Difference between revisions of "The Timeline"

From the Family Tree Forum Reference Library
Line 571: Line 571:
 
|1602|| || || || ||
 
|1602|| || || || ||
 
|-valign="top"
 
|-valign="top"
|1603||James I '''The Stuart's''' || || || ||
+
|1603||James I '''Stuart''' || || || ||
 
|-valign="top"
 
|-valign="top"
 
|1604|| || || || ||
 
|1604|| || || || ||

Revision as of 03:36, 4 July 2009

Time title.jpg


Our ancestors (like us) were shaped by the world they lived in and the sudden movement of a family, for example, from their birthplace to another part of the country could be explained by what was happening in the wider world.


We hope that this historical timeline will help you to put the personal life of your ancestors in context with the social and political situation of the time.


Anyone is welcome to add events to the timeline. Please read Adding an event to the timeline before you start.


If you have any problems, you can ask for help on The Timeline Project or contact the co-ordinator Elizabeth Herts.


Related pages

General History

Creating Your Family Tree

The Classified Index of Wiki Pages






Eleventh.jpg

Eleventh Century

YEAR MONARCH POLITICAL/CONFLICTS SOCIAL/EPIDEMICS INVENTIONS/DISCOVERIES NOTABLE EVENTS
1063 Edward the Confessor Harold Godwinson leads English army campiagn against Welsh
1065 Harold II Edward dies 5 Jan Witan declare Harold king on 6 Jan
1066 William the Conqueror Battle of Hastings Bayeux Tapesty attributed to Matilda of Flanders, William I's wife or to Bishop Odo The Norman Conquest
1072 Building of Durham Castle commenced
1077 First Cluniac House at Lewes (Benedictine Order)
1079 Building of Winchester Cathedral commenced
1083 Ely Cathedral commenced on former nunnery site
1086 Domesday book completed Henry, Holy Roman Emperor & German King born 8th AUG - last of Salian dynasty -died 23 MAY 1125
1087 William II
1097 Stephen born Blois France
1095 First Crusade
1099 Ranierus becomes Pope Paschal II - fosters the First Crusade
1100 Henry I William Rufus killed while hunting Building of Durham Cathedral commenced


Back to Top

Twelfth Century

YEAR MONARCH POLITICAL/CONFLICTS SOCIAL/EPIDEMICS INVENTIONS/DISCOVERIES NOTABLE EVENTS
1105 Ronando Bandinelli born (becomes Pope Alexander II)
1119 Foundation of the Knights Templar Pope Calixtus II
1122 Pope Calixtus II - Concordant of Worms
1123 St Bartholomew's Hospital, London founded by Rahere David I becomes King of Scotland
1129 Cistercians (Order of St. Bernard) arrive from Cheaux France
1132
1135 Stephen of Blois
1141 Matilda (Maud) Civil War
1147 Second Crusade
1150 Pope Alexander II named as cardinal
1154 Henry II Plantagenet
1162 Thomas Becket appointed Archbishop of Canterbury Fredrick I forced into exile by Pope Alexander II
1163 Building of Notre Dame in Paris begins
1164 Constitution of Clarendon
1166 Assize (possessory) of Clarendon
1170 Henry the Young King crowned by Archbishop of York
1172 Thomas Becket murdered at Canterbury Cathedral
1176 Assize (possessory) of Northampton
1179 Third Laterin Council by Pope Alexander III
1189 Richard I Third Crusade
1199 John


Back to Top

Twelfth.jpg

Thirteenth Century

YEAR MONARCH POLITICAL/CONFLICTS SOCIAL/EPIDEMICS INVENTIONS/DISCOVERIES NOTABLE EVENTS
1204 Fourth Crusade
1215 Signing of Magna Carta Fourth Laterin Council

Pope Innocent III

1216 Henry III Two regents, William the Marshal and Hubert de Burgh, rule as Henry is only 9
1217 Treaty of Lambeth
1218 Henry III Fifth Crusade
1219 Death of William the Marshal
1222 Hugh de Burgh supresses an insurrection at Oxford
1223
1224
1227 Henry takes full control of government of England. Hug de Burgh retained as principal adviser.
1228
1230
1232 Peter de Riveaux appointed Treasurer of England
1236 Henry marries Eleanor of Provence
1238 Simon de Monfort marries Henry's sister, Eleanor
1258 De Monfort leads the English barons to rebel
1258 Henry signs the Provisions of Oxford
1261 Henry repudiates the Provisions of Oxford
1262
1263
1264 Battle of Lewes
1265 Battle of Evesham The poet, writer and philospher Dante born in Florence Italy
1268
1270 Seventh Crusade
1272 Edward I
1277 English conquest of Wales begins
1278
1279
1280
1282
1288
1290 Death of Eleanor of Castile Jews expelled from England
1299 Edward marries Margaret of France Ottoman Empire begins



