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Revision as of 02:57, 7 July 2009
The Classified Index of Wiki Pages
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Eleventh Century
YEAR | MONARCH | POLITICAL/CONFLICTS | SOCIAL/EPIDEMICS | INVENTIONS/DISCOVERIES | NOTABLE EVENTS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1000 | Ethelred | ||||
1008 | |||||
1016 | The Danish viking Canute (Cnut) son of Sweyn has victory at Ashington | ||||
1020 | |||||
1031 | Canute's Scotland campaigns | ||||
1040 | |||||
1042 | Edward The Confessor | Edward's court in Normandy | French & Latin courtly languages | ||
1050 | West Minster Abbey founded, building began | ||||
1065 | Harold II the last Saxon | 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 |
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 |
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 |
Fourteenth Century
YEAR | MONARCH | POLITICAL/CONFLICTS | SOCIAL/EPIDEMICS | INVENTIONS/DISCOVERIES | NOTABLE EVENTS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1300 | |||||
1301 | |||||
1302 | |||||
1303 | |||||
1304 | |||||
1305 | |||||
1306 | |||||
1307 | Edward II | ||||
1308 | Dante wrote "'The Divine Comedy" between 1308 and 1321 | ||||
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 |
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 |
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 | Battle of Flodden Field | ||||
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 (Bloody Mary) | ||||
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 | William Byrd Elizabethan Composer creates Cantione Sacrae | 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 |
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 | William Byrd Elizabethan composer creates Gradualia | |||
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 III Prince of Orange and Mary II | 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 II; William III 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 |
Eighteenth Century
YEAR | MONARCH | POLITICAL/CONFLICTS | SOCIAL/EPIDEMICS | INVENTIONS/DISCOVERIES | NOTABLE EVENTS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1701 | Act of Settlement | Jethro Tull invents the seed drill | |||
1702 | Anne Stuart | 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 invents first practical steam engine | |||
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 Elector of Hannover | 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 | Sheffield 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 publishes 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 publishes 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 |
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 | ||||
1804 | William Pitt the Younger, PM (Tory) | World's first steam-hauled railway journey at Merthyr Tydfil,Wales | |||
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 | ||||
1816 | 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 | Death of Queen Charlotte | ||
1818 | Curride (bicycle) appears in England (known as the hobbyhorse) | ||||
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) | Hans Christian Anderson's stories translated into English | ||
1847 | First use of chloroform in childbirth | ||||
1848 to 1849 | 2nd Cholera Epidemic | ||||
1848 | 1st Public Health Act | Foundation of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood | First aircraft to fly under its own power in Chard, Somerset | 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) | Lousia Alcott's Little Women published | 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 | Lewis Carroll's Through The Looking Glass and what Alice Found There published | James Starling invents pennyfarthing bicycle ("highwheeler") | 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 | |||||
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 Mark Twain's The Adventures of Tom Sawyer published | Alexander Graham Bell invents telephone | |||
1877 | Edison invents phonograph | ||||
1878 | Joseph Swan invents and patents the 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 | Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island published | First electric railway opens in Brighton | 20 May eruption of Krakatoa Cholera Epidemic in India | ||
1884 | Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn published | ||||
1885 | Marquess of Salisbury, PM (Conservative) | Robert Louis Stevenson's A Child's Garden of Verse published | Modern style chain driven bicycle invented Benz builds first motor car | ||
1886 | William Ewart Gladstone, PM (Liberal) | ||||
1886 | Marquess of Salisbury, PM (Conservative) | R L Stevenson's Kidnapped Published | |||
1887 | Adolf Frick invents contact lenses | Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee | |||
1888 | Oscar Wilde's The Happy Prince and Other Tales published | ||||
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 |
Twentieth Century
YEAR | MONARCH | POLITICAL/CONFLICTS | SOCIAL/EPIDEMICS | INVENTIONS/DISCOVERIES | NOTABLE EVENTS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1900 | Beatrix Potter's The Tale of Peter Rabbit published | ||||
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) | Beatrix Potter's The Tale of Gloucester published | Anglo Japanese Alliance treaty, first signed on 30th January | ||
1903 | Wilbur and Orville Wright make the first flight | ||||
1903 | Willem Einthoven invents electrocardiograph, King Camp Gillette invents the safety razor | ||||
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 | Herbert H. Asquith PM (liberal-coalition) Women's Suffrage bill carried by 179 votes | The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame published | 4th Olympic Games held in London Triple Entente between Russia, France and Great Britain signed | ||
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 | First large scale production of rayon | |||
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) | Ernest Rutherford splits the atom | Lady Astor becomes the first woman MP | ||
1919 | Sex Disqualification Act | Children's Book Week introduced in USA | |||
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 | Death of Lenin | ||
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 | Jacob Schlick's electric razor introduced | Discovery of the planet Pluto | ||
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 Winsor | 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 | Dupont begin producing nylon | |||
1940 | Winston Churchill, Prime Minister (Conservative - Coalition Government) | Radar developed by British scientists | |||
1941 | |||||
1942 | |||||
1943 | Colossus, the first programmable computer, operational at Bletchley Park | ||||
1944 | |||||
1945 | First atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima | ||||
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) | Festival of Britain | |||
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) | First space satellite launched | |||
1958 | |||||
1959 to 1975 | Vietnam War | ||||
1959 | |||||
1960 | |||||
1961 | First manned space flight by Yuri Gagarin | 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 | Martin Luther King assassinated | |||
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. IBM Personal Computer released | ||||
1982 | Falklands War | ||||
1983 | HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, is identified. | ||||
1984 | Leprosy Vaccine made | ||||
1985 | |||||
1986 | Nuclear disaster at Chernobyl, Ukraine | ||||
1987 | |||||
1988 | |||||
1989 | Tim Berners-Lee develops the World Wide Web | Fall of the Berlin Wall Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia | |||
1990 | Nelson Mandela released from prison | Reunification of Germany | |||
1991 | Break-up of Soviet Union | ||||
1992 | |||||
1993 | |||||
1994 | |||||
1995 | |||||
1996 | |||||
1997 | |||||
1998 | |||||
1999 |
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[http://www.cultureandrecreation.gov.au/articles/goldrush/ Australian Gold Rush]
[[Records Office Guide|Civil Registration introduced]]
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