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  1. John Hall (1575-1635) was a physician working in Stratford-upon-Avon in the early 1600s. Physicians at this time were the highest rank of the medical profession, distinguished by their university education. John Hall attended Queen’s College, Cambridge in 1589.

  2. The name of Dr John Hall is familiar to students of Shakespeare but less well, known to medical biographers. He was born in 1575 and studied at Queen's College, Cambridge, but had no English medical degree. He was not a member of the Royal College of Physicians (founded in 1518).

    • J M S Pearce
    • 2006
  3. Hall-Edwards was the son of John Edwards, and was born on Moseley Road, Kings Norton near Birmingham. He attended King Edward VI Grammar School in Birmingham. He then studied medicine, apprenticing under Prof Richard Hill Norris at Queens College Medical School.

  4. Lane J with Earles M. John Hall and his Patients. The Medical Practice of Shakespeare's Son-in-Law. Stratford-upon-Avon: Shakespeare's Birthplace Trust, 1996. (This also reproduces Cooke's translation of the case-book and uncovers many details about Hall's patients and their treatment)

    • Nicholas Barton
    • 2000
  5. Hall was among just a third of physicians outside of London with a Master of Arts, and although he did not have a medical degree, he could still practice.

  6. He was born in 1575 and studied at Queen's College, Cambridge, but had no English medical degree. He was not a member of the Royal College of Physicians (founded in 1518). Around 1600, he established himself in Stratford.

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  8. He was educated at King Edward VI Grammar School, Birmingham, and attended the Queen's College Medical School, where he was for three years assistant demonstrator in practical histology to the professor of physiology, Richard Hill Norris.

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