Back to Top


Fourteenth Century

YEAR MONARCH POLITICAL/CONFLICTS SOCIAL/EPIDEMICS INVENTIONS/DISCOVERIES NOTABLE EVENTS
1300
1301
1302
1303
1304
1305
1306
1307 Edward II
1308 Estimated that Dante began epic poem in canto form "'La commedia/La divina commedia, completed c1321; 'The Divine Comedy'
1309 Papacy moves to Avignon
1310
1314 Battle of Bannockburn
1315-17 Great Famine in Europe
1319 Battle of Mytton: Scots defeat English
1322 Battle of Boroughbridge: crown defeats rebels
1323 Truce between Robert Bruce and Edward II but warfare continues
1325
1327 Edward III First maunscript reference to a cannon Death of Robert Bruce
1333 Battle of Halidon Hill
1336 First reference to a mounted gun aboard ship
1337 Guillaume de Machaut becomes canon at Rheims; composes "Messe de Notre Dame" during tenure
1338 Start of 100 Years War
1342
1346 Battle of Crecy
1346 Battle Of Neville's Cross
1348 Black Death reaches Europe A third or more of the population died as a result of the Black Death
1356 Battle of Poitiers
1377 Richard II Papacy returns to Rome

Guillaume de Machaut dies

1380 Chaucer begins 'The Legend of Good Women'
1381 The Peasants' Revolt
1382 Chaucer's: 'The Parlement of Foules' first use of rhyme royal in English Literature
1385 Chaucer's: 'Troilus and Criseyde'
1387 Chaucer begins 'Canterbury Tales'
1388 Battle of Otterburn
1399 Henry IV
1400 Owen Glendower revolts in Wales Chaucer dies, London, 25 Oct



Back to Top


Fifteenth Century

YEAR MONARCH POLITICAL/CONFLICTS SOCIAL/EPIDEMICS INVENTIONS/DISCOVERIES NOTABLE EVENTS
1413 Henry V
1415 Battle of Agincourt
1422 Henry VI
1440 Eton College & Kings College Cambridge founded
1450 Jack Cade's rebellion
1454 Johannes Gutenberg uses movable type commercially
1455 Start of the Wars of the Roses
1455 First Battle of St Albans Johannes Gutenberg prints 42 Line Bible in Catholic Mainz, Germany
1456
1461 Edward IV
1470 Henry VI
1471 Edward IV Battle of Barnet
1476 Caxton sets up first English printing press
1477 William Caxton (first English Printer) produces Book of Curtesye & Rhymes for the Goodly Chylde
1483 Edward V
1483 Richard III
1485 Battle of Bosworth Field Richard III dies in battle
1485 Henry VII Tudor
1486 Henry married Elizabeth of York, uniting the houses of York and Lancaster
1487
1488
1489
1490
1491 Perkin Warbeck claims to be Richard, Duke of York
1492 Christopher Columbus discovers America
1493
1494
1495 First dry dock built at Portsmouth
1496 First English blast furnace built in the Weald
1498 Toothbrush invented in China
1499 Perkin Warbeck hanged Amergo Vespucci (Italian) explores and describes American coast



Back to Top


Sixteenth.jpg

Sixteenth Century

YEAR MONARCH POLITICAL/CONFLICTS SOCIAL/EPIDEMICS INVENTIONS/DISCOVERIES NOTABLE EVENTS
1502 Death of Prince Arthur, heir to the throne
1503 Death of Elizabeth of York, Henry's wife
1505
1506
1507
1508
1509 Henry VIII Marriage of Henry and Catherine of Aragon
1510
1511
1512
1513
1514
1515 Birth of Princess Mary
1528
1529 Cardinal Wolsey accused of high treason
1530
1531
1532 Sir Thomas More gives up the Chancellorship
1533 Henry marries Ann Boleyn and is excommunicated by the Pope
1534 Act of Supremacy passed
1535
1536 Execution of Anne Boleyn Act of Union between Wales and England
1537 Jane Seymour dies
1538 Parish Registers started
1539
1540
1541
1542
1543 Robert Record writes The Ground of Arts, the first ever English mathematics textbook Six Books of Copernicus: The Revolutions (laws) of the Heavenly Orbs published in the year of his death
1544
1545
1546 First civil divorce in England
1547 Edward VI
1548
1549 First Act of Uniformity passed, making Roman Catholic mass illegal The First Book of Common Prayer issued
1550
1551
1552
1553 Jane
1553 Mary I
1554 Marriage of Mary to Philip of Spain Execution of Lady Jane Grey
1555
1557 The Stationers Company controls English book publication
1558 Elizabeth I
1559 Second Act of Supremacy
1560
1561
1562 Sumptuary law restricts hose, ruffs and swords
1563 to 1564 Bubonic Plague in London
1564 William Shakespeare baptised 26 April in Statford-upon-Avon Warwickshire Galileo born
1565
1568 Mary Queen of Scots flees to England and is imprisoned by Elizabeth
1571 Johannes Keppler born Germany-discovered planetery movements
1575
1577 Francis Drake circumnavigates the worldto 1580
1578
1579
1580
1585 Roanoke (North America) first Englsih colony founded by Sir Thomas Raleigh
1586 Mary Queen of Scots sent for trial
1587 Execution of Mary Queen of Scots
1588 Spanish Armada
1589 Stocking Frame invented by William Lee
1590 First part of Edmund Spenser's The Fairie Queen published
1597 Tagliacozzi publishes his plastic surgery techiques
1598 Bishops' Transcripts introduced
1599 Richard Burbage, William Shakespeare & others build the Globe Theatre in London
1600 Heels on shoes became common in Europe East India Company founded



