIN.

Names. Number. Year of Succession.
Gregory 1 1161
Laurence Toole 2 1172
John Comyn 3 1182
H. de Londres 4 1218
Luke 5 1255
Falk. de Saunford 6 1271
J. de Derlington 7 1284
John de Saundford 8 1294
W. de Hotham 9 1297
R. de Ferings 10 1306
John Leek 11 1313
A. de Bicknor 12 1349
John de St Paul 13 1362
Thomas Minot 14 1375
R. de Wikeford 15 1390
Richd. Northallis 16 1395
Thomas Cranley 17 1397
Richd. Talbot 18 1417
Nicholas Tregury 19 1449
John Walton 20 1473
Walter Fitzsimons 21 1484
William Rokeby 22 1581
Hugh Inge 23 1528
John Allen 24 1534
Geo. Brown, ap. 25 1554
Hugh Carwin, ap 26 1559
Mat. of Oviedo 27 1600
E. Matthews 28 1611
Thos. Fleming 29 1660
Pet. Talbot 30 1680
Patrick Russel 31 1692
Pet. Creagh 32 1700
Edwd. Byrne 33 1723
Edwd. Murphy 34 1728
Luke Fagan 35 1733
John Linegar 36 1757
Richard Lincoln 37 1763
Patrick Fitzsimons 38 1769
John Carpenter 39 1786
John Th. Troy 40 1787
D. Murray 41 1824

(1 A.) Saint Patrick, ten years after building the Metropolitan church of Armagh, committed it to the care of Bineen, or Benignus, his scholar, who resigned it soon after to Iarlath. He, dying in 482, was succeeded by Cormack, so that St. Patrick saw three of his successors in his see of Armagh, before his death, on the 17th of March, 493.

(14 A.) To Thomian, or Tomian, and the other clergy of Ireland, was written that epistle from the Roman clergy during the vacancy of the Roman see, in 639, concerning the time of observing Easier, of which a part is extant in Bede's Ecclesiastical History.

(20 A.) In Artruge, or Artry's primacy, the Ultonian territories were much disturbed by the invasions of the Danes. Armagh was for a month in their possession, in 830.

(36 A.) Maolbridy, the son of Tornan, or Dornan Comorban to St. Patrick and Columbkille, was of the blood royal of Ireland. His learning and virtues were so eminent as to obtain for him the appellation of the ornament of Europe. In his time, Armagh was thrice plundered by the Danes.

(52 A.) St. Malachy, called in Irish Maolmedoc ua Morgair, resigned his see to Giolla-Iosa, or servant of Jesus, strangely metamorphosed by Latin writers into the seemingly Greek name Gelasius, whereby the Irish etymology is almost lost, as is the case with many other names too. St. Malachy, after establishing a monastery of regular canons in Down, undertook a journey to Rome, but died in the arms of St. Bernard, his biographer, in the Abbey of Clairvaux, in France.

(1 D.) Of the bishops of Dublin, no regular succession can be at present made out before the time of Donat, the Dane, in 1074. Hestaunus, indeed, mentions the few that are above recorded, before that time. Notwithstanding the silence of our records, it is very probable that St. Patrick, after founding a church there, in 448, established a form of ecclesiastical government for it, similar to that which he instituted in other parts of the island.

(2 D.) The illustrious and patriotic St. Laurence O'Toole, was the son of Martough O'Toole, prince of Imaly, by Inghean ee Bhrian, or daughter of the royal house of O'Brien. In 1167, he assisted at a convention of the clergy and princes of Leah-Cuin, or north of Ireland, at Athboy, wherein many laws for the government of church and state were made. St. Laurence animated the inhabitants of Dublin to a vigorous defence against the Anglo-Norman invaders, under Strongbow, until the city was forced to surrender. He next prevailed on Roderic, and the princes of Ireland, to join in a conspiracy against the invaders; but after investing Dublin by land and water with 30,000 men, and 30 ships, the Irish princes were compelled to raise the siege. He, with the rest of the clergy, assisted at a national council, held in Cashel, by order of Henry II. "Having, out of zeal," says Cambrensis, "for his country's service, fallen under Henry the Second's displeasure, Laurence was a long time detained in France and England, by that politic prince." In this latter place, at Becket's shrine in Canterbury, our patriot was attacked by a villain, who, perhaps, wishing, like the murderers of Thomas a Becket, to ingratiate himself with Henry, by a similar act of assassination, rushed on the archbishop as he was saying mass there, and knocked him down with a blow which fractured his skull. He died at Auge, in Normandy, in 1180, and was canonized by pope Honorius the III. in 1225.

(80 A.) Archbishop Dowdall strenuously opposed the innovations of Henry VIII. and of his complaisant servant, then the archbishop of Dublin, the well known apostate George Brown. Brown was originally an Augustinian friar, of London, and provincial of that order in England. He was advanced to the see of Dublin, by Henry VIII. in 1535. He was the first Roman Catholic prelate who embraced the reformation in Ireland. Miles M'Grath, archbishop of Cashell, Staples, bishop of Meath, Lancaster, bishop of Kildare, Travers, bishop of Laughlin, and Coyne, bishop of Limerick, afterwards apostatized, and abjured the Catholic religion; Lancaster and Travers were, in turn, ejected from their sees, in Queen Mary's reign; as they, like the other apostles of the Reformation, took wives to themselves. Coyne, or Quin, was originally a Dominican friar; M'Grath was a Franciscan before his perversion.

