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John Hales (died 1572)

John Hales (c.1516 – 26 or 28 December 1572) was a writer, administrator, and member of parliament during the Tudor period.

John Hales
late 16th C–early 17th C
Bornc.1516
Died26 or 28 December 1572
ParentThomas Hales

Family

John Hales was the son of Thomas Hales of Hales Place, Halden, Kent, and of 'the daughter of Trefoy of the county of Cornwall'. He had four brothers and a sister:[1]

  • John Hales, who died without issue.
  • Christopher Hales, of Coventry, who married Mary Lucy, the daughter of William Lucy, esquire, and Anne Fermor, and sister of Sir Thomas Lucy of Charlecote, Warwickshire.[2]
  • Bartholomew Hales (died 1599), esquire, of Snitterfield, Warwickshire, who married Mary Harper, the daughter of George Harper (died 12 December 1558) by his first wife, Lucy Peckham (d. 31 July 1552), daughter of Thomas Peckham.[3]
  • Stephen Hales (d. 27 March 1574), esquire, of Newland and Exhall, Warwickshire, freeman of the Merchant Taylors' Company in 1552, Warden in 1557, 1564 and 1565, and one of the four founders of the Merchant Taylors' School,[4] who married firstly Amy Morison, the daughter of Thomas Morison of Chardwell, Yorkshire, and sister of Sir Richard Morison,[5] and secondly, before 1561, Bridget Over, widow of John Nethermill, and daughter of Henry Over, who survived him.
  • Mildred Hales (died 1596) who married Thomas Docwra (died 1602) of Putteridge in Offley, Hertfordshire;[6] their son, Thomas Docwra, married Jane Peryam, the daughter of Sir William Peryam.[7]

Under Henry VIII

 
John Hales' former residence, the Whitefriars, Coventry, as it is today

According to Lowe, Hales may have spent some time at Oxford, but 'was largely a self-taught scholar of Greek, Latin, Hebrew, and the law'. He spent his early years in the household of Sir Christopher Hales, Attorney General and Master of the Rolls,[8] and after nine years' service there, was dismissed after having expressed a wish to leave his employment. By 1535 he was in the service of Thomas Cromwell.[9] In 1537 he was appointed clerk to Sir John Gostwick in the office of First Fruits and Tenths, and by 1541 had become deputy to the Clerk of the Hanaper, Sir Ralph Sadler. In 1545 Hales and Sadler were granted a joint patent for the office. According to Bindoff, the records show that Hales 'bore the brunt of the work' at the Hanaper, and in addition assisted Sadler with his duties as Master of the Great Wardrobe.[9][10]

On 6 June 1540, during the Dissolution of the Monasteries, Hales purchased from Sir Richard Morison the former Priory of St Mary Without Bishopsgate in London for £500, and on 16 December 1544 purchased from Sir Ralph Sadler the former monastery of the Whitefriars in Coventry for £83 12s 6d.[11] Hales converted part of the Whitefriars into a residence, Hales Place, and set up a free grammar school in what had been the choir. In 1545 he was granted licence to establish the free school as King Henry VIII School in the former St John's Hospital in Coventry. Hales provided lands valued at 200 marks for the school's maintenance.[9]

Under Edward VI

When King Edward VI came to the throne in 1547, Hales was appointed a Justice of the Peace for Middlesex and Warwickshire, and became a member of parliament for Preston, Lancashire.[12]

Hales supported the economic policies pursued by the young King's uncle, Protector Somerset. Hales was particularly opposed to the enclosure of land, and is said to have been the most active of the commissioners appointed in 1548 to redress this evil. However he failed to carry several remedial measures through Parliament.[13] When Somerset fell from power in October 1549, Hales was imprisoned in the Tower, likely as a result of his support for Somerset's policies. He was released in 1550, and after enfeoffing his lands to his brother, Stephen, and to Sir Ralph Sadler, obtained licence on 2 February 1551 to leave England in the company of Sir Richard Morison, who was being sent as ambassador to Holy Roman Emperor Charles V.

