Timeline of Exeter

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various constructions

The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Exeter, Devon, England.

Prior to 16th century[]

  • 250 BC – Goods traded with Byzantine coins
  • 45 CE – Romans in power (approximate date).[1]
  • 55 – Roman fort established in Isca Dumnoniorum (approximate date).
  • 380 – Roman occupation ends (approximate date).[2]
  • 600 – Saxons arrive (approximate date).[2]
  • 868 – Monastery founded by Ethelred.[3]
  • 876 – Danes occupy town.[4]
  • 893 – Town besieged by Danes again.
  • 900 – Market active.[5]
  • 927 – Athelstan evicts the Cornish from Exeter (and perhaps the rest of Devon), according to William of Malmesbury, writing around 1120.[6]
  • 932 – Monastery founded by Athelstan.[3]
  • 1003 – Exeter sacked by forces of Sweyn of Denmark.[3]
  • 1048 – Episcopal see relocated to Exeter from Crediton.[4]
  • 1050 – Leofric becomes bishop of Exeter.[7][8]
  • 1067 – Exeter besieged by forces of William the Conqueror.[7]
  • 1068 – Rougemont Castle built (approximate date).
  • 1087 – Benedictine Priory of St Nicholas founded.
  • 1130 – Exeter fair active.[5]
  • 1136 – Exeter besieged by forces of Stephen, King of England.[1]
  • 1207 – Mayor in office.
  • 1236 – Nunnery founded.[7]
  • 1400 – Exeter Cathedral built (approximate date).
  • 1490 – Company of Weavers and Fullers incorporated.[9]
  • 1497 – City besieged by forces of Perkin Warbeck.[4]

16th–18th centuries[]

John Rocque's 1744 map of Exeter
  • 1536
    • City becomes a county corporate.[7]
    • Monastery disbanded.[1]
  • 1556 – Society of Merchant Adventurers incorporated.[10]
  • 1564 – Exeter Ship Canal construction begins.[1]
  • 1593 – Guildhall rebuilt.[7]
  • 1595 – Michael Harte bookseller in business.[11]
  • 1612 – Northernhay Gardens laid out.
  • 1633 – Exeter Free Grammar School opens.
  • 1643 – September: City taken by forces of Charles I of England.[7]
  • 1646 – April: Parliamentarians in power.[7]
  • 1664 – St Stephen's Church built.
  • 1681 – Custom House built on the Quay.
  • 1688 – November: William III of England visits city.[3]
  • 1696 – Mint established.[3]
  • 1714 – Exeter Mercury newspaper begins publication.[12]
  • 1758 – Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital built.
  • 1760 – George's Meeting (Unitarian) built.
  • 1763 – Trewman's Exeter Flying Post newspaper in publication.
  • 1764 – Exeter Synagogue consecrated.
  • 1778 – Bridge rebuilt.
  • 1783 – Gilbert Dyer's circulating library in business.[11][13]
  • 1792 – Exeter Gazette newspaper begins publication.[12]

19th century[]

View of Exeter, 1803
  • 1813
    • Devon and Exeter Institution founded.[3]
    • Exeter Western Luminary begins publication.[14]
  • 1814
    • Iron Footbridge built.
    • Exeter Medical Library founded.
  • 1821 – Besley's Exeter News begins publication.[12]
  • 1823 – Cholera epidemic.[1]
  • 1825
    • Mechanics' Institution opens.[7]
    • Chichester Place laid out.
  • 1832 – Veitch plant nursery in business.[15]
  • 1835 – Athenaeum instituted.[3]
  • 1837 – Catacombs built.
  • 1840 – Exeter Diocesan Training College opens.
  • 1842 – Church of St Andrew built.
  • 1844 – Bristol and Exeter Railway begins operating to Exeter St Davids railway station.[7]
  • 1847 – Polytechnic Institution founded.[3]
  • 1848 – South Devon Railway begins operating from Exeter St Davids station.[3]
  • 1853 – Prison built.
  • 1854 – School of Art founded.
  • 1860 – London and South Western Railway begins operating to Exeter Queen Street station.
  • 1862 – Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature, and Art established.[16]
  • 1867 – November: Economic unrest.[7]
  • 1870 – Royal Albert Memorial Museum established.
  • 1882 – Horse-drawn tram begins operating.
  • 1884 – 18 November: Sacred Heart Church opened.
  • 1887 – 5 September: Theatre Royal burns down with 186 fatalities.[7]
  • 1889
  • 1896 – City of Exeter Electricity Company formed.

