History of English Literature

  • 731

    The Venerable Bede

    The Venerable Bede
    The Venerable Bede, in his monastery at jarrow,completes his history of the English church and people
  • 800

    Beowulf

    Beowulf
    Beowulf, the first great work of Germanic literature, mingles the legends of Scandinavia with the experience in England of Angles and Saxons
  • 950

    Eddas

    Eddas
    The material of the Eddas, taking shape in Iceland, derives from earlier sources in Norway, Britain and Burgundy
  • 1300

    Duns Scotus

    Duns Scotus
    Duns Scotus, known as the Subtle Doctor in medieval times, later provides humanists with the name Dunsman or dunce
  • 1340

    William of Ockham

    William of Ockham
    William of Ockham advocates paring down arguments to their essentials, an approach later known as Ockham's Razor
  • 1367

    William Langland

    William Langland
    A narrator who calls himself Will, and whose name may be Langland, begins the epic poem of Piers Plowman
  • 1387

    Chaucer

    Chaucer
    Chaucer begins an ambitious scheme for 100 Canterbury Tales, of which he completes only 24 by the time of his death
  • 1469

    Thomas Malory

    Thomas Malory
    Thomas Malory, in gaol somewhere in England, compiles Morte d'Arthur – an English account of the French tales of King Arthur
  • 1549

    Thomas Cranmer

    Thomas Cranmer
    The first version of the English prayer book, or Book of Common Prayer, is published with text by Thomas Cranmer
  • Marlowe

    Marlowe
    Marlowe's first play, Tamburlaine the Great, introduces the swaggering blank verse of Elizabethan and Jacobean drama
  • Edmund Spenser

    Edmund Spenser
    English poet Edmund Spenser celebrates the Protestant Elizabeth I as The Faerie Queene
  • Shakespeare

    Shakespeare
    Shakespeare's central character in Hamlet expresses both the ideals of the Renaissance and the disillusion of a less confident a
  • Ben Jonson

    Ben Jonson
    Ben Jonson writes The Masque of Blackness, the first of his many masques for the court of James I
  • David Hume

    David Hume
    David Hume publishes his Treatise of Human Nature, in which he applies to the human mind the principles of experimental science
  • Laurence Sterne

    Laurence Sterne
    Laurence Sterne publishes the first two volumes of Tristram Shandy, beginning with the scene at the hero's conception
  • Edwar Gibbon

    Edwar Gibbon
    English historian Edward Gibbon publishes the first volume of The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • William Blake

    William Blake
    William Blake publishes Songs of Innocence, a volume of his poems with every page etched and illustrated by himself
  • Walter Scott

    Walter Scott
    Walter Scott publishes The Lay of the Last Minstrel, the long romantic poem that first brings him fame
  • John Keats

    John Keats
    English poet John Keats publishes Ode to a Nightingale, inspired by the bird's song in his Hampstead garden
  • Charles Dickens

    Charles Dickens
    Charles Dickens begins the publication in monthly numbers of David Copperfield, his own favourite among his novels
  • Henry Wood

    Henry Wood
    Mrs Henry Wood publishes her first novel, East Lynne, which becomes the basis of the most popular of all Victorian melodramas
  • Oxford University press

    Oxford University press
    Oxford University Press publishes the A volume of its New English Dictionary, which will take 37 years to reach Z
  • Joseph Conrad

    Joseph Conrad
    Joseph Conrad publishes his novel Lord Jim about a life of failure and redemption in the far East
  • Jean Rhys

    Jean Rhys
    Caribbean-born author Jean Rhys publishes her first novel, Postures, based on her affair with the writer Ford Madox Ford
  • Virginia Woolf

    Virginia Woolf publishes the most fluid of her novels, The Waves, in which she tells the story through six interior monologues
  • Rebecca West

    British author Rebecca West publishes an account of Yugoslavia, Black Lamb and Grey Falcon
  • Roald Dahl

    Roald Dahl publishes a fantasy treat for a starving child, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
  • Julian Barnes

    English author Julian Barnes publishes a multi-faceted literary novel, Flaubert's Parrot
  • Stephen Hawking

    British physicist Stephen Hawking explains the cosmos for the general reader in A Brief History of Time: from the Big Bang to Black Holes
  • Sebastian Faulks

    English novelist Sebastian Faulks publishes Birdsong, set partly in the trenches of World War I
  • Michael Frayn

    Michael Frayn's play Copenhagen dramatizes the visit of Werner Heisenberg to Niels Bohr in wartime Denmark
  • 2000

    The Amber Spyglass completes Philip Pullman's trilogy, His Dark Materials