The following is a timeline of the history of the city of York , North Yorkshire in northern England.
1st-4th centuries
5th-10th centuries
11th–14th centuries
1055 - Siward, Earl of Northumbria dies and is buried in St Olave's Church .
1065 – 3 October: Northumbrian rebels capture York , outlaw Harold Godwinson 's brother Tostig and choose Morcar of Northumbria as their new earl.[ 2]
1068 – Morcar leads a revolt in Northumbria, but William the Conqueror defeats the rebels at York[ 5] and builds a wooden motte-and-bailey castle probably on the later site of York Castle .
1069 – c. 28 January: Northumbrian rebels attack York.[ 2]
Winter of 1069–1070 – Harrying of the North : William quells rebellions in the North of England brutally[ 7] and builds a second motte-and-bailey castle, probably that on Baile Hill .
1070 – 23 May: The first Norman Archbishop, Thomas of Bayeux , is appointed and begins rebuilding of York Minster .[ 2]
1088 – January/February: St Mary's Abbey re-established.
1126 – Archbishoprics of Canterbury and of York declared equal.[ 2]
1137 – 4 June: York Minster and city are severely damaged by a fire, but the Minster is soon rebuilt; St Peter's Hospital is replaced by St Leonard's.
1154 – Ouse Bridge collapses under the weight of a crowd gathered to greet Archbishop William of York on his return from exile. On 8 June William dies, apparently poisoned at Mass.
1182 – Charter granted to citizens.
1190 – 16 March: A mob besieges 150 Jews (including their leader Josce ) in Clifford's Tower of York Castle , allowing to be killed by fire those who do not commit suicide.[ 2]
1212 – 9 July: Royal charter granted allowing citizens to collect their own taxes and appoint a mayor (first known 1217).
1220 – Re-building of York Minster in Gothic style begins under Archbishop Walter de Gray (dies 1255), starting with the south transept (completed about 1240).
1228 – Christmas: During a visit by King Henry III , a gale destroys the wooden keep at York Castle .
1237 – 25 September: Treaty of York signed between Henry III of England and his brother-in-law Alexander II of Scotland .
1244 – Henry III orders rebuilding of the castle in stone, work which is completed about 1272.
c. 1260 – In York Minster
1291 – Construction of the nave of York Minster begins.[ 5]
1295 - The city returns two members to parliament.
1298–1304 – King Edward houses the national Exchequer (at the castle) and Chancery (at the abbey) in York.[ 8]
1316 – Lady Row built in Goodramgate .
1319 – 20 September: First War of Scottish Independence : Scottish victory at the Battle of Myton over defenders from York.[ 2] Many priests and the mayor of York are killed.
1322 - Great Raid of 1322 plagued the north of England with a Scottish victory at the Battle of Old Byland nearby. Suburbs of York was raided.
1328 – King Edward marries Philippa of Hainault in the Minster. A tournament is held in their honour.
1335 – Parliament meets in York ; subsequently it will normally meet at Westminster (London).
1337 – c. 8 July: Death of William of Hatfield , second son of Edward III and Queen Philippa, at only a few months old; he is buried in the Minster.
1344 – Mint established at the castle.
1349 – May: Black Death reaches York.[ 2] 50% of the population die.
1350s – Construction of the nave of York Minster completed. The great west window becomes known as the "Heart of Yorkshire".
1357 – Merchant Adventurers' Hall construction begins.[ 9]
1361 – Construction of the lady chapel, presbytery and choir of York Minster in Perpendicular style begun, by Archbishop John of Thoresby .
1376 – Corpus Christi (feast) : Earliest record of York Mystery Plays , although they probably originate from the 1340s.
1381 – Summer: Peasants’ Revolt . Unrest in York lasts for a year.
1389 – Office of mayor raised to Lord Mayor of York , second in precedence only to the Lord Mayor of London.
1396 – King Richard II grants a charter to the city making it a county corporate .
15th–16th centuries
c. 1400 – Lantern tower of All Saints’ Church, Pavement , built.
1405 – 8 June: Following the collapse of a revolt in the north begun in April by the House of Percy in which they participated and trial by a special commission, Richard Scrope , Archbishop of York, and others are beheaded at York.[ 2]
1407 – York Minster ’s central tower collapses due to poor foundations; it is rebuilt from 1420 in Perpendicular style.
1408 – York Minster east window, the world's largest expanse of medieval glass (begun c. 1405), is completed by glass painter John Thornton of Coventry.
1434 – Mulberry Hall built.
c. 1450 – Choir of York Minster completed.
1453 – York Guildhall opens.
1460 – St William's College founded.
1464 – 1 June: Treaty of York signed between England and Scotland.
1471 – 14 March: Wars of the Roses : The deposed Edward IV of England lands with a small force at Ravenspur ,[ 2] moving on speedily to secure York.
1472 – York Minster consecrated following completion of its west towers.
1476 – 13 March: Richard of Gloucester addresses civic officials within Bootham Bar proclaiming he is present to keep his brother the king's peace.[ 10]
1483 – 8 September: Edward of Middleham is invested as Prince of Wales [ 2] by his father the new king Richard III of England at the Archbishop's Palace.
