George Browne
Appearance
(Redirected from George Browne (bishop))
George Browne may refer to:
- Sir George Browne (died 1483) (1440–1483), took part in Buckingham's rebellion
- George Browne (archbishop of Dublin) (died 1556), Anglican bishop in Ireland
- George Browne (by 1517–62 or later), MP for Berwick-upon-Tweed
- George Browne (died 1631) (1583–1631), English lawyer, landowner and politician
- Sir George Browne (died 1661), English politician
- George Browne (provost) (c. 1649–1699), professor of divinity at Trinity College, Dublin
- Sir George Browne, 4th Baronet (1680s–1737), Irish politician, MP for Castlebar 1713–14
- George Browne (died 1782) (c. 1735–1782), Irish politician, MP for Mayo 1779–82
- George Browne (soldier) (1698–1792), Irish soldier of fortune, field-marshal in the Russian service
- George Browne, 8th Viscount Montagu (1769–1793), English nobleman
- George Browne (Lower Canada politician) (before 1794–1822), merchant and political figure in Lower Canada
- George Joseph Plunket Browne (1795–1858), Irish Roman Catholic Bishop of Elphin from 1844 to 1858
- George H. Browne (1818–1885), U.S. Representative from Rhode Island
- George Browne (architect) (1811–1885), Irish-born Canadian architect
- George Browne, 3rd Marquess of Sligo (1820–1896), Irish peer
- George Forrest Browne (1833–1930), English bishop
- George Browne (cricketer) (1835–1919), English cricketer
- George Eakins Browne (1837–1923), Irish politician, Member of Parliament for Mayo
- Sir George Buckston Browne (1850–1945), British medical doctor and pioneer urologist
- Sir George Washington Browne (1853–1939), Scottish architect
- George Elmer Browne (1871–1946), American artist
- George Browne (baseball) (1876–1920), American baseball player
- Young Tiger (George Browne, 1920–2007), Trinidadian calypso musician
- George Browne (archbishop of West Africa) (1933–1993), Anglican bishop in Africa
- George Browne (umpire) (born 1934), West Indian cricket umpire
- George Browne, 6th Marquess of Sligo (1856–1935), Irish peer
- George E. Browne, American labor union leader