Marian exile

Hales lived in Germany with his brother, Christopher, principally at Frankfurt, until Queen Elizabeth I came to the throne. While there he formed a friendship with the scholar Sturmius.[14]

Under Elizabeth I

Hales was back in England by 3 January 1559, and resumed his former position at the Hanaper. He was one of the Members of Parliament for Lancaster from 1563 to 1567.[14]

Hales lost royal favour, however, by writing a succession tract entitled A Declaration of the Succession of the Crowne Imperiall of Inglande, supporting the title to the crown of the descendants of King Henry VIII's younger sister Mary. Mary's granddaughter Lady Catherine Grey had secretly married Edward Seymour, and the Queen had had them both imprisoned. Hales took the position that if the Queen were to have no children, Lady Catherine should be next in line to the throne.[15] Hales was imprisoned for his temerity. On 27 April 1564 Sir William Cecil wrote to Sir Thomas Smith that:

Here is fallen out a troublesome fond matter. John Hales had secretly made a book in the time of the last Parliament wherein he hath taken upon him to discuss no small matter, viz., the title to the Crown after the Queen’s Majesty, having confuted and rejected the line of the Scottish Queen, and made the line of the Lady Frances, mother to the Lady Catherine, only next and lawful. He is committed to the Fleet for this boldness, specially because he had communicated it to sundry persons. My Lord John Grey is in trouble also for it. Beside this, John Hales hath procured sentences and counsels of lawyers from beyond seas to be written in maintenance of the Earl of Hertford’s marriage. This dealing of his offendeth the Queen’s Majesty very much.[16]

With Cecil's help Hales obtained his release from prison in 1566, but remained under house arrest for the next four years.[12]

Death

The date of Hales's death is uncertain. According to Bindoff, he died on 26 December 1572, while according to Lowe, he died two days later on 28 December.[14] He was buried in the Church of St Peter le Poer in Broad Street, London. He was sometimes referred to as "Club-foot" Hales, supposedly because he had accidentally wounded his foot with a dagger.[12]

Works

Hales wrote his Highway to Nobility about 1543. He wrote Introductiones ad grammaticum for his newly founded free school. In 1543 he also published Precepts for the Preservation of Health, a translation from Plutarch.[12]

Hales was likely the author of the anonymous mercantilist tract, The Discourse of the Common Weal of this Realm of England (1581), which has been regarded by some commentators as being the "first" economics tract in the English language.[17]

Heir

Hales had never married and left most of his property to his nephew John Hales,[18] a son of his brother Christopher Hales by his brother's marriage to Mary Lucy.[19]

Notes

  1. ^ Howard 1874, p. 69; Hales 1882, p. 62; Lowe 2004; Burke & Burke 1838, pp. 236–7.
  2. ^ Deacon 1898, p. 80; Thomas 1730, p. 506; Garrett 1938, p. 171; Metcalfe 1887, pp. 19, 32.
  3. ^ According to the History of Parliament biography of Sir George Harper, the real father of Lucy Peckham's children during her marriage to George Harper was Sir Richard Morison. According to the inquisition post mortem taken 18 October 1560, these children were Marcellus Harper (died 1 February 1559); Frances, who married William Patrickson, gentleman; Mary, who married Bartholomew Hales, gentleman; and Anne, who died unmarried; Fry 1896.
  4. ^ Clode 1888, pp. 159–61.
  5. ^ Burke & Burke 1838, pp. 236–7, 372–3; Marshall 1873, p. 29; Kimber & Johnson 1771, p. 102.
  6. ^ Chauncey 1826, p. 195; Metcalfe 1886, p. 48.
  7. ^ Burton 1905, p. 324.
  8. ^ Said by some authorities to have been his uncle, but by others to have been a distant kinsman.
  9. ^ a b c Bindoff 1982, p. 276.
  10. ^ Folger Shakespeare Library, Guide to the Loseley Collection, (1955/2000), 87, L.b.479.
  11. ^ Reader 1846, p. 122; Bindoff 1982, p. 276; Lowe 2004.
  12. ^ a b c d Lowe 2004.
  13. ^ "Hales, John (politician)" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 834.
  14. ^ a b c Bindoff 1982, p. 277; Lowe 2004.
  15. ^ Torre, Victoria de la (2001). ""We Few of an Infinite Multitude": John Hales, Parliament, and the Gendered Politics of the Early Elizabethan Succession". Albion: A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies. 33 (4): 557–582. doi:10.2307/4052892. JSTOR 4052892.
  16. ^ Ellis 1827, p. 285.
  17. ^ "John Hales". www.hetwebsite.net. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  18. ^ Reader 1846, p. 126
  19. ^ Garrett 1938, p. 174
Attribution
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Hales, John (politician)". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 834.

