A New and Complete Law-Dictionary

A New and Complete Law-Dictionary

The title of the Dictionary was “A New and Complete Law-Dictionary, or, General Abridgement of the Law. London: Printed by the law printers to the King’s Most Excellent Majesty, for S. Crowder [etc.]”, edited in 1764-1765.

About the Author: Timothy Cunningham (c. 1726-1789)

In the words of the Tarlton Law Library (University of Texas School of Law):

“According to his testament, Timothy Cunningham was the son of John Cunningham of Carickonshure (Carrick-on-Suir), Tipperary. Cunningham was a member of the Middle Temple, and lived in chambers at Gray’s Inn for over thirty years. Title page, New and Complete, 1783There is no record that he was called to the bar. Cunningham was the author or compiler of a large number of legal books including The Law of Bills of Exchange, Promissory Notes, Bank-Notes, and Insurances (1760), A New Treatise on the Laws Concerning Tithes (1765), and A New and Complete Law Dictionary (2 vols., 1764-5). He also wrote The History and Antiquities of the Inns of Court (1780). Cunningham was a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries after 1761, and left a bequest of £1000 to the Royal Irish Academy.

Cunningham attempted to give an alphabetically ordered account of the whole law in his two volume dictionary, hence the subtitle General Abridgment of the Law. More encyclopedia than dictionary, the lengthy compilation was specifically designed to compete with the still successful Jacob’s A New Law Dictionary, the only other contemporary work to attempt to restate the whole law and arrange the material alphabetically. The result was both verbose and cumbersome. Rather than achieving long popularity, Cunningham’s dictionary went through its third and final edition in 1783 – Jacob’s dictionary went through eleven editions and was still in print in one form or another well into the nineteenth century.”

Resources

Further Reading

  • A. M. Clerke. “Cunningham, Timothy (d. 1789).” Rev. J. A. Marchand. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004 (the national record of men and women who have shaped British history and culture, worldwide)
  • Frederick Teague Cansick. A Collection of Curious and Interesting Epitaphs, Copied from the Monuments of Distinguished and Noted Characteres in the Ancient Church and Burial Grounds of Saint Pancras, Middlesex. London: John Russell Smith, 1869, p. 69.
  • Bryan Garner. “Introduction to Cunningham’s A New and Complete Law-Dictionary (3rd. ed. 1783).” Garner on Language and Writing. Chicago: American Bar Association, 2009, pp. 367-371.
  • John Thomas Gilbert. A History of the City of Dublin. 3 vols. London: John Russell Smith, 1859, vol. 3, pp. 235-236.

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