Key dates in the History of Somerset
- 43–47 – Roman invasion and occupation
- 491 – Battle of Mons Badonicus (may have been fought in Somerset) (uncertain date)
- 537 – Battle of Camlann (sometimes located at Queen Camel) (uncertain date)
- 577 – Battle of Deorham (Dyrham, Gloucestershire) – Saxons occupied Bath
- 658 – Battle of Peonnum (Penselwood ?) – Saxons then occupied most of Somerset
- 710 – Battle of Llongborth (? Langport)
- 845 – First documentary reference to "Somersæte"
- 878 – Battle of Cynwit – Saxon victory over the Danes by Ealdorman Odda
- 878 – Battle of Ethandun – West Saxon victory over the Danes (uncertain whether in Somerset or Wiltshire)
- 878 – Treaty of Wedmore – after defeat of Danes by King Alfred the Great
- c900 – Kings of Wessex hold court at Cheddar
- 973 – King Edgar of England crowned at Bath
- 988 – St Dunstan buried at Glastonbury
- 1013 – Danish king Sweyn Forkbeard received submission of western thegns at Bath
- 1088 – Siege of Ilchester
- 1191 – Discovery of "King Arthur's" tomb at Glastonbury
- 1497 – Perkin Warbeck's rebellion supported by Somerset men
- 1643 – Battle of Lansdowne
- 1645 – Siege of Taunton during the English Civil War
- 1685 – Battle of Sedgemoor – Duke of Monmouth defeated
- 1685 – Judge Jeffries holds the "Bloody Assizes" at Taunton
- 1770 – Start of major enclosures of Somerset Levels
- 1805 – Somerset Coal Canal Opened
- 1827 – Bridgwater and Taunton Canal opened
- 1875 – Formation of Somerset County Cricket Club
- 1898 – County boundaries altered
- 1956 – Chew Valley Lake opened by Queen Elizabeth II
- 1974 – Formation of County of Avon, reducing the area of the County of Somerset
- 1996 – Abolition of the County of Avon, creating the unitary authorities of North Somerset and Bath and North East Somerset
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.