English Literature Timeline

  • 500 BCE

    Celts Migrations

    Celts Migrations
    Celts inhabited much of Europe and started to colonize the British Isles. This group of people was tied by a similar language, religion, and cultural expression. Very few people could read or write in Britain. Instead, information was usually passed from person to person by word of mouth.
  • 1 BCE

    Middle of the first millennium

    Middle of the first millennium
    Before the Anglo-Saxon invasion, the language or languages spoken by the native inhabitants of the British Isles belong the Celtic family introduced by the people who had come to the islands around the middle of the first millennium BC.
  • 5

    Celts

    Celts
    Celts arrived to what is now, known as England, Celts inhabit much of Europe, and beginning to colonize the British Isles.
  • 43

    Julius Caesar

    Julius Caesar
    Romans arrived in England first Roman raids on Britain under Julius Caesar.
  • 55

    Roman Emperor Claudius

    Roman Emperor Claudius
    Roman occupation of Britain under Emperor Claudius (beginning of Roman rule of Britain)
  • 410

    The Romans Leaves Britania

    The Romans Leaves Britania
    Roman Army leaves Britain to help defend their Empire in Europe. PS: When Rome left its province of Britannia, after nearly four centuries of imperial rule, the native population had little protection against intruders. Between the time of Rome's conquest (in 43 A.D.), and its departure (in 410), the empire's forces were responsible for maintaining law and order. Rome's legions left. Who would rule? Whose troops would defend the people and their land?
  • 420

    Scots and Pits attack Britain

    Scots and Pits attack Britain
    Scots and Pits attack Britain. Venerable Bede began the letter asking for help, written to the Roman consul by some of the Celtic people who had survived the ferocious invasion. Rome denied help.
  • 449

    King Vortigern

    King Vortigern
    King Vortigern call over for help to the Saxon nation, the nation of the angles or Saxons arrived in Britain, with three long ships.
  • 455

    Hengist and Horsa

    Hengist and Horsa
    Hengist and Horsa fought against King Vortigern at a place which is called Agaelesprep (Aylesford), and his brother Horsa was slain. And after that Hengist succeeded to the kingdom and Aesc, his son.
  • 457

    Hengist and Aesc, fought against the Britons

    Hengist and Aesc, fought against the Britons
    Hengist and Aesc, fought against the Britons at a place known as Crecganford (Crayford, Kent) four thousand Britons were slew the Britons fled to London in great terror.
  • 465

    Hengist and Aesc fought against the Welsh

    Hengist and Aesc fought against the Welsh
    Hengist and Aesc fought against the Welsh near Wippedesfleot and there slew twelve Welsh nobles; and one of their thanes, whose name was Wipped, was slain there.
  • 473

    Hengist and Horsa capture and kill Welsh

    Hengist and Horsa capture and kill Welsh
    Hengist and Horsa capture and kill Welsh, and the Welsh abandon Britain.
  • 477

    The Saxons

    The Saxons
    The Saxon establish in areas of southern and south-eastern Britain.
  • 485

    Aelle

    Aelle
    In this year Aelle fought against the Welsh near the bank of the stream Mearcraedesburna.
  • 488

    Aesc

    Aesc
    In this year Aesc succeeded to the kingdom and was king of the people of Kent twenty-four years.
  • 547

    Jutish and saxons establish in Britain

    Jutish and saxons establish in Britain
    Jutish Brothers Hengist and Horsa establish in the areas known as Kent.
    The Angles establish in areas known as Northumbria
  • 550

    End of the 5th Century

    End of the 5th Century
    By the end of the 5th Century, the foundation was established for the Emergence of the English Language.
    The Northumbrian monk, Bede or Beade, known in history as the Venerable Bede. Born at Monkton on Tyne was taken to the new monastery at Wearmouth, by then moving in 682 to the sister monastery at Jarrow, where he worked as a writer and teacher. Venerable Bede wrote in Latin “Historia Ecclesiastical Gentis Anglorum” translated to English as “Ecclesiastical History of the English Nation”.
  • 792

    Vikings

    Vikings
    Viking raids of Britain begin
  • 800

    Beowulf

    Beowulf
    Old English epic poem “Beowulf” composed
  • 865

    Danish Invasion

    Danish Invasion
    The Danes launch full-scale invasion and occupy Northumbria
  • 871

    Alfred the Great

    Alfred the Great
    Alfred the Great becomes king of Wessex, encourages English prose and translation of Latin works
  • 871

