High Sheriff of County Cork
The Sheriff 'of County Cork' was an official in County Cork from the county's creation in the early 13th century until the creation of the Irish Free State in 1922. Within each Irish county, the high sheriff was the primary judicial representative of the English (later British) monarch, who was Lord of Ireland, later King/Queen of Ireland, and finally monarch of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. In 1608, Cork city was made a county corporate separate from County Cork, after which separate sheriffs of Cork City were appointed by the city corporation.
13th to 16th centuries
- 1319: John FitzSimon
- 1343: Nicholas de Barry
- 1344: David Barry, 5th Lord Barry
- 1352: John Lumbard
- 1355: John Lumbard
- 1358: John Lumbard
- 1377: John Warner
- 1386: Robert Thame
- 1400: Robert Cogan
- 1401: John Barry, 7th Lord Barry
- 1403–1415: John Barry, 7th Lord Barry
- 1433: William Barry, 8th Lord Barry
- 1451: William Barry, 8th Lord Barry
- 1461: William Barry, 8th Lord Barry
- 1568-1570: Sir Richard Grenville
- 1580: Cormack MacTeige