References

  • Bindoff, S.T. (1982). The House of Commons 1509–1558. Vol. II. London: Secker and Warburg. ISBN 9780436042829. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  • Burke, John; Burke, John Bernard (1838). A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England. London: Scott, Webster and Geary. pp. 236–7. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  • Burton, John A. (1905). "The Sequestration papers of Humphrey Walcot". Transactions of the Shropshire Archaeological and Natural History Society. 3rd series. Shrewsbury: Adnitt and Naunton. V.
  • Burke, John; Burke, John Bernard (1844). A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland (2nd ed.). London: John Russell Smith. pp. 372–3. Retrieved 8 January 2013.
  • Chauncey, Henry (1826). The Historical Antiquities of Hertfordshire. Vol. II. London: J.M. Mullinger. pp. 195–6. Retrieved 29 January 2013.
  • Clode, Charles M. (1888). The Early History of the Guild of Merchant Taylors, Part 2. London: Harrison and Sons. pp. 159–61. Retrieved 25 January 2013. merchant taylors school stephen hayles.
  • Deacon, Edward (1898). The Descent of the Family of Deacon of Elstowe and London, Part 2. Bridgeport, Connecticut. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  • Ellis, Henry (1827). Original Letters Illustrative of English History. Second Series. Vol. II. London: Harding and Lepard. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  • Fry, G.S., ed. (1896). Abstracts of Inquisitiones Post Mortem for the City of London: Part 1. Vol. XV. London and Middlesex Archaeological Society. pp. 191–211. Retrieved 8 January 2013.
  • Garrett, Christina Hallowell (1938). The Marian Exiles; A Study in the Origins of Elizabethan Puritanism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 171–4. ISBN 9781108011266. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  • Hales, R. Cox (1882). "Brief notes on the Hales Family". Archaeologia Cantiana. London: Kent Archaeological Society. XIV: 61–84. Retrieved 4 January 2013.  
  • Howard, Joseph Jackson, ed. (1874). Miscellanea Genealogica et Heraldica. (New Series). Vol. I. London: Hamilton, Adams. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  • Kimber, E.; Johnson, R. (1771). The Baronetage of England. Vol. II. London: G. Woodfall. pp. 99–102.
  • Lowe, Ben (2004). "Hales, John (1516?–1572)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/11913. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Marshall, George W., ed. (1873). La Neve's Pedigrees of the Knights. Vol. VIII. London: Harleian Society. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  • Metcalfe, Walter C., ed. (1886). The Visitations of Hertfordshire. London: Harleian Society. Retrieved 29 January 2013.
  • Metcalfe, Walter C., ed. (1887). The Visitations of Northamptonshire. London: Harleian Society. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  • Pierce, William (1908). A Historical Introduction to the Marprelate Tracts. New York: Burt Franklin.
  • Reader, W. (1846). Nichols, John Gough (ed.). "Documents Relating to the Family of Hales, of Coventry, and the Foundation of the Free School". The Topographer and Genealogist. I: 120–32. Retrieved 8 January 2013.
  • Thomas, William (1730). The Antiquities of Warwickshire . . . by Sir William Dugdale (2nd rev. ed.). London: John Osborn and Thomas Longman. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  •   Works related to John Hales at Wikisource: Dictionary of National Biography, 1885–1900, Volume 24, pp. 29–30.

