Timeline of Oxford

The following is a timeline of the history of the city, University and colleges of Oxford, England.

Part of a series on the
History of England
 England portal

Pre-history

  • Activity from the Mesolithic period onwards, attested by archaeological finds across the city.[1]
  • Bronze Age burials at locations including The Hamel, Radcliffe Infirmary, Banbury Road and several university buildings.[1]
  • Bronze Age barrow complexes at locations including the University Parks.[1]
  • Wide-ranging Iron Age and Roman remains, suggesting continued occupation from pre-conquest period into the Roman era.[1]

Recorded history, prior to 13th century

City coat of arms in Town Hall
University seal
St George's Tower of the Castle
"Friar Bacon's Study" at Folly Bridge, demolished 1779[22]

1200s

1300s

1400s

New College Dining Hall

1500s

  • 1548 – March: Florentine evangelical reformer Peter Martyr Vermigli is appointed Regius Professor of Divinity in place of Richard Smyth. He is forced to flee the city in September 1553.[49]
  • 1550 – The university's Duke Humfrey's Library stripped of "superstitious books and images".
  • 1555
  • 1556 – 21 March: The third of the Oxford martyrs, Thomas Cranmer, deposed Archbishop of Canterbury, is burned at the stake for treason[25] having professed his faith at St Mary's.
  • 1562 – Grazing rites of freemen of Oxford to Port Meadow and of residents of Wolvercote to Wolvercote Common are confirmed.[50]
  • 1566 – 31 August–6 September: Visit of Queen Elizabeth, staying at Christ Church. On 2 September at a performance of Richard Edwardes' play Palamon and Arcite before her the stage collapses causing three deaths, but the show goes on and "the Queen laughed heartily thereat".[51] On 6 September the first honorary degrees to be awarded at a ceremony in Oxford are conferred on Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, and eleven others, who receive the MA.[52] The Queen grants a royal crest to the city coat of arms.
  • 1571 – 27 June: Establishment of Jesus College "within the City and University of Oxford of Queen Elizabeth's foundation" on the site of White Hall by Welsh cleric and lawyer Hugh Price, the first college established as an Anglican institution at its foundation.[23]
  • 1577 – 6 July: "Black Assize" results in an outbreak of epidemic typhus killing around 300 in the city.[53] Rowland Jenkins, an Oxford stationer, is condemned to have his ears cut off for distributing Popish books.[36]
  • 1580 – 6 April: Dover Straits earthquake felt in Oxford.[7]
  • 1581
    • Undergraduates are required to subscribe to the Thirty-Nine Articles of the Anglican Church.[36]
    • 27 June: Copies of Edmund Campion's Decem Rationes, arguments against the validity of the Anglican Church, printed clandestinely at Stonor Park, are found on the benches of the University Church of St Mary the Virgin.[36]
  • 1582 – February: Meleager, a Latin play on the mythological figure of Meleager by "Gulielmus Gagerus" (William Gager), is performed by members of Christ Church.
  • 1583 – 11 June: Rivales, another Latin play by Gager, is acted by members of Christ Church; it is criticised for its "filth". The following day they present another, Dido.[54]
  • 1585 – 3 April: The Queen's College is incorporated as a full college under this name under an Act of Parliament obtained by its Provost, Henry Robinson.
  • 1586 – Oxford University Press is recognised by decree of the Star Chamber.[55]
  • 1588
  • 1589
  • 1592 – 22–28 September: Visit of Queen Elizabeth, staying at Christ Church.[56] On 26 September members of Christ Church revive William Gager's 1583 Latin play Rivales before her.
  • c. 1594 – Mound erected as a feature in New College garden.
  • 1598 – 23 February: Thomas Bodley refounds the university's Duke Humfrey's Library.[25]

1600s

Old Schools Quadrangle, Bodleian Library
Brasenose in c.1674, from Loggan's Oxonia Illustrata

1700s

Broad Street looking east towards (right to left) the Old Ashmolean Building, the Sheldonian Theatre and the Clarendon Building

1800s

On the river – an early view
First two women's colleges
The HighPhotochrom of c.1900

1900s

1913 "Bullnose" Morris Oxford
Salters steamer Wargrave (1913) by Folly Bridge
Wartime aircraft scrap dump at Cowley as portrayed in Paul Nash's Totes Meer[222]
Oxford's dreaming spires from South Park
Port Meadow

