Bantry house

Time line

  • Period: 6000 BCE to 800 BCE

    Nolithic Britain and Bronze Ages

    Human beings have been living in the part of northern Europe that is today called Britain for about 750,000 years. For most of that time, they subsisted by gathering food like nuts, berries, leaves and fruit from wild sources, and by hunting.
  • 2500 BCE

    Stonehenge

    Stonehenge
    Stonehenge was constructed in three phases.
    It has been estimated that the three phases of the construction required more than thirty million hours of labour.
    Speculation on the reason it was built range from human sacrifice to astronomy.
  • Period: 1485 BCE to 1603 BCE

    Tudors

    Most people in Henry's England lived in villages. Towns were much smaller than towns today. London was the biggest city, with about 50,000 people.
    Wales at this time was ruled from England. So was Ireland. Scotland had its own King.
  • Period: 1154 BCE to 1485 BCE

    Middle Ages

    Far from their dour reputation, the Middle Ages were a period of massive social change, burgeoning nationalism, international conflict, terrible natural disaster, climate change, rebellion, resistance and renaissance.
    There was also a fight for power between the kings and the rich men in England.
  • Period: 1066 BCE to 1154 BCE

    Norman Britain

    The Normans brought a powerful new aristocracy to Britain, and yet preserved much that was Anglo-Saxon about their new possession. What did they change and what did they leave?
  • Period: 800 BCE to 43 BCE

    Iron Age

    The Iron Age of the British Isles covers the period from about 800 BC to the Roman invasion of 43 AD, and follows on from the Bronze Age. As the Iron Age progressed through the first millennium BC, strong regional groupings emerged, reflected in styles of pottery, metal objects and settlement types. In some areas, 'tribal' states and kingdoms developed by the end of the first century BC.
  • 410 BCE

    Romans left Britain

    Romans left Britain
    They went to defend Rome againist the barbians, who were not in the Roman Empire, and left Britain without any protection.
  • Period: 410 BCE to 1066 BCE

    Vikings and Anglosaxons

    The breakdown of Roman law and civilisation was fairly swift after the Roman army departed in 410 AD. To counter the raids from continental pirates, Vikings, Picts and Scots towns would bring in mercenaries from Europe to defend them from attack. These mercenary soldiers were Angles and Saxons from northern Germany.
  • 122 BCE

    Hadrian's Wall

    Hadrian's Wall
    He visited Britain and decided to build a wall across the north of England to defend Roman Britain againist the Pics in Scotland
  • Period: 43 to 410

    Roman Britain

    Why did the Romans invade Britain in 43 AD? Their empire already extended from the Channel coast to the Caucasus, from the northern Rhineland to the Sahara.
    The great age of conquest had ended a few decades before. Three legions had been destroyed in the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest by rebellious German tribesmen in 9 AD, and the emperor Augustus concluded that the empire was overextended and called a halt to new wars of conquest.
  • Great Plague

    Was the first plague and in two successive years of the 17th century London suffered two terrible disasters. In the spring and summer of 1665 an outbreak of Bubonic Plague spread from parish to parish until thousands had died and the huge pits dug to receive the bodies were full.
  • Great fire in London

    Great fire in London
    Whas the second plague which destroyed many buildings in the capital.
  • Period: to

    British Empire and Sea Power

    How did Britain's naval strength, coupled with the beginnings of the industrial revolution, lead to the establishment of a strong global empire?
  • Period: to Mar 10, 783

    American war of Indepence

    Occurs of a result that Britain lost its colonies in America.
  • Period: to

    Victorian Era

    During the Victorian era, Britain could claim to be the world's superpower, despite social inequality at home and burgeoning industrial rivals overseas. How did it happen?
  • Modern Day Britain

    Modern Day Britain
    Post-1945, Britain quickly relinquished its status as the world's largest imperial power, but it was the massive cultural and social changes at home that truly transformed British society.