Back to Top


Seventeenth Century

YEAR MONARCH POLITICAL/CONFLICTS SOCIAL/EPIDEMICS INVENTIONS/DISCOVERIES NOTABLE EVENTS
1601 Poor Law Act Relief granted to paupers only in their parish of legal settlement Orphans and paupers' children become apprentices (see Poor Law Act)
1602
1603 James I Stuart
1604
1605 Gunpowder Plot
1606
1607 Ulster colonized by Protestant settlers Huge wave in Bristol Channel kills hundreds Settlement of Jamestown, Virginia, USA
1608 John Milton (poet) born Quebec city founded
1609 Galileo looks at the sky with a telescope
1610 Authorized Version of Bible
1611
1612 Henry Prince of Wales died of typhoid 10 hanged at Lancaster for witchcraft
1613 Globe Theatre London burns down
1614 Globe Theatre rebult by June John Napier publishes book of logarithms New York founded by Dutch (New Amsterdam)
1615
1616 Shakespeare dies 23 April at Statford-upon-Avon
1617 Napier's bones, a calculating tool, invented
1618
1619 Francis Bacon made Lord Chancellor
1620 Francis Bacon publishes Novum Organum Pilgrim Fathers settle in New England
1621
1622
1623
1624 Fire destroys much of Dunfermline
1625 Charles I
1626
1627 England goes to war with France
1628 William Harvey publishes An Anatomical Study of the Motion of the Heart and of the Blood in Animals
1629 11 years rule without Parliament commences
1630
1631
1632
1633 Milton's On the Morning of Christ's Nativity first poem in English
1634 First writs for Ship Money issued
1635 18th Sept Emperor Ferdinand II declares War on France
1636
1637 John Hampden tried for non-payment of Ship Money New Prayer Book introduced in Scotland
1638
1639 First Bishops War against Scots
1640 Second Bishops war Battle of Newburn Ford Most of Gentry and Merchant classes literate
1641 Star Chamber and Court of High Commission abolished Protestation Returns required by Parliament
1641 Irish Rebellion
1642 to 1651 English Civil Wars
1642 Royalists victory at Powick Bridge 23 Sep Theatre banned (until 1660) Birth of Isaac Newton
1642 Royalist advantage after Battle of Edgehill 23 Oct
1643 Crown controls Cornwall after Battle of Braddock Down 19 Jan
1643 Battle of Hopton Heath 16 Mar
1643 Battle of Stratton 16 May
1643 Battle of Chalgrove 17 Jun
1643 Battle of Adwalton Manor 30 Jun
1643 Battle of Roundway Down 13 Jul
1643 Battle of Newbury 20 Sep
1643 Parliament win Battle of Winceby 11 Oct
1644 Battle of Nantwich 25 Jan
1644 Battle of Cheriton 29 Mar Globe Theatre destroyed by Puritans
1644 Battle of Cropredy Bridge 29 June
1644 Battle of Marston Moor 2 July Parliament bans Christmas (lasts until Restoration)
1645
1646
1647 George Fox's spiritual revelation that leads to founding Quakers
1648 Frondes civil wars in France
January 1649 Regicide of Charles I England declared a republic
1649 to 1660 Interregnum Possible gaps in Parish records
1649 Irish royalists defeated at Wexford and the Siege of Drogheda
1650 Scots royalists defeated at Dunbar First coffee-house opened in England Cape Town founded
1651 Scots royalists defeated at Worcester Charles II flees into exile
1652 to 1654 First Dutch War
1652 Pasqua Rosee opens London's first Coffee House
1653 Oliver Cromwell
1654
1655 Parliament dismissed. Country divided into 11 districts, each with a Major-General Jamaica captured from the Spanish
1656
1657 Milton's Paradise Lost published
1658 Richard Cromwell Oliver Cromwell dies
1659
1660 Charles II Royal Society formed Samuel Pepys begins diary
1661 The Corporation Act Malpighi discovers capillaries
1662 Poor Relief Act (Act of Settlement) The parish responsible for the relief of the poor.
1662 Act of Comformity Charles II marries Catherine of Braganza Book of Common Prayer (the current traditional C of E prayer book)
1662 to 1689 Hearth Tax in England
1663 Mens' wigs become fashionable
1664
1665-67 2nd Dutch War The Oxford Gazette (later the London Gazette) first published The Convertide Act The Five Mile Act
1665 Five Mile Act Great Plague
1666 Great Fire of London Isaac Newton's annus mirabilis
1666 The Oxford Gazette becomes the London Gazette
1667 John Milton writes Paradise Lost
1668 Newton invents reflecting telescope Bombay granted to East India Company
1669 Christopher Wren appointed Surveyor General
1670 Secret Treaty of Dover Milton's The History of Britain
1671
1672-74 3rd Dutch War
1673 Test Act
1674 John Milton (poet) dies
1675 John Flamsteed appointed first Astronomer Royal Royal Observatory established at Greenwich
1676 Great Fire of Southwark St Paul's Cathedral begun by Sir Christopher Wren
1677 Act for burying in Woollen
1678 Popish plot fabricated by Titus Oates Pilgrim's Progress by John Bunyan
1679 Habeas Corpus Act
1680 William Dockwra establishes the penny post Anton van Leeuwenhoek refines the microscope and Royal Society accept his observations on single cell organisms
1681 Charles II offered sanctuary to the Huguenots
1682 Pennsylvania founded
1683
1684
1685 James II Battle of Sedgmoor Edict of Nantes revoked and many Huguenots settle in England Johann Sebastian Bach born