External links

  • Hales, John (d.1572), History of Parliament
  • Hales, Stephen (d.1574), History of Parliament
  • Will of Stephen Hales, National Archives
  • Harper, George (1503–58), History of Parliament
  • Will of Sir George Harper, National Archives
  • Bartholomew Hales, manor of Snitterfield
  • Morison, Sir Richard (1514–56), History of Parliament
  • King Henry VIII Grammar School
  • Works by or about John Hales in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
  • Hutchinson, John (1892). "John Hales" . Men of Kent and Kentishmen (Subscription ed.). Canterbury: Cross & Jackman. p. 60.

john, hales, died, 1572, other, people, named, john, hales, john, hales, disambiguation, john, hales, 1516, december, 1572, writer, administrator, member, parliament, during, tudor, period, john, haleslate, 16th, early, 17th, cbornc, 1516died26, december, 1572. For other people named John Hales see John Hales disambiguation John Hales c 1516 26 or 28 December 1572 was a writer administrator and member of parliament during the Tudor period John Haleslate 16th C early 17th CBornc 1516Died26 or 28 December 1572ParentThomas Hales Contents 1 Family 2 Under Henry VIII 3 Under Edward VI 4 Marian exile 5 Under Elizabeth I 6 Death 7 Works 8 Heir 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksFamily EditJohn Hales was the son of Thomas Hales of Hales Place Halden Kent and of the daughter of Trefoy of the county of Cornwall He had four brothers and a sister 1 John Hales who died without issue Christopher Hales of Coventry who married Mary Lucy the daughter of William Lucy esquire and Anne Fermor and sister of Sir Thomas Lucy of Charlecote Warwickshire 2 Bartholomew Hales died 1599 esquire of Snitterfield Warwickshire who married Mary Harper the daughter of George Harper died 12 December 1558 by his first wife Lucy Peckham d 31 July 1552 daughter of Thomas Peckham 3 Stephen Hales d 27 March 1574 esquire of Newland and Exhall Warwickshire freeman of the Merchant Taylors Company in 1552 Warden in 1557 1564 and 1565 and one of the four founders of the Merchant Taylors School 4 who married firstly Amy Morison the daughter of Thomas Morison of Chardwell Yorkshire and sister of Sir Richard Morison 5 and secondly before 1561 Bridget Over widow of John Nethermill and daughter of Henry Over who survived him Mildred Hales died 1596 who married Thomas Docwra died 1602 of Putteridge in Offley Hertfordshire 6 their son Thomas Docwra married Jane Peryam the daughter of Sir William Peryam 7 Under Henry VIII Edit John Hales former residence the Whitefriars Coventry as it is today According to Lowe Hales may have spent some time at Oxford but was largely a self taught scholar of Greek Latin Hebrew and the law He spent his early years in the household of Sir Christopher Hales Attorney General and Master of the Rolls 8 and after nine years service there was dismissed after having expressed a wish to leave his employment By 1535 he was in the service of Thomas Cromwell 9 In 1537 he was appointed clerk to Sir John Gostwick in the office of First Fruits and Tenths and by 1541 had become deputy to the Clerk of the Hanaper Sir Ralph Sadler In 1545 Hales and Sadler were granted a joint patent for the office According to Bindoff the records show that Hales bore the brunt of the work at the Hanaper and in addition assisted Sadler with his duties as Master of the Great Wardrobe 9 10 On 6 June 1540 during the Dissolution of the Monasteries Hales purchased from Sir Richard Morison the former Priory of St Mary Without Bishopsgate in London for 500 and on 16 December 1544 purchased from Sir Ralph Sadler the former monastery of the Whitefriars in Coventry for 83 12s 6d 11 Hales converted part of the Whitefriars into a residence Hales Place and set up a free grammar school in what had been the choir In 1545 he was granted licence to establish the free school as King Henry VIII School in the former St John s Hospital in Coventry Hales provided lands valued at 200 marks for the school s maintenance 9 Under Edward VI EditWhen King Edward VI came to the throne in 1547 Hales was appointed a Justice of the Peace for Middlesex and Warwickshire and became a member of parliament for Preston Lancashire 12 Hales supported the economic policies pursued by the young King s uncle Protector Somerset Hales was particularly opposed to the enclosure of land and is said to