(Sources in addition to those shown: Bernard Grun The Timetables of History, Simon & Schuster, 1991; Norman Davies: The Isles, A History, Appendix 42, Macmillan 1999; Key Dates of Parliament, House of Commons, 2008.[[1]]; .Chris Scarre (ed) The Human Past, Thames and Hudson, 2005. James Ingham's translation of the Anglo Saxon Chronicle [2])
For population estimates see the addendum subpage[3]
For further detail see the Channel 4 timeline[4]
All entries before 1707 refer to England unless clearly not.
Roman occupation 43 - 410 AD
Celtic Ireland
Saxon Britain (the term Saxon is used in this article to refer to people from Northern Germany that are sometimes known as Angles, Saxons and Jutes)
Norman Conquest
1300 Edward I invades Scotland.
1307 Edward II (1307-1327)
1314 Battle of Bannockburn[80]
1315-22 The Great Famine.
1320 Declaration of Arbroath[81] - a plea to the Pope for Scotland's independence.
1323 William of Occam's Summa Logicae[82] (logic handbook) - rejects the Church's contention that theology is a science.
1327 Edward III (1327 - 1377)
1337 Beginning of Hundred Years War[83] - an intermittent conflict about the English claim to the French throne.
1348-50 The Black Death[84] reduces the population by about a third.
1366 Statutes of Kilkenny [85] - an English attempt to suppress Irish culture by the prohibition of the use of the Irish language and the practice of Irish customs.
1377 Richard II (1377-1399)
1381 Peasants' Revolt [86].- a revolt against taxes and serfdom.
1382 John Wycliffe's Confession Concerning the Eucharist[87] - challenges the doctrine of the Church.
1390 Richard III's Irish expedition
1390s Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales
1397 The Twelve Conclusions of the Lollards[88] - an attack on the doctrines and conduct of the Church.
1399 Henry IV (1399 -1413)
1401 De Heretico Comburendo[89] - legislation enacting death by burning as the penalty for heresy.
1413 Henry V (1413-22)
1415 Agincourt[90] - longbows against crossbows: a victory over a French army by an outnumbered English Army.
1422 Henry VI (1422-61)
1429 Franchise Act [91] - restricted voting in elections for county members to freeholders of land worth more than 40 shillings annually. City and borough franchises were much more varied.
1453 End of Hundred Years War - leaving England with no French possessions except Calais.
1455 -1485 The Wars of the Roses[92] - small-scale fighting that causes heavy casualties among the aristocracy and results in the victory of the House of Lancaster over the House of York.
1460 Statute of Drogheda[93] (Poyning's Law) - under which Ireland adopts the entire body of English law.
1461 Edward IV (1461-83)
1476 Caxton's printing press[94]
1483 Richard III (1483-85)
Tudor Era 1485-1603
1485 Battle of Bosworth Field [95] between Richard III and Henry, Earl of Richmond, afterwards Henry VII (1485-1509)
1489 Thomas Cranmer [96] (1489 - 1556) - architect of English Reformation, advisor to Henry VIII
1494 William Tyndale [97] (c.1494-1536) - 16th century theologian, translated the New Testament into English
1503 Marriage of Margaret, daughter of Henry VII to James IV of Scotland.
1509 Henry VIII (1509-47)
1511 England joins Holy League[98] - against France.
1513 Battle of Flodden [99] - major defeat of Scots army and death of James IV.
1516 Thomas More's Utopia[100]
1526 William Tyndale's[101] translation of the New Testament.
1534 The Act of Supremacy[102] - makes Henry VIII the head of the new Anglican Church, legalising the break with Rome.
1535 Dissolution of the monasteries[103]
1535 Laws in Wales Act[104]
1535 Thomas More[105], Lord Chancellor, executed for refusing to recognise the break with Rome.
1536 Hans Holbein[106] portrait of Henry VII[107]
1536 Pilgrimage of Grace[108] - a popular uprising against the closure of the monasteries.
1541 Henry VIII is declared King of Ireland[109]
1542 Battle of Solway Moss[110] - minor defeat of James V's Scottish raiders.
1542 Great Debasement[112] - reduces the silver content of the coinage from 75% to 25% by 1551.
1547 Edward VI (1547-53)
1549 Cranmer's English Prayer Book[113] (revised 1552).
1553 Mary I[114] becomes Queen, reimposes Catholicism and crushes Wyatt's rebellion[115].
1558 Elizabeth I [116](1559-1603) - restores Anglicanism[117].
1560 Scots Confession of Faith[118] - a rejection of Scottish allegiance to the Roman Catholic Church and the founding document of the Church of Scotland, drafted by John Knox and others and approved by meeting of the Scottish Parliament, but without Royal Assent.
