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MS Add.3465 University of Cambridge Patent to Hugh Martin to be Stationer and Printer
MS Add.3466 Samuel Dale: Journeys to Cambridge
MS Add.3470 Henry de Kirkestede: Catalogus Scriptorum Ecclesie
MS Add.35 Catechism
MS Add.3543 Alexius Pedemontanus: Secrets
MS Add.3544 Book of Magic
MS Add.3545-3555 Sir Richard Colt Hoare: Journals of tours in Italy and Europe
MS Add.3556 Integer Commentarius...in Petronii Arbitri Satiricon Ineditus
MS Add.3561 Text of Antonius Arkudius
MS Add.3562 Chesterton, Cambridgeshire: two terriers
MS Add.3563 Ickleton, Cambridgeshire: manor of Lymbury, recovery in court baron
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Sir Matthew Hale: The History and analysis of the Common Laws of England

Title Sir Matthew Hale: The History and analysis of the Common Laws of England
Reference GBR/0012/MS Add.3820
Creator Hale, Sir Matthew, 1609-1676
Covering Dates 1696
Extent and Medium 1 volume; paper
Repository Cambridge University Library, Department of Manuscripts and University Archives
Content and context

Sir Mathew Hale(s) (1609-1676), judge and writer, was born at Alderley, Gloucestershire. He matriculated at Magdalen Hall, Oxford in 1626. Hale married twice, first to Anne Moore (1621-1658?) who bore him ten children, and then to a family servant, Anne Bishop (d. 1694) in 1667. He is remembered for his witchcraft trials, which often lead him to be painted as a misogynist; however his dealings with his wives and children, and the will that he left seem to paint him in a more favourable light.

Hale was called to the bar in 1636 and his professional progress was much accelerated by England's political troubles.

Cromwell appointed Hale a justice of the court of common pleas in January 1654, thereafter Hale's behaviour suggested a qualified support for the protector. Hale sat for Oxford University in Richard Cromwell's parliament and for Gloucestershire (again) in the Convention. He seems to have played no significant part in the former, but was one of the leading members of the latter until he was named chief baron of the exchequer in November 1660, one motive for appointing him chief baron was probably to remove him from the House.

Hale was knighted in 1661 and after the Restoration, he enjoyed virtually universal reverence and was seen as a relaxed and thoughtful lawmaker. In May 1671 Charles made Hale the chief justice of king's bench, an appropriate appointment for someone who was writing a great digest of criminal law, but one that necessarily involved him in numerous politically sensitive cases.

Aside from his judicial contribution, Hale's influence on the course of legal history has rested upon two substantial achievements: his unfinished Historia placitorum coronae, and his History and Analysis of the Common Laws of England. He was not published during his lifetime but wrote widely on law, science and religion.

On his death in 1676 Hale left a place in national memory as a virtuous lawyer and incorruptible judge. This image was cemented by Gilbert Burnet's hagiography, The Life and Death of Sir Matthew Hale (1682), a book that soon achieved a classic status. In modern times he is remembered for his witch trials but this is by no means the sole item of note in a long career.

'Copyed from the Bishop of Worcester's copy that was taken after the originall under My Ld Ch. Justice Hales own hand before it was abused.'

pp. ii-vi, 105-10: blank.

Purchased from G. David, 26 May 1899.

Access and Use

Please cite as Cambridge University Library, Department of Manuscripts and University Archives, Sir Matthew Hale: The History and analysis of the Common Laws of England, MS Add.3820

Further information

First printed 1713, and several times thereafter. See Catalogue of English Legal Manuscripts, p. 591.

Index Terms
Law
Hale, Sir Matthew (1609-1676) knight, judge and writer
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