In the three hundred years of its existence, the college has not been without a share in the ecclesiastical literature of Ireland. Among the rectors of the college have been
Thomas Messingham, prothonotary Apostolic, author of the "Florilegium Insulæ Sanctorum" (Paris, 1624);
Andrew Donlevy, author of an "Anglo-Irish Catechism" (Paris, 1742); Miley, author of "A History of the Papal States" (Dublin, 1852); Thomas McNamara, author of "Programmes of Sermons" (Dublin, 1880), "Encheiridion Clericorum" (1882), and several other similar works.
James MacGeoghegan,
Sylvester O'Hallaran,
Martin Haverty, and probably
Geoffrey Keating, all eminent Irish historians, were students of the college. Dean Kinane, a student and then a professor in the college, is widely known for his "Dove of the Tabernacle" and numerous other devotional works. More recently, John MacGuinness, vice-rector, has published a full course of dogmatic theology. Amongst the rectors of the college were John Farley and
John Baptist Walsh, in the eighteenth century, and Patrick MacSweeney and
Thomas MacNamara, in the nineteenth. Charles Ouin La Croix, from Rouen, administered the college from 1859 until 1873. Charles O'Neill was college president in the 18th century.
Alumni •
Eugène de Beauharnais – Duke of Leuchtenberg and stepson of Napoleon Bonaparte, attended the lay college established following the revolution •
Jérôme Bonaparte – youngest brother of Napoleon attended the lay college •
Henry Conwell – Bishop of Philadelphia •
William Coppinger –
Bishop of Cloyne and Ross •
Thomas Croke – Archbishop of Cashel •
Daniel Delany –
Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin •
James Dillon – Bishop of Kilmore •
Patrick Donnelly - Bishop of Dromore, known as
The Bard of Armagh •
Peter Flood – second President of
St. Patrick's College, Maynooth. •
James Gallagher –
Bishop of Raphoe(1725–37),
Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin(1737–51) •
Laurence Gillooly –
Bishop of Elphin •
Neal McCabe –
Bishop of Ardagh and Clonmacnoise, served as Rector 1866–68, buried in the Vincentian community plot in Montparnasse, Paris. •
John McCarthy, Bishop Sandhurst, Australia, 1917–1950 •
Michael O'Reilly,
Bishop of Derry(1739–49) and
Archbishop of Armagh(1749–58) •
Patrick Joseph Plunkett –
Bishop of Meath, served as superior and professor in Paris •
Charles Tuohy –
Bishop of Limerick 1813–28
Burials in the College •
Andrew Donlevy, alumni of the Irish College (housed in the Collège des Lombards) buried in the vaults of the college chapel •
Dominic Maguire OP, Jacobite, Archbishop of Armagh •
John O'Molony, Bishop of Killaloe and Bishop of Limerick
Rectors & Superiors • John Lee (1605–) •
Thomas Dease ( -1621), appointed
Bishop of Meath •
Thomas Messingham (1621–1632), rector when the college was officially linked to the University of Paris in 1626. • James Merrick, Superior • John Farley (1728–1736), principal • Patrick Corr (1736–1738), principal •
Patrick Joseph Plunkett (1770–1778) joint Superior of the Irish College(College of the Lombards), and royal professor of theology, Collège de Navarre. • Charles Kearney (1782–1787), superior/rector, remained in Paris •
John Baptist Walsh (1787–1814), superior, responsible for the Fondation Irlandais/Irish College inheriting and acquiring the legacy and equity of the Irish and British Colleges in France. •
Richard Ferris(1810–1814, 1815), "colourful" and controversial superior and administrator of the British(which included the Irish) Colleges. • Paul Long (1814–1819), administrator, sent by
Maynooth to assert Irish control of the college and its interests. • James Lynch (1858-1866), first Vincentian rector •
Neal McCabe (1866–1868) • Thomas McNamara (1868–1889) • Patrick Boyle (1889–1926), re-established the college following its closure during World War I, he remained and taught in the college until his death in 1933. • John Magennis (McGuinness) (1926–1932) • Joseph P. Sheedy (1932–1938) • Patrick Travers (1938–39) stayed at the college during the Second World War. Reappointed and served from (1949–1972) • Henry Casey (1945–1949) • Patrick Travers, Reappointed (1949–1972), non-resident, with William McGlynn resident priest, liaising with the French Government. •
Thomas Fagan (1972–1984), non-resident in the college, in 1984 the Vincentians relinquished their position as rectors of the college. •
Brendan Devlin (1984–2001), rector and manager Following the reappointment of Travers, the rector was not resident in the college, and only visited periodically to look after the Irish interest in the college which was being used for seminary training Polish priests,
Seminaire Polonais de Paris(1947–97). An Irish Catholic presence was re-established in the 1970s when the historian and archivist
Liam Swords became chaplain to the Irish Community in Paris. ==Chaplains (or Aumônier, Collège des Irlandais)==