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Great Britons: 250 Lives

 

Roman Occupation to 599AD I 600 to 1399 I 1400 to 1499 I 1500 to 1599 I 1600 to 1699 I 1700 to 1799 I 1800 to 1899 I 1900 to Present

600 to 1399 AD

Britain Unlimited "Timelines" show the birth and deaths of the 250 famous British people covered in this site, together with the works they were associated with as well as other significant historical events of the time.

Information associated with the 250 figures is written in normal text and other events are written in italics.

Historical Event

 

Time Zones by Period
or Kings and
Queens of England

635: Aidan a monk from Iona founds the monastery of Lindisfarne in Northumbria.

657: Whitby Abbey is founded.

664: Synod of Whitby held by the Abbess Hilda marks the decline of the Celtic church over Roman christianity

673: Birth of Venerable Bede.

674: Ethelred becomes King of Mercia.

680: Venerable Bede entered St. Peter's Monastery at Monkwearmouth.

686: Venerable Bede went to Jarrow, where he spent much of the rest of his life.

687: Death of St Cuthbert.

698: Creation of the Lindisfarne Gospels by a monk called Eadfrith.

715: Creation of the Lindisfarne Gospels.

725: Venerable Bede wrote “De Temporum Ratione” which gave the reckoning for the date for Easter.

731: Venerable Bede wrote “Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum” (Ecclesiastical History of the English People) and became known as the "Father of English History".

735: Death of Venerable Bede.

757: Offa takes the Kingdom of Mercia.

789: Building of Offa's dyke to keep out the Welsh from England.

793: First Viking attack on Northumbria.

796: Death of Offa marks the end of Mercian dominance.

800: The Book of Kells is written in Ireland.

825: At the Battle of Ellandon Egbert King of Wessex defeats the Mercians and becomes the major power in the region.

836: Egbert is defeated by the Danes at Carhampton, Somerset.
The Synod of Aachen posthumously awarded the title “Venerable” to the Venerable Bede.

838: Egbert defeats the Danes at Hingston Down in Cornwall.

840: The stone of Destiny is moved from Iona to Scone in Scotland.

841: The Vikings found Dublin as a stronghold in Ireland.

851: Vikings attack London and Canterbury.

853: Alfred visits Rome with his father King Ethelwulf.

865: Ethelred the third son of Ethelwulf becomes King of Wessex.

866: Vikings attack York.

 

Early Anglo-Saxon Kings

871: Ethelred dies of his wounds at the Battle of Ashdown.

878: King Alfred defeats the Danes at the Battle of Edington. England is effectively cut into two with Wessex in the south and "The Danelaw" north of Watling Street.

886: King Alfred takes London from the Danes.

891: The Anglo Saxon Chronicle was begun.

895: Alfred captures the Danish fleet and they retreat to Northumbria.

 

Alfred the Great: 871-99

902: The Danish ruler of East Anglia Eric is killed at the Battle of Holme.

903: Monks bury St Edmund at Beodricsworth which is renamed Bury St Edmunds.

920: After several victories Edward rules England and Scotland from the South Coast as far North as the Rivers Forth and Clyde.

 

Edward the Elder: 899-924

927: The River Tees now marks the Northern frontier of England.

937: Athelstan defeats Scots, Danes and Celts and takes tile of King of Britain.

Athelstan: 924-939

943: Malcolm becomes King of the Scots.

946: Edmund is murdered by Leofa when he tries to have him thrown out of a party.

Edmund: 939-946

952: The Dane Eric Bloodaxe recaptures York.

954: Edred drives Eric out of York and this is the end of the viking period.

Edred: 946-955

955: Edwy the son of Edmund becomes King of England.

Edwy: 955-59

959: Edwy's younger brother Edgar succeeds to the throne.
973: Dunstan the Archbishop of Canterbury crowns Edgar Emperor of England.

Edgar the Peaceful: 959-975

975: Edgar's son Edward becomes King at the age of thirteen.
978: Edward is murdered at Corfe Castle in Dorset.

Edward the Martyr: 975-78

978: Edward's younger bother takes on the throne.