have been the most active of the commissioners appointed in 1548 to redress this evil However he failed to carry several remedial measures through Parliament 13 When Somerset fell from power in October 1549 Hales was imprisoned in the Tower likely as a result of his support for Somerset s policies He was released in 1550 and after enfeoffing his lands to his brother Stephen and to Sir Ralph Sadler obtained licence on 2 February 1551 to leave England in the company of Sir Richard Morison who was being sent as ambassador to Holy Roman Emperor Charles V Marian exile EditHales lived in Germany with his brother Christopher principally at Frankfurt until Queen Elizabeth I came to the throne While there he formed a friendship with the scholar Sturmius 14 Under Elizabeth I EditHales was back in England by 3 January 1559 and resumed his former position at the Hanaper He was one of the Members of Parliament for Lancaster from 1563 to 1567 14 Hales lost royal favour however by writing a succession tract entitled A Declaration of the Succession of the Crowne Imperiall of Inglande supporting the title to the crown of the descendants of King Henry VIII s younger sister Mary Mary s granddaughter Lady Catherine Grey had secretly married Edward Seymour and the Queen had had them both imprisoned Hales took the position that if the Queen were to have no children Lady Catherine should be next in line to the throne 15 Hales was imprisoned for his temerity On 27 April 1564 Sir William Cecil wrote to Sir Thomas Smith that Here is fallen out a troublesome fond matter John Hales had secretly made a book in the time of the last Parliament wherein he hath taken upon him to discuss no small matter viz the title to the Crown after the Queen s Majesty having confuted and rejected the line of the Scottish Queen and made the line of the Lady Frances mother to the Lady Catherine only next and lawful He is committed to the Fleet for this boldness specially because he had communicated it to sundry persons My Lord John Grey is in trouble also for it Beside this John Hales hath procured sentences and counsels of lawyers from beyond seas to be written in maintenance of the Earl of Hertford s marriage This dealing of his offendeth the Queen s Majesty very much 16 With Cecil s help Hales obtained his release from prison in 1566 but remained under house arrest for the next four years 12 Death EditThe date of Hales s death is uncertain According to Bindoff he died on 26 December 1572 while according to Lowe he died two days later on 28 December 14 He was buried in the Church of St Peter le Poer in Broad Street London He was sometimes referred to as Club foot Hales supposedly because he had accidentally wounded his foot with a dagger 12 Works EditHales wrote his Highway to Nobility about 1543 He wrote Introductiones ad grammaticum for his newly founded free school In 1543 he also published Precepts for the Preservation of Health a translation from Plutarch 12 Hales was likely the author of the anonymous mercantilist tract The Discourse of the Common Weal of this Realm of England 1581 which has been regarded by some commentators as being the first economics tract in the English language 17 Heir EditHales had never married and left most of his property to his nephew John Hales 18 a son of his brother Christopher Hales by his brother s marriage to Mary Lucy 19 Notes Edit Howard 1874 p 69 Hales 1882 p 62 Lowe 2004 Burke amp Burke 1838 pp 236 7 Deacon 1898 p 80 Thomas 1730 p 506 Garrett 1938 p 171 Metcalfe 1887 pp 19 32 According to the History of Parliament biography of Sir George Harper the real father of Lucy Peckham s children during her marriage to George Harper was Sir Richard Morison According to the inquisition post mortem taken 18 October 1560 these children were Marcellus Harper died 1 February 1559 Frances who married William Patrickson gentleman Mary who married Bartholomew Hales gentleman and Anne who died unmarried Fry 1896 Clode 1888 pp 159 61 Burke amp Burke 1838 pp 236 7 372 3 Marshall 1873 p 29 Kimber amp Johnson 1771 p 102 Chauncey 1826 p 195 Metcalfe 1886 p 48 Burton 1905 p 324 Said by some authorities to have been his uncle but by others to have been a distant kinsman a b c Bindoff 1982 p 276 Folger Shakespeare Library Guide to the Loseley Collection 1955 2000 87 L b 479 Reader 1846 p 122 Bindoff 1982 p 276 Lowe 2004 a b c d Lowe 2004 Hales John