Georg Friedrich Handel born Halle Germany

1687 Newton publishes Principia
1688 The Glorious Revolution
1689 William and Mary Battle of Killiecrankie Freedom of worship for Protestant dissenters
1690 First bicycle appears in France - the celerifere
1692 Glencoe Massacre Salem witch trials in Massachusetts
1693 National Debt founded Land tax first introduced
1694 Death of Mary; William rules alone Foundation of the Bank of England
1695 Press licensing abandoned in England (freedom of the press)
1696 Window Tax introduced
1697 St Paul's Cathedral opened
1698 Sir Isacc Newton calculates the speed of sound
1699
1700



Back to Top


Eighteenth Century

YEAR MONARCH POLITICAL/CONFLICTS SOCIAL/EPIDEMICS INVENTIONS/DISCOVERIES NOTABLE EVENTS
1701 Act of Settlement Jethro Tull invents the seed drill
1702 Anne War of Spanish Succession starts The Daily Courant published - first daily newspaper
1703 Eddystone Lighthouse swept away by a storm
1704 Battle of Blenheim
1705 The Earl of Peterborough captures Barcelona Newcomen patents steam pump
1706 Marlborough defeats the French at the Battle of Ramilles
1707 Act of Union
1708 Capture of Minorca Prince George of Denmark, Anne's husband, dies
1709 First piano built by Bartolommeo Cristofori in Florence
1710
1711
1712
1713 The Treaty of Utrecht
1714 George I End of the War of Spanish Succession Mercury thermometer invented by Gabriel Fahrenheit
1715 Jacobite Rebellion defeated
1716 The Septennial Act (General Elections to be held every 7 years)
1717
1718 Thomas Lombe's silk spinning patent
1719 Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe published
1720 South Sea Bubble burst
1721 Robert Walpole becomes the first Prime Minister (Whig)
1722 Daniel Defoe 's A Journel of the Plague Year & Colonial Jack published
1723
1726 Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift published Death of Sophia Dorothea, wife of George I
1727 George II Death of Sir Isaac Newton
1733 Kay's flying shuttle
1736 Witchcraft finally abolished as a crime
1737 Death of Queen Caroline
1738 Methodism begins
1739 War of Jenkins Ear
1740 War of the Austrian Succession
1742 Spencer Compton, Earl of Wilmington, Prime Minister (Whig) Henry Fielding publishes Joseph Andrews Sheffiel flatware(cutlery) developed by Thomas boulsover
1743 Henry Pelham, Prime Minister (Whig)
1744 John Newbery first to publish Children's Literature A Pretty Pocket Book
1745 2nd Jacobite rebellion
1746 Battle of Culloden
1747 James Lind, a Scottish naval surgeon, discovers that citrus fruits prevent scurvy
1748 Tobias George Smollet publishes The Adventures of Roderick Random
1149 Fielding publishes Tom Jones Samuel Johnson published poem A Vanity of Human Wishes
1750 London earth tremors cause panic Samuel Johnson produces The Rambler essays (1750-52)
1751 Fielding publishes Amelia; Tobias Smollet published The Adventures of peregrine Pickle;
1752 Gregorian calendar introduced
1753 Foundation of the British Museum Marriage Act
1754 Thomas Pelham-Holles, Duke of Newcastle, Prime Minister (Whig)
1755 War with France Samuel Johnson published The Dictionary (English)
1756 William Cavendish, Duke of Devonshire, Prime Minister (Whig) Marine Society founded
1756 to 1763 Seven Years' War
1755 Black Hole of Calcutta
1757 Battle of Plassey William Blake born
1758 Thomas Pelham-Holles, Duke of Newcastle, Prime Minister (Whig)
1759 Georg Friedrich Handel dies
1760 George III
1762 John Stuart, Earl of Bute, Prime Minister (Tory) Oliver Goldsmith's essay The Citizen of the World or Letters from a Chinese Philospher published
1763 George Grenville, Prime Minister (Whig) August hailstorms ruin Sussex harvest
1764 Oliver Goldsmith published The Travellor
1765 Charles Watson-Wentworth, Marquess of Rockingham, Prime Minister (Whig) John Newbery prints A history of Goody Two Shoes; Mother Goose's Melody
1766 William Pitt the Elder, Earl of Chatham, Prime Minister (Whig) The Vicar of Wakefield by Oliver Goldsmith published
1767 Augustus Fitzroy, Duke of Grafton, Prime Minister (Whig)
1768 Royal Academy of Arts founded Spinning jenny
1770 Frederick North, Lord North, Prime Minister (Tory) Cook charts New South Wales