980: Further Danish invasions and Ethelred is unable to unite the Kingdom against them.

991: Ethelred buys off the Danes with £10,000 worth of silver known as the Danegeld.

994: Ethelred buys off Sweyn the Dane and Olaf Trygvesson as they besiege London.

1002: The St Brices Day Massacre. Ethelred tries to exterminate all the Danes in England.

1003: Sweyn extracts revenge and then retreats.

1006: Sweyn again returns and sends armies through Berkshire and Hampshire.

1007: Ethelred buys two years peace for £36,000 of silver.

1009: The Danes return.

1010: Attacks on Oxford and East Anglia.

1012: Canterbury is sacked and Archbishop Alphege is murdered The Danes are bought off for £48,000 of silver.

1013: Sweyn lands in England and is proclaimed King. Ethelred flees to Normandy.

Ethelred 11 (The Unready) 978-1013

1014: On the Death of Sweyn his son Canute is elected King by the army. Ethelred is called on by the English and Canute leaves.

1015: Canute again invades England.

1016: Edmund Ironside becomes King of England south of the Thames. He is assassinated and Canute becomes undisputed King.

1017: Canute divides the Kingdom again into Northumbria. Wessex, Mercia and East Anglia.

1028: Canute also becomes King of Norway.

1031: Canute becomes Overlord of Scotland.

1035: Harold "Harefoot" becomes Regent of England at the Death of Canute.

Canute (The Dane) 1014-35
Ehthelred 11: 1014-16
Edmund Ironside: 1016

1037: The Witan Parliament declares Harold King despite him being an illegitimate son of Canute.

Harold "Harefoot": 1036-40

1040: Harthacanute the legitimate son of Canute becomes King. Macbeth murders Duncan the King of Scotland.

1042: Harthacanute dies of drink.

Harold Harthacanute: 1040-42

1042: Edward half brother of Harthacanute and son of Ethelred becomes King. The english royal line is restored after a period of twenty-nine years.

1045: Edward marries Edith daughter of one of the powerful nobles of Wessex.

1051: Duke William comes to England from Normandy and is promised the throne by Edward after a quarrel with Earl Godwin Edith's father.

1052: Edward founds Westminster Abbey. Harold succeeds Earl Godwin as Earl of Wessex after he chokes to death.

1057: Lady Godiva rides naked through Coventry.

1064: Harold is shipwrecked in Normandy and swears a solemn oath that William should succeed him.

1065: Westminster Abbey is finished.

Edward the Confessor: 1042-66

1066: 25th September: Harold defeats his brother Tostig and Harold Hardraada at the Battle of Stamford Bridge. Both are killed
14th October: William of Normandy lands at Pevensey and marches south to meet Harold at the Battle of Hastings. Harold is slain.

Harold the Second: 1066

1066-77: Commissioning of the Bayeaux Tapestry.

1073: Uprising of Hereward the Wake against the Normans near Ely.

1077: St Albans Cathedral is begun.

1078: Work is started on the Tower of London.

William the First: 1066-87 (The Conqueror)

1086: Domesday Book compiled.

1096: Launch of the First Crusade.

William the Second: 1087-1100

1110: First mystery play is performed at Dunstable.

1118: Birth of Thomas a Becket.

Henry the First: 1100-1135

1141: King Stephen captured by the Scots at Lincoln but the fight was continued by his wife Matilda.

1147: Start of the Second Crusade.

1154: Thomas a Becket appointed Chancellor of England.
Nicholas Brakspear becomes the only English Pope.

Stephen: 1135-1154

1160: Birth of Robin Hood.

1162: Thomas a Becket Appointed Archbishop of Canterbury by King Henry.

1170: 29th December: Murder of Thomas a Becket in Canterbury Cathedral.

1180: Glass windows begin to appear in English houses for the first time.

1185: Lincoln Cathedral is destroyed during an earthquake.

Henry the Second: 1154-89

1191: First Lord Mayor of London appointed.

Richard the First: 1189-1199

1202: The fourth crusade is launched.

1215: 5th June: Signing of the Magna Carta, charter of liberties, at Runnymede.