2000s

Births

Deaths

Osney Cemetery (on the site of the Abbey)
  • 727 – 19 October: Frideswide, abbess (b. c.650)
  • 924 – 2 August: Ælfweard of Wessex, royal prince (b. c.902)
  • 1002 – 13 November: Gunhilde, Viking noblewoman
  • 1040 – 17 March: Harold Harefoot, king of England (b. c.1015)
  • 1151 – Walter of Oxford, archdeacon
  • 1176 – Rosamund Clifford, royal mistress
  • 1222 – 17 April: Robert of Reading (Haggai), convert to Judaism, executed
  • 1236 – 7 May: Agnellus of Pisa, Franciscan friar (b. 1195)
  • 1292 – June?: Roger Bacon, friar, philosopher and scientist (b. c.1214)
  • 1553 – 15 February: Catherine Vermigli, ex-nun[49]
  • 1610 – 9 November: George Napper, Catholic priest, executed (b. 1550)
  • 1644
    • 5 February: Sir Thomas Byron, Royalist commander (b. c.1610)
    • 4 July: Brian Twyne, antiquary (b. 1581)
  • 1680 – 4 February: Jacob Bobart the Elder, botanist (b. 1599 in Brunswick)
  • 1686 – 10 July: John Fell, Bishop of Oxford (b. 1625)
  • 1703 – 28 October: John Wallis, mathematician (b. 1616)
  • 1709 – 30 June: Edward Lhuyd, Welsh natural historian and antiquary (b. 1660)
  • 1747 – 2 April: Johann Jacob Dillenius, botanist (b. 1684 in Darmstadt)
  • 1773 – 10 June: Thomas Hearne, antiquary (b. 1678)
  • 1790 – 21 May: Thomas Warton, poet (b. 1728)
  • 1854 – 22 December: Martin Routh, classicist and President of Magdalen College (b. 1755)
  • 1862 – 7 August: William Turner, topographical watercolourist (b. 1789)
  • 1882 – 16 September: E. B. Pusey, high churchman (b. 1800)
  • 1893 – 1 October: Benjamin Jowett, theologian, Master of Balliol and academic reformer (b. 1817)
  • 1894 – 30 July: Walter Pater, art critic (b. 1839)
  • 1896 – 8 February: Charles Umpherston Aitchison, colonial governor (b. 1832 in Edinburgh)
  • 1899 – 6 October: Felicia Skene, writer and prison reformer (b. 1821 in Aix-en-Provence)
  • 1900
    • 16 October: Sir Henry Acland, academic physician (b. 1815)
    • 28 October: Max Müller, orientalist (b. 1823 in Dessau)
  • 1901 – 31 March: Sir John Stainer, organist, composer and professor of music (died on holiday in Verona; burial 6 April at Holywell Cemetery) (b. 1840)
  • 1912 – 30 April: Henry Sweet, philologist (b. 1845)
  • 1919
  • 1920 – 5 June: Rhoda Broughton, popular novelist (b. 1840)
  • 1930
  • 1932 – 29 February: George Claridge Druce, botanist, pharmacist and mayor of Oxford (b. 1850)
  • 1934 – 14 March: Francis Llewellyn Griffith, Egyptologist (b. 1862)
  • 1936 – 19 March: Eleanor Constance Lodge, promoter of women's higher education (b. 1869)
  • 1941
  • 1943 – 14 October: Michael Sadler, educationalist, Master of University College (b. 1861)
  • 1944 – 26 June: Edward Brooks, soldier, winner of the Victoria Cross (b. 1883)
  • 1945 – 15 May: Charles Williams, writer (b. 1886)
  • 1946 – 20 February: Hugh Allen, conductor, died of effects of road accident (b. 1869)
  • 1952
  • 1954 – 8 June: Kenneth Kirk, Bishop of Oxford and moral theologian (b. 1886)
  • 1955 – 31 March: Thomas Dunbabin, classical archaeologist and resistance leader (b. 1911 in Australia)
  • 1956 – 27 September: Gerald Finzi, composer (b. 1901)
  • 1957
  • 1963
  • 1971 – 4 July: Sir Maurice Bowra, classicist, Warden of Wadham College and wit (b. 1898)
  • 1975
  • 1980 – 19 November: Edmund Bowen, physical chemist (b. 1898)
  • 1981 – 22 November: Sir Hans Krebs, biochemist (b. 1900 in Hildesheim)
  • 1982 – 20 November: John Redcliffe-Maud, civil servant and Master of University College (b. 1906)
  • 1985 – 13 April: Oscar Nemon, sculptor (b. 1906 in Osijek)
  • 1988 – 21 December: Nikolaas Tinbergen, animal behaviourist (b. 1907 in The Hague)
  • 1992 – 24 January: John Sparrow, literary scholar and Warden of All Souls (b. 1906)
  • 1994 – 24 May: John Wain, poet, novelist and critic (b. 1925)
  • 1997 – 5 November: Sir Isaiah Berlin, philosopher and President of Wolfson College (b. 1909 in Riga)
  • 1999 – 27 March: Michael Aris, orientalist (b. 1946)
  • 2001 – 15 October: Anne Ridler, poet (b. 1912)
  • 2005 – 24 July: Sir Richard Doll, epidemiologist (b. 1912)
  • 2007 – 21 August: Siobhan Dowd, children's novelist (b. 1960)
  • 2011 – 18 January: John Herivel, cryptanalyst (b. 1918)
  • 2014 – 14 October: A. H. Halsey, sociologist (b. 1923)
  • 2017
  • 2018 – 3 March: Sir Roger Bannister, mile runner, neurologist and Master of Pembroke College (b. 1929)
gollark: Oh well.
gollark: But what if I want to ask when they have donkeys?
gollark: I vaguely remember the ñ being important.
gollark: Isn't it "when do you have donkeys"?
gollark: Wow!

See also

References

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Further reading

Published prior to 1800

  • David Loggan (1675). Oxonia illustrata. Oxford: at the Sheldonian Theatre.
  • Anthony Wood (1674). Historia et antiquitates Universitatis Oxoniensis. Oxford: at the Sheldonian Theatre.
  • Anthony Wood (1691). Athenæ Oxonienses: an Exact History of all the Writers and Bishops who have had their Education in the University of Oxford from 1500 to 1690. London.

Published in the 1800s

Published in the 1900s

Published in the 2000s

  • Daniel A. Bell; Avner de-Shalit (2011). "Oxford". Spirit of Cities: Why the Identity of a City Matters in a Global Age. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691151441.
  • L. W. B. Brockliss (2016). The University of Oxford: a history. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-924356-3.

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