Ludwig van Beethoven born in Bonn

1773 Boston Tea Party Oliver Goldsmith's play She Stoops to Conquer appears
1774 Discovery of oxygen by Joseph Priestley
1775 American War of Independence James Watt develops the steam engine
1776 Bridgewater canal completed American Declaration of Independence
1778 First iron bridge built
1778 Bramah's flushing watercloset patented
1779 to 1783 Siege of Gibraltar
1779 Crompton's Mule
1780 4th Anglo-Dutch war Gordon Riots in London
1781
1782 Charles Watson-Wentworth, Marquess of Rockingham, Prime Minister (Whig)
1782 William FitzMaurice, Earl of Shelburne, Prime Minister (Whig)
1783 William Bentinck, Duke of Portland, Prime Minister (Tory) Britain recognises U.S. independence
1783 William Pitt the Younger, Prime Minister (Tory)
1784 William Blake opens own print shop; Blake invents relief etching as a print/publishing form
1785 Separation of the Methodist Church from the Church of England Cartwright's Power Loom
1786 Beginnings of gas lighting
1787 The Constitution (United States of America) declared
1788 Charles Edward Stuart (Bonnie Prince Charlie) dies in Rome
1788 Captain Arthur Phillip's First Fleet in Sydney Cove
1789 French Revolution
1791 Publication of The Rights of Man by Thomas Paine The Board of Ordnance started mapping southern Britain
1793 War with France Joseph Preistley discovered nitrous oxide (laughing gas)
1794 William Blake writes and prints Songs of Innocence and Experience
1796 to 1808 Anglo-Spanish War
1796 Grand Junction (Union) Canal opens
1796 Jenner develops smallpox vaccine
1798 Nelson wins Battle of the Nile Beethoven writes Pathetique Beginning of Irish Immigration to Canada
1800 Sir Humphry Davy announces the anesthetic properties of nitrous oxide although it was not used as such for 40 years Census Act



Back to Top


Nineteenth.jpg

Nineteenth Century

YEAR MONARCH POLITICAL/CONFLICTS SOCIAL/EPIDEMICS INVENTIONS/DISCOVERIES NOTABLE EVENTS
1801 Regents Canal opens Census 10th March (of limited use to family historians
1801 Henry Addington, PM (Tory) Earl of Mansfield's monument completed by John Flaxman First Ordnance Survey map published, the 1 inch map of Kent
1802 John flaxman illustrates Dantes' The Divine Comedy
1803 War with France
1804 William Pitt the Younger, PM (Tory)
1805 Battle of Trafalgar
1806 William Grenville, Lord Grenville, PM (Whig) State funeral of Nelson
1807 Abolition of Slavery Act
1807 William Bentinck, Duke of Portland, PM (Tory)
1808 to 1814 Peninsular War
1809 Spencer Perceval, PM (Tory) First 'free' settlers to NSW
1810 First curry house opens in England
1811 Prince George appointed Regent when his father's health deteriorates (porphyria) Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility published Census 27th May (of limited use to family historians)
1812-15 Anglo-American War
1812 Spencer Perceval PM assassinated First commercial European paddle steamer Rose's Act passed. Entry of baptisms, marriages and burials in Anglican churches standardised in bound volumes
1812 Robert Jenkinson, Earl of Liverpool, PM (Tory)
1813 Publication of Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
1814 Publication of Mansfield Park by Jane Austen
1815 Napoleon defeated at the Battle of Waterloo Emma by Jane Ausen published Leeds Liverpool canal completed
1816 Davy lamp improves mining safety Year without a summer due to volcanic eruption
1816 René Laënnec invents the stethoscope the draisine (bicycle) appears in Germany
1817 Jane Austen's Persuasion and Northanger Abby published postumously
1818 Nelson's monument completed by John Flaxman James Blundell, British obstetrician, performs the first successful human blood transfusion

Curride (bicycle) appears in England (known as the hobbyhorse) ||Death of Queen Charlotte