1561 - 1626 Francis Bacon
1562 The 39 Articles[119] - the beliefs to be practised by the Anglican church.
1564 - 1616 William Shakespeare
1567 Forced abdication of Mary Queen of Scots[120] and succession of James VI[121].
1583 William Lee invents a knitting machine[122] but Queen Elizabeth refuses the grant of a patent on the grounds that the machine would throw hand knitters out of work
1586 Treaty of Berwick[123] - between Elizabeth 1 and James VI of Scotland.
1587 Franchise Act (Scotland)[124] sets a land ownership-based entitlement to vote as in England.
1588 The Spanish Armada [125] an unsuccessful attempt at invasion.
1593 William Shakespeare's Venus and Adonis
1600 The East India Company is founded and is granted the monopoly of trade with "the Indies"[126].
1601 Poor Law[127][128] - created a national system to provide for the poor, replacing the parish-based systems of the Acts of 1552, 1563, 1572, 1576 and 1597.
Stuart Era 1603-1688
1603 James VI of Scotland becomes James I of England (1603-25).
1605 Francis Bacon's "The Advancement of Learning" [129] - makes the case for the inductive method of reasoning.
1605 Gunpowder Plot
1609 The Ulster plantation[130] - of thousands of Scottish and English Protestant settlers.
1620 The voyage of the Mayflower carrying the 100 Puritans that came to be known as the Pilgrim Fathers] from Plymouth to Cape Cod.
1623 The Statute of Monopolies[131] prevented the king from creating new domestic monopolies.
1625 Charles I (1625-49)[132]
1628 The Petition of Right[133] -established Habeas Corpus.
1632 Christopher Wren [134] (1632 - 1723) - mathematician and architect, designer of St Paul's Cathedral.
1639 "Bishops Wars" [135] between England and Scotland over Charles I's attempt to reform Scottish church.
1641 Parliament's "Grand Remonstrance"[136] [137] is rejected by the King.
1642 Parliament's "Nineteen Propositions"[138] ultimatum is rejected by the King.
1642-46 Civil War[139] between Charles I and the forces of Parliament led by Oliver Cromwell.
1644 John Milton's Areopagitica[140] - a tract in favour of the freedom of the press.
1649 Execution of Charles I and abolition of the monarchy.
The Interregnum - the period between the execution of Charles I in 1649 and the Restoration of the monarchy under Charles II in 1660 during which the various governments of the Commonwealth and Cromwell's Protectorate were in power.
1649 The Agreement of the People[141] - the demand by the Levellers for rule by a representative assembly elected by universal male suffrage.
1649 the "Rump", what remains of the House of Commons, declares England to be a "Commonwealth", i.e. republic.
Cromwell invades Ireland.
1651 Thomas Hobbes' Leviathan[142] - defines government as, a social contract by which power is irrevocably delegated to an absolute sovereign.
1652 Act for the Settlement of Ireland [143]
The Restoration. Charles II (1660-85)[144]
1661-5 The Clarendon Code[145] - used to persecute "dissenters" (from Anglicanism) but all mainstream Protestant churches legalized after the Revolution.
1663 Thomas Newcomen[146] (1663 - 1729) - pioneer of the steam engine
1665 Great Plague
1666 Fire of London
1673 Test Act[147]. Catholics excluded from office.
1685 James II (1685-88)
Monmouth Rebellion[148] an unsuccessful rebellion led by James, Duke of Monmouth, a Protestant and Charles II's bastard son, who claimed his parents were secretly married.
1687 Isaac Newton's Principia[149] - the founding document of the "scientific revolution" in thinking about the universe.
1688 The Glorious Revolution deposed James II
1689 William III[150] and Mary II.
1690 John Locke's Treatise on Government [151] - the people's delegation of power to a sovereign is conditional upon their continued consent.
1690 The Battle of the Boyne[152]
1694 The Bank of England [153]
1701-14 War of Spanish Succession[154]
1707 Act of Union - with Scotland [155].
1711 David Hume[156] (1711-1776) A Treatise of Human Nature (1739-1740), the Enquiries concerning Human Understanding (1748) and Concerning the Principles of Morals (1751),
1714 Hanoverian succession.
George I (1714-27)
1715 First major Jacobite Rising
1717 The Gold standard - the £ is linked to gold at £3 17s 10½d per troy ounce[157]
1727 George II (1727-1760)
1733 John Kay invents the flying shuttle[158] - the first step in the mechanisation of weaving.
1745 Second Jacobite Rising - "the '45"
1746 Battle of Culloden.
1760 George III (1760-1820).
1763 Treaty of Paris - French possessions in America and India are ceded to Britain.
1768 Cast iron production at the Coalbrookdale foundry[159].
1764 James Hargreaves builds the first "spinning jenny"[160] - a major improvement on the spinning wheel.
1769 James Watt's patent for a steam engine [161] - a major improvement of Newcomen's "atmospheric engine".
1772 The James Somerset(t) Ruling - a slave is released by a writ of Habeas Corpus[162]. Popularly supposed to have declared slavery illegal in England, though the formal ruling in this case only forbade his taking out of the realm by force[2]
War of American Independence[163] 1775 -81 - and the creation of the United States of America.