1486 & 1487 – King Henry VII visits.
c. 1500 – Rose window installed in York Minster commemorating the end of the Wars of the Roses in 1487.
1525–36 – New church of St Michael le Belfrey built (John Forman, master mason).
1536 – c. October: Pilgrimage of Grace occupies York.
1538 – Dissolution of the Monasteries : York Franciscan Friary dissolved.
1539 – Dissolution of the Monasteries: St Mary's Abbey and the adjacent St Leonard's Hospital are dissolved. King's Manor becomes the headquarter of the Council of the North .
1541 – King Henry VIII visits.
1569 – York Mystery Plays suppressed.
1586 – 25 March: Margaret Clitherow martyred by peine forte et dure for refusing to plead to a charge of harbouring Catholic priests.
1596 – 29 November: George Errington , William Gibson and William Knight martyred by hanging, drawing and quartering for professing their Catholic faith.
17th century
1616 – June: First waterworks and piped water supply.
1617 – King James I visits.
1633 – King Charles I visits.
1642 – 19 March–3 July: Charles I holds court at York. The Great Seal of the Realm is sent to him here on 17 May.[ 11]
1644
1653 – 18 April: London–York stagecoach first recorded.
1673 – 18 April: Viscount Fairfax throws a party to mark his remodelling of Fairfax House .
1674 – Friends meeting house in Friargate first built.
1676 – Highwayman John Nevison rides from Kent to York in a day to establish an alibi .[ 12]
1677 – York Waterworks re-established.
1679 – 7 August: Nicholas Postgate is hanged, drawn and quartered on the Knavesmire for being a Roman Catholic priest.
1684 – 23 April: A gunpowder explosion guts Clifford's Tower at York Castle , leading to the city being abandoned as a military garrison.
1686 – 5 November: Bar Convent established, making it the oldest surviving active Catholic convent in England.[ 13]
1694 – First corporation fire engine purchased.
1695 – Grays, solicitors, established.
18th century
19th century
20th century
21st century
Births
c. 735 – Alcuin , scholar (died 804 in Tours)
Before 1190 – Aaron of York , financier and chief rabbi of England (died after 1253)
1556 – Margaret Clitherow , Catholic saint (martyred 1586)
1564 – 20 March: Thomas Morton , bishop of Durham (died 1659)
1570 – 13 April: Guy Fawkes , Catholic conspirator (executed 1606)
1586 – 5 April: Christopher Levett , sea captain and New England settler (died 1630 at sea)
c. 1612 – John Hingston , organist and composer (died 1683)
1624 – Matthew Poole , Nonconformist theologian (died 1679 in Amsterdam)
1647 – Francis Place , gentleman draughtsman (died 1728)
1755 – 6 July: John Flaxman , sculptor (died 1826)
1784 – 31 July: Samuel Tuke , philanthropist and mental health reformer (died 1857)
1787 – 10 March: William Etty , painter of nudes (died 1849)
1799 – May: George Hennet , railway contractor (died 1857)
1800 – 17 June: William Parsons, 3rd Earl of Rosse , astronomer (died 1867 in Ireland)
1803 – 26 October: Joseph Hansom , architect and patentee of the Hansom cab (died 1882)
1809 – Mary Ellen Best , domestic watercolourist (died 1891 in Darmstadt)
1813 – 15 March: John Snow , physician, epidemiologist and pioneer of anaesthesia (died 1858 in London)
1836 – 24 May: Joseph Rowntree , chocolate manufacturer and philanthropist (died 1925)
1841 – 4 September: Albert Joseph Moore , figure painter (died 1893)
1851 – 19 June: Silvanus P. Thompson , physicist, pioneer of calculus and electricity (died 1916)
1871 – 7 July: Seebohm Rowntree , chocolate manufacturer and social reformer (died 1954)
1881 – 20 September: Will Ashton (Sir John Ashton), landscape painter and gallery director (died 1963 in Australia)
1907 – 21 February: W. H. Auden , poet (died 1973 in Austria)
1912 – 6 February: Christopher Hill , Marxist historian (died 2003)
1917 – 6 March: Frankie Howerd , comic actor (died 1992)
1933 – 3 November: John Barry , film composer (died 2011 in the United States)
1934 – 9 December: Judi Dench , actress
1942
1943 – 9 May: Vince Cable , politician
1992 – 2 October: Lucy Staniforth , footballer
See also
References
^ Collingwood, R. G. (1965). "RIB 665. Building inscription of Trajan" . Retrieved 19 May 2016 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Palmer, Alan; Palmer, Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History . London: Century Ltd. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2 .
^ Annals of Ulster .
^ William of Malmesbury (1125). Gesta Regum Anglorum .
^ a b c Williams, Hywel (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History . London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-304-35730-7 .
^ "Norman Britain" . British History Timeline . BBC . Retrieved 23 December 2007 .
^ "Medieval" . History of York . York Museums Trust. Retrieved 11 April 2016 .