John: 1199-1216

1220: The building of Salisbury Cathedral is begun.

1228: The sixth crusade is launched.

1233: Coal is mined at Newcastle commercially for the first time.

1235: The monk Matthew Paris begins his "Historia Major".

1245: Westminster Abbey is begun to be rebuilt.

1247: Death of Robin Hood in December.
Wales comes under the authority of the English crown at the Treaty of Woodstock.

1248: The Seventh Crusade is launched.

1249: Founding of University College, Oxford.

1258: Simon de Montfort and the English Barons force the King to recognise the powers of Parliament. He starts the first directly elected parliament in Europe.

1265: 4th August: Simon de Montfort is killed at the Battle of Evesham.

1269: The first Toll roads are built in England.

1270: Birth of William Wallace.
The eighth crusade is launched.

1271: The ninth crusade is launched.

Henry the Third: 1216-1272

1274: Birth of Robert the Bruce on the 11th July.

1275: First customs duties levied on wool and leather.

1276: The Welsh are led by Llewelyn the Last into the first Welsh war aghainst the English.

1283: Llewelyn is killed and King Edward the First conquers Wales.

1284: 3rd March: Statute of Rhuddlan granting system of government to the Principality of Wales.

1290: Expulsion of the jews from England.

1294: The first Customs Officers are appointed in England.

1296: 27th April: Battle of Dunbar.

1297: William Wallace slays Haselrig, the English Sherrif of Lanark.
11th September: At the Battle of Stirling Bridge William Wallace defeats the English Army.

1298: 22nd July: Battle of Falkirk. William Wallace is defeated by the English.

1305: William Wallace captured at Robroyston just outside Glasgow by Sir John Menteith and his men.
25th March: The crown of Scotland was placed on Robert the Bruce's head at Scone.
23rd August: Execution of William Wallace.

1306: Robert the Bruce slays John Comyn in a church at Dumfries.

Edward the First: 1272-1307

1309: Robert the Bruce holds his first parliament at St Andrews.

1314: 24th June: Battle of Bannockburn. Robert the Bruce defeats King Edward's much larger English army.

1320: Robert the Bruce makes the "Declaration of Arbroath" which stated he was King of Scots and their defender rather than King of Scotland.

1323: A thirteen year truce is agreed on between England and Scotland.

Edward the Second: 1307-1327

1328: Robert the Bruce is finally recognised as the rightful King of Scotland at the Treaty of Northampton.

1329: Death of Robert the Bruce on the 7th June.

1332: The first recording of the English parliament being divided into two houses.

1340: England defeats a French fleet at Sluys and gains control of the English Channel.

1342: Birth of Geoffrey Chaucer.

1346: The English defeat the French at the Battle of Crecy.

1347: The English capture Calais in France which becomes a colony.

1348: The Black Death. Serious outbreak of Bubonic Plague. King Edward begins his Order of the Garter with himself, his son the Black Prince and twenty four knights.

1351: Parliament passed the Statute of Labourers in an effort to hold down wages.
Rebuilding of Windsor Castle is begun.

1356: 19th September: Battle of Poitiers. Edward the Black Prince defeats the French.

1359: Geoffrey Chaucer served in the army of King Edward the Third in France.
Birth of Owen Glendower.

1361: Second major outbreak of the Black Death.

1369: WIlliam Langland writes "Piers Plowman".

1373: English Merchants legally have to use tunnage and poundage weights.

Edward the Third: 1327-1377

1380: The implementation of the Third and major "Poll Tax" by an impoverished government.

1381: The Peasant's Revolt led by Wat Tyler against the Poll Tax.

1382: John Wycliffe is expelled from Oxford due to opposing the church's doctrines.

1384: First English Bible produced.

1385: Geoffrey Chaucer writes "Troilus and Criseyde".

1386: Geoffrey Chaucer becomes a Member of Parliament for Kent.

1387: Geoffrey Chaucer begins writing "The Canterbury Tales".

1398: Winchester College is founded by William of Wykeham.

1399: Painting of the Wilton Diptych.

Richard the Second: 1377-1399

 

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