1819 Peterloo Massacre Jacques Offenbach French Composer born
1820 George IV Failure of the Cato Street Conspiracy
1821 Census May 28th (of limited value to family historians)
1822 Birth of Louis Pasteur Caledonian Canal completed
1823
1824
1825 First railway, Stockton-Darlington
1826 Machine breaking & riots in Lancashire First steamship crosses Atlantic
1827 George Canning PM (Tory) Endoscope invented by Pierre Segalas
1827 Frederick Robinson, Viscount Goderich, PM (Tory) Ludwig van Beethoven dies
1828 Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington, PM (Tory)
1829 The Catholic Relief Act passed - Catholics permitted to becomes MPs Metropolitan Police established Stephenson's "Rocket" locomotive WA declared British possession
1830 William IV Charles Grey, Earl Grey, PM (Whig ) Liverpool & Midlands Railway opens
1831 Census: 30th May (of limited use to family historians)
1831 to 1832 1st Cholera Epidemic
1832 The Reform Bill of 1832
1833 Slavery Abolition Act
1834 Poor Law Amendment Act Tolpuddle Martyrs sentenced to transportation to Australia
1834 William Lamb, Viscount Melbourne, PM Whig)
1834 Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington, PM (Tory)
1834 Sir Robert Peel, PM (Tory)
1835 William Lamb, Viscount Melbourne, PM (Whig)
1836 Sentence of Tolpuddle Martyrs remitted under public pressure Charles Dickens serializes The Pickwick Papers
1837 Victoria Electric Telegraph invented Civil Registration introduced
1838 Chartism:The People's Petition Daguerrotype photographical process Public Record Office established
1839 to 1842 First Afghan War
1839 Foundation of the anti-Corn Law League Macmillan produces the self propelled hobbyhorse
1840 Charles Booth, Ship owner and Sociologist born
1840 Uniform Penny Post introduced Victoria married Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha
1841 Sir Robert Peel PM (Tory) Thomas Cook travel company founded London-Brighton railway completed Census: 6th June
1842 Income Tax Act Income tax re-introduced
1843 Rebecca riots in Wales
1844 Nitrous oxide first used as an anesthetic by Dr. Horace Wells, American dentist
1844 Safety match invented in Sweden
1845 Start of the Irish Potato Famine Emigration from Ireland rises steeply
1845 to 1872 New Zealand Colonial Wars
1846 Lord John Russell, PM (Whig) Repeal of the Corn Laws Dickens publishes Dombey and Son (1846-48)
1847 First use of chloroform in childbirth
1848 to 1849 2nd Cholera Epidemic
1848 1st Public Health Act Foundation of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood Influx of academic and middle class Europeans to London
1849 Dickens releases David Copperfield
1850 First Public Library Act First convicts arrive in Perth 'Scindian'
1851 The Great Exhibition Australian Gold Rush Census: 30th March
1852 Edward Stanley, Earl of Derby, PM (Conservative) Foundation of the Museum of Manufactures (later the Victoria & Albert Museum)
1852 George Hamilton-Gordon, Earl of Aberdeen, PM (Conservative) Dickens releases Bleak House 1852-1853
1853 3rd Cholera Epidemic
1853 Compulsory Vaccination Act Jacques Offenbach composes and performs Pepito Alexander Wood invents hypodermic syringe
1854 to 1856 The Crimean War Florence Nightingale and the Crimean War
1854 Broad Street cholera outbreak John Snow discovers cause of cholera
1854 Dickens publishes Hard Times
1855 Viscount Palmerston, PM (Liberal) Dickens releases Little Dorrit Civil Registration introduced in Scotland
1856 Crinoline becomes popular Synthetic dyes invented
1856 Cage crinoline invented Bessemer converter enables large scale steel production
1857 The Museum of Manufactures moved to South Kensington and became South Kensington Museum (later the Victoria and Albert Museum) Matrimonial Causes Act
1858 Edward Stanley, Earl of Derby, PM (Conservative)
1858 Viscount Palmerston PM (Liberal) Secular Court of Probate created
1859 Louis Pasteur paper published suggesting that microorganisms may cause many human and animal diseases
1860 Census: 7th April
1861 Death of Prince Albert from typhoid
1861 to 1865 American Civil War Lancashire Cotton Famine
1862
1863 Formation of Football Association First underground railway opens in London
1864 First diagnosis of swine fever in Bristol Dickens serializes Our Mutual Friend until 1865
1864 First diagnosis of swine fever in Bristol
1865 to 1866 4th Cholera Epidemic
1865 Locomotives on Highways Act also known as the 'Red Flag Act' Great Cattle Plague to 1857
1865 John Russell, Earl Russell, PM (Liberal) Lewis Carrol (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson) published Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
1866 Edward Stanley, Earl of Derby, PM (Conservative)
1867 Second Reform Act - number of voters doubled Joseph Lister publishes paper on Antiseptic Principle of the Practice of Surgery Suez canal opens
1868 Benjamin Disraeli, PM (Conservative) Last convicts transported to Western Australia
1868 William Ewart Gladstone, PM (Liberal) Jacques Offenbach composes Orpheus of the Underworld
1870 Education Act makes primary education compulsory First Barnardo's Home opens
1870 Charles Dickens dies and The Mystery of Edwin Drood published postumously Germ theory of disease established by Robert Kock and Louis Pasteur
1871 Trade Unions legalized Penny farthing bicycle invented Census: 2nd April
1871 Benjamin Seebohm Rowntree, entrepreneur and philanthropist born Typewriter invented by Christopher Sholes
1872 2nd Public Health Act introduced Compulsory vaccination against smallpox introduced
1873 The highwheeler (bicycle) invented
1874 Benjamin Disraeli PM (Conservative) Bustles begin to be fashionable
1875 3rd and 4th Public Health Act introduced and were compulsory First electric dental drill patented by George Green
1876 New Central Committee of Nation Society for Women's Suffrage founded Alexander Graham Bell invents telephone
1877 Edison invents phonograph and electric light bulb
1878 to 1880 Second Afghan War
1879 Zulu War First vaccine for Cholera introduced
1880 William Ewart Gladstone, PM (Liberal) Jacques Offenbach composes The Tales of Hoffman
1880 to 1881 First Boer War Death of Jacques Offenbach
1881 Some women granted the vote in the Isle of Man First vaccine for anthrax introduced Census: 3rd April
1883 First electric railway opens in Brighton 20 May 1883 eruption of Krakatoa Cholera Epidemic in India
1885 Marquess of Salisbury, PM (Conservative) Modern style chain driven bicycle invented
1886 William Ewart Gladstone, PM (Liberal)
1886 ( name) Marquess of Salisbury, PM (Conservative)
1887 Adolf Frick invents contact lenses Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee
1890 Antitoxins discovered by Emil von Behring who used them to develop tetanus and diphtheria vaccines
1891 Census: 5th April
1892 William Ewart Gladstone PM (Liberal)
1893 First Matabele War Marconi invents Wireless Telegraph
1894 Earl of Rosebery PM (Liberal)
1895 Marquess of Salisbury PM (Conservative) Rontgen discovers X rays
1896 Second Matabele War First vaccine for typhoid fever
1897 First vaccine for plague Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee
1898 Marie Curie (1867-1934) discovers radioactive substances
1899 Women gain the right to vote in Western Australia Museum of South Kensington becomes the Victoria and Albert Museum Bayer begin marketing Aspirin



