Early life Daniel George Edward Hall was born on 17 November 1891 into a farming family in
Hertfordshire,
England. His early education was at
Hitchin Grammar School. He entered the Department of History in
King's College London in 1913 and graduated in 1916 with a first-class honors degree in Modern History, winning the Gladstone Memorial Prize. Hall also won an Inglis Studentship that allowed him to gain a Master's degree from the
University of London with a thesis on mercantile aspects of English foreign policy during the reign of
Charles II. During the First World War Hall served in the army with
Inns of Court Regiment, and also toured the
Western Front with the Lena Ashworth concert party.
Career In early 1919, Hall obtained a position as senior history master at
Royal Grammar School, Worcester. Later that year Hall married Helen Eugenie Banks (who, two years his junior at King's College, had also been awarded the Gladstone Memorial Prize) and began teaching history at
Bedales School, Hampshire. While at
Bedales School, Hall was offered the position of chair of history at the recently founded
University of Rangoon. Upon his arrival in
Rangoon in May 1921, Hall was faced with a history syllabus was that was unsuited to the new university, being focused on classical Greece, Rome and modern European history. His initial task therefore was to create courses and provide textbooks that were relevant to the needs of his Burmese students. It was while engaged in this task, and developing the local history content of the syllabus, that Hall became interested in Burmese culture and Asian studies. However his full-scale pursuit of these interests had to wait until he had completed the task of developing and teaching the Western history syllabus of the university. , taken c.1945 when he lived there. Thus it was not until 1927 that the first results of Hall's research into Anglo-Burmese relations was published with his paper
“English Relations with Burma, 1587–1686" published in the Journal of the
Burma Research Society, 1927. The completion of further research, including
The Dalhousie-Phayre Correspondence, led to Hall being awarded a degree of Doctor of Literature by the University of London. In 1934 Hall was forced to resign his chair in Rangoon and return to England due to his family having developed
trachoma, which made it impossible for them to remain in the tropics. Upon his return to England Hall took up the position of Headmaster of
Caterham School in
Surrey. Hall left Caterham in 1949 when he was appointed chair of the History of South East Asia department at the University of London
School of Oriental and African Studies. It was while at SOAS that Hall published his
History of South-East Asia (1955), the center-piece of his work. In September 1959 Hall retired from the University of London and took up a visiting professor position at
Cornell University. After retiring from Cornell and returning to England in 1973, Hall published his biography of
Henry Burney in 1975. Hall died on 12 October 1979. ==Books and publications==