1776 Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations - advocacy of "laisser-faire" on the grounds that the only legitimate goal of government is growth of national income.
1785 Edmund Arkwright invents the power loom[164]
1788 The colonisation of Australia [165]
1792 Thomas Paine's The Rights of Man[166]
1798 United Irishmen rebellion fails.
1799 Combination Acts - outlawed trades unions.
Napoleonic Wars[167] 1789 - 1815.
1801 Act of Union[168] takes effect, making Ireland a part of the "United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland" with representation in the kingdom's parliament.
1805 Battle of Trafalgar[169]. A decisive defeat of the French and Spanish navies that established Britain as the dominant naval power for over a century
1807 Abolition of the Slave Trade Act[170] bans transportation of slaves from Africa to the Americas.
1809 Charles Darwin [171] (1809 - 1882) - Victorian naturalist, author of The Origin of Species
1812 Charles Dickens [172] (1812 - 1870) The foremost novelist of the Victorian era and a vigorous social campaigner.
1815 Battle of Waterloo[173] Defeat of the French army under Napoleon Bonaparte by the British and Prussian armies under the Duke of Wellington and Blücher.
1820 George IV (1820-30).
1829 Catholic Emancipation Act [174] enables Catholics to be Members of Parliament.
1830 William IV (1830-37).
1832 Reform Act - raised the proportion of adult English males entitled to vote to 20 per cent.
1833 Act abolishing slavery in most British colonies [175]
1834 The Tamworth Manifesto [176] - Robert Peel's election manifesto (sometimes considered to be the founding document of the Conservative Party).
1835 Joseph Whitworth's machine tools[177]
1837 Queen Victoria (1837-1901)/
1838 Maiden voyage of the Great Western - Brunel's ocean-going screw-propelled iron steamship.
1839 Sir Robert Peel's[178] Metropolitan Police Act[179]
Irish Famine 1845-1850.
1846 Repeal of Corn Laws.
1848 Peoples' Charter [180] - a petition for male suffrage, secret ballots, equal constituencies, no property qualification, payment for MPs, annual elections.
Crimean War 1853 - 56.
Indian Mutiny 1857-8.
1858 The Government of India Act[181] - transfers the military and administrative functions of the East India Company to the Crown.
1859 The formation of the Liberal Party[182]- an alliance Whigs, Peelites and Radicals, formed to provide an opposition to the Conservative Party.
1859 Charles Darwin's The Origin of Species
1861 John Stuart Mill's Representative Government[183] - argues the case for a qualified extension of the suffrage.
1867 Reform Act[184] - gave the vote to every male adult householder living in a borough constituency, and to male lodgers paying £10 for unfurnished rooms.
1867 The British North America Act[185] establishes the Dominion of Canada.
1868 Trades Union Congress [186]- created
1870 Education Act[187] - created publicly-funded elementary schools for children (attendance was made compulsory in 1880).
1871 Trade Union Act[188] - recognised trades unions as legal corporations.
1874 Disraeli's First Conservative Government (1874-80).
1874 Birth of Winston Churchill [189](1874 - 1965)
1880 Gladstone's Liberal Government.
1888 John Logie Baird[190] (1888 - 1946) - inventor of television.
1898 Battle of Omdurman
1899-1902 Boer War.
1900 The Labour Representation Committee is formed[191] - (the forerunner of the Labour Party) and makes an electoral pact with the Liberal Party.
1901 Edward VII (1901-10).
1902 Treaty of Vereeniging[192] marking the surrender of South Africa to Britain.
1902-05 Balfour's Conservative Government.
1903 Women's Social and Political Union[193]- "suffragettes" launch a "votes for women" campaign.
1905-08 Campbell-Bannerman's Liberal Government.
1908-1915 Asquith's Liberal Government (Lloyd George Chancellor of the Exchequer)
1908 London hosts the Olympic Games
1910 George V (1910-36)
1911 National Insurance Act[194] - enacts publicly-financed health insurance, and unemployment insurance for workers in the building, engineering and shipbuilding industries.
1914 UK declares war on Germany[195]
1915-16 Asquith's Coalition Government.
