Hallam described his work
Middle Ages as a series of historical dissertations for the period from the 5th to the 15th century. The work consists of nine long chapters: the histories of
France,
Italy,
Spain,
Germany, and of the Greek and
Saracenic empires, fill five chapters. Others deal with major institutional features of
medieval society: the
feudal system, the ecclesiastical system, and the political system of England. The last chapter sketches society, commerce, manners, and literature in the Middle Ages. The
Constitutional History of England (1827) took up the subject at the point at which it had been dropped in
Middle Ages, namely the accession of
Henry VII, and carried it down to the accession of
George III. Hallam stopped here because he was unwilling to touch on issues of contemporary politics which seemed to him to run back through the whole period of the reign of George III, but this did not prevent him from being accused of bias. The
Quarterly Review for 1828 contains a hostile article on the
Constitutional History, written by
Robert Southey, full of reproach: the work, he said, is the "production of a decided partisan". It was his distant treatment of
Charles I,
Thomas Cranmer and
William Laud that provoked the indignation of Southey. Hallam, like
Thomas Babington Macaulay, ultimately referred political questions to the standard of
Whig constitutionalism. But he was conscientious with his materials, and it was this which made the
Constitutional History one of the standard textbooks of English politics. ==Literary history works==