politician Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 12 11th ed 1911 p 834 a b c Bindoff 1982 p 277 Lowe 2004 Torre Victoria de la 2001 We Few of an Infinite Multitude John Hales Parliament and the Gendered Politics of the Early Elizabethan Succession Albion A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies 33 4 557 582 doi 10 2307 4052892 JSTOR 4052892 Ellis 1827 p 285 John Hales www hetwebsite net Retrieved 23 June 2020 Reader 1846 p 126 Garrett 1938 p 174 Attribution This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Hales John politician Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 12 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 834 References EditBindoff S T 1982 The House of Commons 1509 1558 Vol II London Secker and Warburg ISBN 9780436042829 Retrieved 7 January 2013 Burke John Burke John Bernard 1838 A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England London Scott Webster and Geary pp 236 7 Retrieved 7 January 2013 Burton John A 1905 The Sequestration papers of Humphrey Walcot Transactions of the Shropshire Archaeological and Natural History Society 3rd series Shrewsbury Adnitt and Naunton V Burke John Burke John Bernard 1844 A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England Ireland and Scotland 2nd ed London John Russell Smith pp 372 3 Retrieved 8 January 2013 Chauncey Henry 1826 The Historical Antiquities of Hertfordshire Vol II London J M Mullinger pp 195 6 Retrieved 29 January 2013 Clode Charles M 1888 The Early History of the Guild of Merchant Taylors Part 2 London Harrison and Sons pp 159 61 Retrieved 25 January 2013 merchant taylors school stephen hayles Deacon Edward 1898 The Descent of the Family of Deacon of Elstowe and London Part 2 Bridgeport Connecticut Retrieved 7 January 2013 Ellis Henry 1827 Original Letters Illustrative of English History Second Series Vol II London Harding and Lepard Retrieved 7 January 2013 Fry G S ed 1896 Abstracts of Inquisitiones Post Mortem for the City of London Part 1 Vol XV London and Middlesex Archaeological Society pp 191 211 Retrieved 8 January 2013 Garrett Christina Hallowell 1938 The Marian Exiles A Study in the Origins of Elizabethan Puritanism Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 171 4 ISBN 9781108011266 Retrieved 7 January 2013 Hales R Cox 1882 Brief notes on the Hales Family Archaeologia Cantiana London Kent Archaeological Society XIV 61 84 Retrieved 4 January 2013 Howard Joseph Jackson ed 1874 Miscellanea Genealogica et Heraldica New Series Vol I London Hamilton Adams Retrieved 7 January 2013 Kimber E Johnson R 1771 The Baronetage of England Vol II London G Woodfall pp 99 102 Lowe Ben 2004 Hales John 1516 1572 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 11913 Subscription or UK public library membership required Marshall George W ed 1873 La Neve s Pedigrees of the Knights Vol VIII London Harleian Society Retrieved 7 January 2013 Metcalfe Walter C ed 1886 The Visitations of Hertfordshire London Harleian Society Retrieved 29 January 2013 Metcalfe Walter C ed 1887 The Visitations of Northamptonshire London Harleian Society Retrieved 7 January 2013 Pierce William 1908 A Historical Introduction to the Marprelate Tracts New York Burt Franklin Reader W 1846 Nichols John Gough ed Documents Relating to the Family of Hales of Coventry and the Foundation of the Free School The Topographer and Genealogist I 120 32 Retrieved 8 January 2013 Thomas William 1730 The Antiquities of Warwickshire by Sir William Dugdale 2nd rev ed London John Osborn and Thomas Longman Retrieved 7 January 2013 Works related to John Hales at Wikisource Dictionary of National Biography 1885 1900 Volume 24 pp 29 30 External links EditHales John d 1572 History of Parliament Hales Stephen d 1574 History of Parliament Will of Stephen Hales National Archives Harper George 1503 58 History of Parliament Will of Sir George Harper National Archives Bartholomew Hales manor of Snitterfield Morison Sir Richard 1514 56 History of Parliament King Henry VIII Grammar School Works by or about John Hales in libraries WorldCat catalog Hutchinson John 1892 John Hales Men of Kent and Kentishmen Subscription ed Canterbury Cross amp Jackman p 60 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Hales died 1572 amp oldid 1120039511, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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