John Hall (physician)

[1] He became a physician, although he did not hold an English medical degree; it has been speculated that he studied medicine in France.

Hall appears to have had a close relationship with his father-in-law, as they are recorded being in agreement over a local issue regarding enclosure in 1613.

On 15 July the Halls brought suit for slander against Lane in the Consistory Court at Worcester.

Robert Whatcott, who three years later witnessed Shakespeare's will, testified for the Halls, but Lane failed to appear.

[3] He published them in 1657, 22 years after Hall's death, as Select observations on English bodies, or Cures both empericall and historicall performed upon very eminent persons in desperate diseases.