^ "Welcome to the Merchant Adventurers' Hall" . The Company of Merchant Adventurers of the City of York. Retrieved 10 April 2016 .
^ "King Richard III and the City of York" . The Richard III Foundation, Inc. Archived from the original on 10 March 2016. Retrieved 12 April 2016 .
^ "1642" . BCW Project . 15 January 2012. Retrieved 11 April 2016 .
^ Defoe, Daniel (1727). A tour thro' the whole island of Great Britain .
^ "The Bar Convent" . Retrieved 11 April 2016 .
^ "Theatre Royal - Tate Wilkinson as Manager" . York Guides . Archived from the original on 26 February 2012. Retrieved 25 February 2011 .
^ Crosse, John (1825). An Account of the Grand Musical Festival, held in September, 1823, in the Cathedral Church of York . York: J. Wolstenholme.
^ "Yorkshire Insurance Company Ltd" . Our history . Aviva . Retrieved 11 April 2016 .
^ Balston, Thomas (1945). The Life of Jonathan Martin .
^ Barnet, Margaret C. (1972). "The 1832 cholera epidemic in York" . Medical History . 16 (1): 27–39. doi :10.1017/s0025727300017233 . PMC 1034928 . PMID 4558437 .
^ Malden, John (1976). "The Walker Ironfoundry, York". York Historian . 1 : 37–52.
^ a b c d e f Appleby, Ken (1993). Britain's Rail Super Centres – York . Shepperton: Ian Allan Publishing . ISBN 0-7110-2072-8 .
^ "Opening of the Wesleyan Centenary Chapel". Yorkshire Gazette . 17 July 1840. p. 5.
^ "Opening of Lendal Bridge". The York Herald . 10 January 1863. p. 5.
^ "Opening of the York Corn Exchange". The York Herald . 31 October 1868. p. 9.
^ Murray, Hugh (1980). The Horse Tramways of York 1880–1909 . Broxbourne: Light Rail Transit Association. ISBN 0-900433-81-7 .
^ "The Skeldergate Bridge". Yorkshire Gazette . 12 March 1881. p. 9.
^ Poverty, A Study of Town Life . 1901.
^ "Public services British History Online" . www.british-history.ac.uk . Retrieved 17 January 2016 .
^ a b "Cinema Comes to York" . History of York . York Museums Trust. Retrieved 12 April 2016 .
^ "Strike Riots At York". The Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer . 14 July 1911. p. 7.
^ "Work starts on York Terry's chocolate factory site housing" . BBC News . 13 January 2014. Retrieved 23 April 2017 .
^ Hodgson, G. (2001). A History Of Acomb: Richardson's History revised and enlarged . ISBN 0-9527093-8-4 .
^ Berry, Steve; Norman, Phil (2014). A History of Sweets in 50 Wrappers . London: The Friday Project . pp. 84–85. ISBN 9780007575480 .
^ York Crematorium Bereavement Services Guide .
^ "Coal-fired Power Stations" . Parliamentary Debates (Hansard) . 16 January 1984. Retrieved 17 January 2016 .
^ "Historic York Minster engulfed by flames" . On This Day . BBC News . 9 July 1984. Archived from the original on 7 March 2008. Retrieved 29 January 2008 .
^ "Two sugar plants set to be closed" . BBC News . 4 July 2006. Retrieved 4 May 2012 .
^ "About York Barbican" . Archived from the original on 18 August 2012. Retrieved 12 September 2012 .
^ "No fairytale start for York City at the Community Stadium as Fylde win 3-1" . York Press . 16 February 2021. Retrieved 19 January 2022 .
^ Dale, Tim (3 August 2023). "York to get its first Rabbi in 800 years" . BBC News . Retrieved 3 August 2023 .
Further reading
Drake, Francis (1736). Eboracum: The History and Antiquities of the City of York, from its Original to the Present Time; together with the History of the Cathedral Church and the Lives of the Archbishops . York.
Buckley, Theodore Alois (1862). "York" . Great Cities of the Middle Ages (2nd ed.). London: Routledge, Warne & Routledge.
"York" . Encyclopædia Britannica . Vol. 28 (11th ed.). 1910. pp. 927–929.
Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England . (1962–81). An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in the City of York . London: H.M.S.O.
Tillott, P. M., ed. (1961). A History of the County of York: The City of York . London: Victoria County History .
Smyth, Alfred P. (1975). Scandinavian York and Dublin: the history and archaeology of two related Viking kingdoms . Dublin: Templekieran Press. ISBN 9780716523659 .
Pevsner, Nikolaus ; Neave, David (1995) [1972]. Yorkshire: York and the East Riding . Pevsner Architectural Guides (2nd ed.). London: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-071061-2 .
Hall, Richard (1996). English Heritage Book of York . London: Batsford. ISBN 0-7134-7720-2 .
Nuttgens, Patrick , ed. (2001). The History of York: from earliest times to the year 2000 . Pickering: Blackthorn Press. ISBN 0-9535072-8-9 .
Rees Jones, Sarah (2013). York: The Making of a City . Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198201946 .
Palliser, D. M. (2014). Medieval York, 600–1540 . Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199255849 .
External links
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