Back to Top


Twentieth Century

YEAR MONARCH POLITICAL/CONFLICTS SOCIAL/EPIDEMICS INVENTIONS/DISCOVERIES NOTABLE EVENTS
1901 Queen Victoria died 22nd Jan Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research opens in New York City
1901 Edward VII The existence of different human blood types discovered by Karl Landsteiner Australia granted dominion status
1901 Census 1st April
1902 Arthur Balfour, Prime Minister (Conservative) Anglo Japanese Alliance treaty, first signed on 30th January
1903 Wilbur and Orville Wright make the first flight
1903 Willem Einthoven invents electrocardiograph
1905 Henry Campbell-Bannerman, Prime Minister (Liberal)
1906 Diagnostic test for syphilis introduced by German researcher August von Wasserman. San Francisco earthquake
1907 First mention of a brassiere in Vogue Skin test for TB introduced by Clemens Von Pirquet. New Zealand granted dominion status
1907 First successful human blood transfusion using Landsteiner's ABO blood typing technique
1908 Women's Suffrage Bill carried by 179 votes
1908 Herbert H. Asquith, Prime Minister (Liberal) - Coalition Government, 1915)
1908 Triple Entente between Russia, France and Britain signed The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame published 4th Olympic Games held in London
1909 Old age pension introduced in Britain National Committee for Mental Hygiene founded to promote prevention and cure of mental diseases.
1909 Labour Exchange system introduced
1910 George V
1911 National Insurance Act Census 2nd April
1912 Suffragette newspaper founded by the Pankhursts Sinking of the Titanic
1913
1914 to 1918 World War One Sinking of the Lusitania
1914 Suffragettes suspended militancy and joined war effort
1915 Coalition government formed
1916 David Lloyd George, Prime Minister (Liberal - Coalition Government)
1916 Battle of the Somme
1917 Russian Revolution
1918 Qualification of Women Act Influenza pandemic First opportunity for women to vote
1919 Third Afghan War (May-Aug) Lady Astor becomes the first woman MP
1919 Sex Disqualification Act
1920 Married Women's Protery Act
1921 Edward Mellanby discovers vitamin D
1922 Andrew Bonar Law, Prime Minister (Conservative) BBC begins radio broadcasts
1923 Stanley Baldwin, Prime Minister (Conservative) 26th April Marriage of Duke of York and Lady Elizabeth First vaccine for diphtheria. Anglo Japanese Alliance treaty terminated.
1924 First Labour Government formed by James Ramsay MacDonald First Greenwich time signal broadcast
1924 Stanley Baldwin, Prime Minister (Conservative)
1925
1926 General Strike in support of coalminers John Logie Baird makes the first public demonstration of television Formal Legal Adoption Commenced
1926 Winnie-the-Pooh by A A Milne published First vaccine for pertussis (whooping cough).
1927 Princess Elizabeth born April 21st First vaccine for tuberculosis
1927 First vaccine for tetanus
1928 House At Pooh Corner by A A Milne published Alexander Fleming discovers penicillin
1929 James Ramsay MacDonald, Prime Minister (Labour) The Wall Street Crash Start of the Great Depression
1930 Princess Margaret Rose born
1931 James Ramsay MacDonald, Prime Minister (National Labour - National Government)
1932 BBC World Service begins
1933 Manfred Sakel discovers insulin shock therapy
1933 to 1945 Adolf Hitler, Chancellor and Head of state of Germany(Dictator)
1935 Stanley Baldwin, Prime Minister (Conservative - National Government)
1936 Edward VIII January to December Death of George V First vaccine for yellow fever Olympic Games Berlin Germany
1936 George VI Maiden voyage of the liner the Queen Mary World's first television service launched in Britain
1937 Neville Chamberlain, Prime Minister (Conservative - National Government) First vaccine for typhus Duke of Windsor marries Wallis Simpson
1939 to 1945 World War Two
1940 Winston Churchill, Prime Minister (Conservative - Coalition Government)
