my-server
← Wiki

Timeline of York

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

15th–16th centuries

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.
  • 1644
  • 16 July: First English Civil War: Parliamentary forces capture York; Thomas Fairfax prevents damage to the Minster and churches.
  • Ye Olde Starre Inne licensed.
  • 1653 – 18 April: London–York stagecoach first recorded.
  • 1673 – 18 April: Viscount Fairfax throws a party to mark his remodelling of Fairfax House.
  • 1674 – Friargate Quaker Meeting House first built.
  • 1676 – Highwayman John Nevison rides from Kent to York in a day to establish an alibi.
  • 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.
  • 1694 – First corporation fire engine purchased.
  • 1695 – Grays, solicitors, established.

18th century

19th century

20th century

21st century

  • 2000 – October–November – Severe flooding, chiefly from River Ouse.
  • 2001 – 10 April: Millennium Bridge opens.
  • 2007 – York sugar beet factory closes.
  • 2011 – The York Barbican reopens after several years of closure.
  • 2014
  • 6 July: York hosts the start of Tour de France, Stage 2.
  • Vangarde Shopping Park opens.
  • 2015
  • Easter: York Army Museum opens.
  • December: Severe flooding, chiefly from the River Foss.
  • 2020 – 30 January: COVID-19 in the UK: The first two known cases of infection with SARS-CoV-2 (at this time known as 2019-nCoV) in the United Kingdom, two Chinese nationals staying in York, are confirmed.
  • 2021 – 16 February: York City F.C. play the opening match at York Community Stadium at Monks Cross.
  • 2023 – 3 August: Appointment of first rabbi to a Jewish congregation in York since 1190 is announced.

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
  • 17 April: David Bradley, actor
  • 23 June: Martin Rees, astrophysicist
  • 1943 – 9 May: Vince Cable, politician
  • 1992 – 2 October: Lucy Staniforth, footballer

See also

References

Further reading

External links