(87 A.) Richard Creagh was poisoned in the tower of London in 1585, and his successor, Edward M'Gauron, was murdered in his confessional, by a soldier, in 1598, as is asserted by David Roth, the learned bishop of Ossory, in his "Processus Martyrialis." To these illustrious martyrs, we may add the (92. A.) fourth in succession after M'Gauran; viz. the learned and holy martyr, Oliver Plunket, who, in 1679, was taken to Dublin, detained as a close prisoner there, and after being transmitted from thence to Newgate in London, was ultimately drawn on a sledge to Tyburn, that theatre of Catholic martyrdom since the holy Reformation, and hanged, beheaded, and quartered, on the 1st of July, 1681, as may be seen more at large, in the Tripartite Theology of Richard Archdeakin, an erudite Jesuit of Kilkenny, printed at Antwerp, in 1682.

(101 A.) Doctor R. O'Reilly, having completed his studies at Rome, returned to his native country, and, in 1780, was consecrated coadjutor bishop to Doctor O'Keefe, the predecessor of the present learned and pious Doctor Delany, in the diocess of Kildare and Leighlin. In 1782, Doctor O'Reilly was made administrator of the arch-diocess of Armagh; and on the death of the late Doctor Blake, in 1787, was promoted to the metropolitan chair of that primatial see.

(40 D.) Doctor J. T. Troy was born in the city of Dublin, and was, at an early age, affiliated into the order of St. Dominic, an order which has rendered itself eminently illustrious for adorning the Christian Church with a brilliant galaxy of popes, prelates, and preachers, equally distinguished for their pious zeal in cultivating the Lord's vinevards, as for the purity of their principles and edifying sanctity of their lives. In order to qualify himself for the mission, he went to Rome. There, in the college of SS. PP. Sixtus and Clement de Urbe, he spent twenty-one years. That he attained to literary pre-eminence in the various departments of his under graduate course, is fully evinced by his being twice dignified with the honour of filling the rectorial chair of that celebrated seminary. From this academic retreat he was at last called forth to the active labours of the Irish mission. In 1776, Doctor Troy was promoted to the see of Ossory, then vacant by the death of Doctor Thomas Burke, also a native of Dublin, a member of the Dominican order, and author of the celebrated work called "Hibernia Dominicana." Doctor Troy, in 1786, was translated to the archdiocess of Leinster, and took possession of the metropolitan and primatial chair, in his native city of Dublin, on the 15th February, 1787, leaving the vacated see of Ossory to Doctor John Dunne, who, dying in 1789, was succeeded by Doctor James Lanigan, the present truly religious, learned, and laborious bishop of that diocess.

ARCHBISHOPS OF CASHELL.

Names.

Year of Succession.

Cormac M'Cullinan

908

Donat. O'Lonorgan I.

1158

Donald O'Hulluchan

1182

Maurice ---------

1191

Matthew O'Heney

1206

Donat. O'Lonorgan II.

1215

Donat. O'Lonorgan III.

1223

Marian O'Brien

1238

David MacKelly

1252

David MacCarwill

1289

Stephen O'Brogan

1302

Maur. MacCarwill

1316

William Fitzjohn

1326

John O'Carroll

1329

Walter le Rede

1330

John O'Gradag

1345

Ralph Kelley

1361

George Roch

1362

Thomas O'Carroll

1373

Philip de Torrington

1380

Peter Hackett

1406

Richard O'Hedian

1440

John Cantwell

1482

David Creagh

1503

Maur Fitzgerald

1523

Edmund Butler

1550

Roland Baron

1561

James M'Caghwell

1570

Mau. Fitzgibbon, died

1578

Derm. O'Hurlay, mart.

1583

Thomas Walsh, sat

1649

Christ. Butler, Kilcash

1757

Jam. Butler, Dunboyne

----

Jam. Butler, Ballyragget

1792

Tho. Bray, present Archbishop

ARCHBISHOPS OF TUAM.

Names. Year of Succession.
St. Jarlath 540
Edan O'Hoisin 1085
Catholicus O'Dubhai 1201
Felix O'Ruadan 1235
Marian O'Laghnan 1249
Florence Mac Flin 1250
Walter de Salern 1258
Thomas O'Conor 1279
Stephen de Fulburn 1288
Willm. de Birmingham 1311
Malachy Mac Aeda 1348
Thomas O'Carroll 1365
John O'Grada 1371
Gregory -------- 1384
Gregory O'Moghan 1386
William O'Cormacair 1394
Maurice O'Kelley 1407
John Tabynghe 1411
Cornelius -------- ----
John Batterley 1436
Thomas O'Kelly 1441
John de Burgo 1450
Donat. O'Murry 1484
William Shioy 1501
Philip Pinson 1505
Maurice de Portu 1513
Thomas O'Mullaly 1536
Christopher Bodekin 1570
Nicholas Skerret 1583
Flor. Conroy 1629
John Burke 1649
Marc. Skerret, sat in 1756
Phil. Philips ----
Boet. Egan, d. 1798
Edw. Dillon 1809