    Chronicle

    Chronicle
    “The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle” is begun
  • 878

    Britain Gets Divided

    Britain Gets Divided
    Danelaw established, dividing Britain into Anglo-Saxon south and Danish north
  • 911

    Charles II of France

    Charles II of France
    Charles II of France grants Normandy to the Viking chief Hrolf the Ganger (the beginning of Norman French)
  • 1066

    The Norman conquest

    The Norman conquest
    The Norman conquest under William the Conqueror
  • 1150

    Middle English

    Middle English
    The oldest surviving manuscripts in Middle English date from this period
  • 1362

    English in the Parliament

    English in the Parliament
    English is used in the English Parliament for the first time
  • 1362

    The Statute of Pleading

    The Statute of Pleading
    The Statute of Pleading replaces French with English as the language of law (although records continue to be kept in Latin)
  • 1370

    William Langland

    William Langland
    William Langland writes “Piers Plowman” William Langland is the presumed author of a work of Middle English alliterative verse generally known as Piers Plowman, an allegory with a complex variety of religious themes. The poem translated the language and concepts of the cloister into symbols and images that could be understood by a layman.
  • 1384

    John Wycliffe

    John Wycliffe
    John Wycliffe publishes his English translation of “The Bible”
  • 1385

    English replaces Latin

    English replaces Latin
    English replaces Latin as main language in schools (except Universities of Oxford and Cambridge)
  • 1388

    Chaucer

    Chaucer
    Chaucer begins “The Canterbury Tales”
  • 1399

    Henry IV

    Henry IV
    Henry IV becomes first English-speaking monarch since before the Conquest
  • 1450

    The Great Vowel

    The Great Vowel
    The Great Vowel Shift begins
  • 1500

    Renaissance

    Renaissance
    Start of English Renaissance
  • 1526

    William Tyndale

    William Tyndale
    William Tyndale prints his English translation of the New Testament of “The Bible”
  • 1539

    The Great Bible

    The Great Bible
    “The Great Bible” published
  • 1549

    The Book of Common Prayer

    The Book of Common Prayer
    First version of “The Book of Common Prayer” published
  • William Shakespeare

    William Shakespeare
    William Shakespeare writes his first plays
  • Robert Cawdrey

    Robert Cawdrey
    Robert Cawdrey publishes the first English dictionary, “A Table Alphabeticall”
  • King James Version

    King James Version
    The Authorized, or King James Version, of “The Bible” is published
  • William Shakespeare Dies

    William Shakespeare Dies
    Death of William Shakespeare
  • The First English-language newspaper

    The First English-language newspaper
    Publication of the first English-language newspaper, the “Courante” or “Weekly News”
  • Shakespeare’s Plays are Published

    Shakespeare’s Plays are Published
    First Folio of Shakespeare’s works is published
  • “The Daily Courant”, in London

    “The Daily Courant”, in London
    Publication of the first daily English-language newspaper, “The Daily Courant”, in London
  • Samuel Johnson

    Samuel Johnson
    Samuel Johnson publishes his “Dictionary of the English Language”
  • William Wordsworth

    William Wordsworth
    Literary Voice - 1770-1850
  • Walter Scott

    Walter Scott
    Literary Voice – 1771-1832
  • Speaker of the Celtic language dies

    Speaker of the Celtic language dies
    Last native speaker of the Celtic Cornish language dies
  • “The Times” newspaper in London

    “The Times” newspaper in London
    First publication of “The Times” newspaper in London
  • Noah Webster

    Noah Webster
    Noah Webster publishes “The American Spelling Book”
  • William Makepeace Thackeray

    William Makepeace Thackeray
    Literary Voice – 1811-1863
  • Noah Webster

    Noah Webster
    Noah Webster publishes his “The American Dictionary of the English Language”
  • Thomas Hardy

    Thomas Hardy
    Literary Voice – 1840-1928
  • BBC

    BBC
    British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) founded
  • Oxford English Dictionary 1st Edition

    Oxford English Dictionary 1st Edition
    First edition of the “Oxford English Dictionary” is published
  • Oxford English Dictionary 2 Edition

    Oxford English Dictionary 2 Edition
    It traces the usage of words through 2.4 million quotations from a wide range of international English language sources. The quotations are drawn from a huge variety of sources worldwide - literary, scholarly, technical, and popular - and represent authors as disparate as Geoffrey Chaucer and Erica Jong, William Shakespeare, Charles Darwin, and Isabella Beeton.