1916 Easter Rising[196] - an Irish rebellion is violently suppressed.
1917 The Balfour Declaration[197] - in favour of a Jewish home in Palestine.
1918 Armistice[198]
1918 Representation of the People Act - gave the vote to men over 21 and women over 30 - increasing the electorate from 8 million to 21 million.
1919 Treaty of Versailles
1919 League of Nations mandates [199]- Palestine, Transjordan, Iraq, and Tanganyika are mandated to Britain.
1919-22 Irish War of Independence
1920 Government of Ireland Act - Devolved government (Home Rule) for Northern Ireland and Southern Ireland.
1920-22 Unemployment Insurance Acts[200] - extended coverage to most males earning less than £250 a year and introduced "seeking work" and means tests.
1922 Anglo-Irish Treaty [201] - The Irish Free State becomes a Dominion of the British Crown.
1922-23 Irish Civil War[202]
1925 The United Kingdom returns to the gold standard
1926 General Strike [203] - involved over 1.5 million workers and the closure of mines, transport, newspapers, docks and power stations..
1926 Baird's television system.
1928 Equal Franchise Act - gave women the right to vote on the same terms as men.
1928 Fleming discovers penicillin
1929-31 The Slump (the Great Depression in the United Kingdom)
1930 BBC transmits a television play[204]
1931 Statute of Westminster[205] - independence for the Dominions of Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the Union of South Africa .
1931 The United Kingdom leaves the gold standard.
1935 Robert Watson Watt's[206] radar receives its first trial (then called "radio direction finding"}.
1936 Abdication of Edward VIII.
1936 John Maynard Keynes The General Theory of Employnent, Interest and Money"[207]
1936 Alan Turing's On Computable Numbers[208] - includes the "Turing Machine" (the first specification of a computer)
1936 George VI (1936-52}
1937 The Irish Free State becomes Éire[209]
1938 Munich Pact with Germany.
1939 Britain and France declare war on Germany[210]
1940
1940-45 Battle of the Atlantic[213] - German submarines sink three million tons of allied shipping in a nearly-successful blockade.
1941
1942 battles of the Coral Sea, Alamein, Stalingrad - the first allied victories
1942 The Beveridge Report[215] - a proposal for a system of government-managed health and unemployment insurance funded by compulsory weekly contributions.
1944 D Day landings - open the Battle of Normandy
1944 Bretton Woods Conference [216] - created a system of fixed exchange rates linked to the $ which was to be freely convertible to gold.
1944 Employment policy White Paper - a commitment to "full employment".
1945
1945-51 Clement Attlee's Labour Government - financial crisis and austerity
1947 Independence for India and Pakistan
1948 The Marshall Plan[220] - a 4-year $13 bn programme of US aid towards European Reconstruction
1948 National Health Service[221].
1949 North Atlantic Treaty Organisation formed
1951-55 Winston Churchill's Conservative Government.
1953 Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II.
1954 the end of food rationing
1955-57 Anthony Eden's Conservative Government.
1956 Suez crisis.
1957-63 Harold Macmillan's Conservative Government.
1963-4 Alec Douglas-Home's Conservative Government.
1964-70, 1974-6 Harold Wilson's Labour Governments.
1965 Monopolies and Mergers Act 1965[222]
1968-69 Start of The Troubles in Northern Ireland.
1970-74 Edward Heath's Conservative Government.
1971 Return to a floating exchange rate - after the USA abandons the convertibility of the $ [223]
1973 Britain joins the European Economic Community. European Communities Act[224] makes EC law enforceable in the UK.
1976-9 James Callaghan's Labour Government.
1978 Winter of Discontent
1979-1990 Margaret Thatcher's Conservative Governments.
1982 Falklands War.
1986 Single European Act - introduced Qualified Majority Voting to most European Union decisions [225].
1990-97 John Major's Conservative Government.
1992 Maastricht Treaty [226][227]
1992 Tim Berners-Lee's project for a "World wide web"[228][229]
1997 Tony Blair's "New Labour" Government.[230]
1998 Devolution[232]
1998 Bank of England Act[237] - transferred responsibility for monetary policy from the Treasury to the Bank of England.
2000 Freedom of Information Act[240]
2003-2009 Iraq War
2005 Constitutional Reform Act, 2005[241] transfers the Lord Chancellor's legal functions to the Lord Chief Justice and creates a new, independent Supreme Court[242] replacing of the judicial committee of the House of Lords.
1998 - 2006 Northern Ireland returns to relative peace.
2007 Gordon Brown's Labour Government.
2008 Crash of 2008
2009 Recession of 2009
2010 David Cameron's Conservative/Liberal Democrat coalition Government.
2011 Last British troops withdraw from Iraq[244]
2015 David Cameron's Conservative government
2016 UK decides in referendum to leave EU