1945 Clement Attlee, Prime Minister (Labour) First vaccine for influenza
1947 Notably severe winter in UK India and Pakistan granted independence
1948 The National Health Service comes into effect on the 5th of July 1948
1948 Berlin Blockade and Air Lift
1949
1950 John Hopps invented the first cardiac pacemaker
1951 Winston Churchill, Prime Minister (Conservative)
1952 Elizabeth II USA tests the first hydrogen bomb Jonas Salk invented polio vaccine
1953 Paracetamol first marketed
1954 Rationing finally ends
1955 Sir Anthony Eden, Prime Minister, (Conservative) Contraceptive pill invented by Gregor Pincus
1956
1957 Harold Macmillan, Prime Minister (Conservative)
1958
1959 to 1975 Vietnam War
1959
1960
1961 Creation of Berlin Wall
1962 First oral polio vaccine (as an alternative to the injected vaccine) U.S. Congress passes legislation creating Medicare and Medicaid.
1963 Sir Alec Douglas-Home, Prime Minister (Conservative) Very severe winter
1963 Assassination of President John F Kennedy in the USA
1964 Harold Wilson, Prime Minister (Labour) First vaccine for measles
1965 U.S. Congress passes law requiring label on cigarette packages: "Warning: Cigarette Smoking may be Hazardous to your Health."
1966 Decimal currency and dollars in Australia
1967 First vaccine for mumps. South African heart surgeon Dr. Christiaan Barnard performs the first human heart transplant.
1968 USSR invades Czechoslovakia
1969 Apollo 11 moonlanding - 1st man on the moon
1970 Edward Heath, Prime Minister (Conservative) First vaccine for rubella.
1971 Introduction of decimal currency
1973 CAT scan invented by Godfrey Hounsfield and Allan Cormack
1974 Harold Wilson, Prime Minister (Labour) First vaccine for chicken pox.
1974
1976 James Callaghan, Prime Minister (Labour)
1977 First vaccine for pneumonia
1978 First test-tube baby is born in the U.K.
1979 Margaret Thatcher, Prime Minister (Conservative) ultrasound scan invented by Ian Donald
1980 W.H.O. (World Health Organization) announces smallpox is eradicated.
1981 First vaccine for hepatitis B.
1982 Falklands War
1983 HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, is identified.
1984 Leprosy Vaccine made
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989 Tim Berners-Lee develops the World Wide Web Fall of the Berlin Wall
Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia
1990 Reunification of Germany
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999



Back to Top


Adding an event to the timeline

It will sometimes be necessary to make a value judgement into which column something will fit. If that column is already "full", then another row can be added.


The columns will remain the same width, and any long text will wrap onto extra lines automatically. It will also be vertically aligned.


Please keep the text as short as possible - if you feel that more information is needed, it is usually possible to add a hyperlink to a website such as Wikipedia!!


If there is a relevant page elsewhere in The Wiki, please use an internal link.


Click on [edit]

Timeline1.jpg


You will see the code:

Timeline2.jpg


Adding an event

Count along the row and just type in the spaces - be careful to leave || in between each item.

| DATE || MONARCH || type in here || type in here || type in here || type in here

Adding a new row

Each row in the list needs:

|-valign="top"

| DATE || MONARCH || type in here || type in here || type in here || type in here


N.B. One | at the beginning of the line

N.B. Nothing at the end of the line


Adding hyperlinks

Timeline3.jpg [http://www.cultureandrecreation.gov.au/articles/goldrush/ Australian Gold Rush]


Timeline4.jpg [[Records Office Guide|Civil Registration introduced]]


For more information about wiki coding please see Minibad.jpg The Wiki Guide How to use The Wiki.



Back to Top