Thomas Bayly Howell

Thomas Bayly Howell FRS (6 September 1767 – 13 April 1815) was an English lawyer and writer who edited and lent his name to Howell's State Trials.

Thomas Bayly Howell
Born(1767-09-06)6 September 1767
Died13 April 1815(1815-04-13) (aged 47)
NationalityGreat Britain
EducationChrist Church, Oxford
OccupationLawyer
Known forHowell's State Trials

Life

Thomas Bayly Howell was born in Jamaica. His family returned to England in 1770 to settle at Prinknash Park near Gloucester. Howell studied at Christ Church, Oxford but did not graduate, instead moving on to Lincoln's Inn and being called to the bar in 1790.[1]

In 1808, William Cobbett asked Howell to edit a new edition of the State Trials, a work aspiring to aggregate all the important cases on public law in England. Former compilations of the subject were published by Thomas Salmon, Sollom Emlyn and Francis Hargrave over the previous century. Howell worked on the project from 1809 to 1814, his son, Thomas Jones Howell taking over from him.[1] A modern edition of the State Trials was edited by Donald Thomas and published in two volumes in 1972.[2]

Honours

gollark: > hoping for more people to die and greater economic damage because it would boost your political ideology
gollark: The economic damage is almost certainly better than the increased deaths/sick people which would result from doing less.
gollark: And I'd argue that not knowing exactly what it can do means you should treat it more seriously.
gollark: It's very infectious, mortality rate between, what, 0.2% and 10%, depending (probably only 10% as an upper bound with really overloaded healthcare), and not really any good treatments yet.
gollark: We have a decent idea.

References

  1. Goodwin (2004)
  2. State Trials. WorldCat. OCLC. OCLC 3489049.

Bibliography

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