Swinburne is best known for his two treatises on law -
A briefe treatise of Testaments and last Wills, first published in 1590, and
A treatise of Spousals, or Matrimonial Contracts, published posthumously in 1686 based on a draft found in
Lincoln's Inn. The book was intended to rectify a fault in the canon law system - that there were so many hundreds of books on various bits of canon law that it was impossible to read all of them and get an accurate picture of a particular area of law. Swinburne intended to rectify this by publishing a single book on family law which could act as a substitute to the hundreds of other texts on the matter. After the copyright was acquired by the
Company of Stationers in 1607 it was reprinted and edited repeatedly.
A treatise of Spousals, or Matrimonial Contracts was being written up to Swinburne's death in 1624, and was only published in 1686 when a draft was found in the library of
Lincoln's Inn. There is evidence that it was intended to be one of three volumes on the subject, although the other two were never started, even in draft form. ==References==