20th century[]

Electric tram crosses the new Exe Bridge, 1905
Queen Street, Exeter, 1943
  • 1901 – Population: 47,185.[18]
  • 1904 – Express & Echo newspaper begins publication.[19]
  • 1905
    • 29 March: Rebuilt Exe Bridge opened.
    • 4 April: Exeter Corporation Tramways begins operating its electric system.
    • Approximate date: Devon and Cornwall Record Society established.[20]
  • 1907 – Sidwell Street Methodist Church completed, a pioneering example of reinforced concrete construction by French engineer Paul Cottancin.
  • 1910 – Empire Electric Palace opens.[21]
  • 1911 – Exeter Pictorial Record Society active.[22]
  • 1914 – 7 October: First of five war emergency hospitals in requisitioned buildings in the city opens to casualties, staffed by Voluntary Aid Detachment nurses.[23]
  • 1916 – December: Deller's Café opens in Bedford Street.[23]
  • 1937 – Odeon Exeter cinema opens.[21]
  • 1938 – Exeter Airport opens.
  • 1942 – May: "Baedeker Blitz": Aerial bombing by the German Luftwaffe devastates the city centre.[1]
  • 1949 – 21 October: Official inauguration of construction of Princesshay, Britain's first pedestrianised shopping precinct, as part of the postwar city centre reconstruction.[24]
  • 1955 – University of Exeter chartered.
  • 1960 – October: Flood.
  • 1963 – November: Exeter & Devon Crematorium opened.
  • 1964 – Devon County Hall built.
  • 1967 – Northcott Theatre opens.
  • 1970 – Exeter College established.
  • 1972 – Barnfield Theatre established.
  • 1974 – Spacex (art gallery) established.
  • 1977 – M5 motorway opens.[1]
  • 1997 – Douglas Centre for the History of Cinema and Popular Culture opens at University of Exeter.

21st century[]

  • 2007 – Princesshay rebuilt.
  • 2008 – 22 May: Attempted bombing in Princesshay.
  • 2011 – Population: 117,773.
  • 2017 – Exeter Chiefs rugby union team win the Aviva Premiership.

See also[]

  • Exeter history
  • Timelines of other cities in South West England: Bath, Bristol, Plymouth

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Devon Library and Information Services. "Devon Timeline". Devon County Council. Archived from the original on 5 May 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Shorter, A. H. (1954). "The Site, Situation and Functions of Exeter". Geography. 39 (4): 250–261. JSTOR 40564988.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i George Henry Townsend (1867), "Exeter", A Manual of Dates (2nd ed.), London: Frederick Warne & Co.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c Toone, William (1828). Chronological Historian ... of Great Britain. 1 (2nd ed.). London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green.[1]
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b Letters, Samantha (2005), "Devon", Gazetteer of Markets and Fairs in England and Wales to 1516, Institute of Historical Research, Centre for Metropolitan History
  6. ^ Payton, Philip (1996). Cornwall: a history. Fowey: Alexander Associates. 'Exeter was cleansed of its defilement by wiping out that filthy race'... The area inside the city walls still known today as 'Little Britain' is the quarter where most of the Cornish Romano-British aristocracy had their town houses, from which the Cornish were expelled. Under Athelstan's statutes it eventually became unlawful for any Cornishman to own land, and lawful for any Englishman to kill any Cornishman (or woman or child).
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k Benjamin Vincent (1910), "Exeter", Haydn's Dictionary of Dates (25th ed.), London: Ward, Lock & Co.
  8. ^ Oliver, George (1861). Lives of the Bishops of Exeter, and a history of the Cathedral. Exeter: W. Roberts. OL 7124106M.
  9. ^ Lewis, W.S. (1924). "Ancient Maritime Trade of Exeter". Geographical Teacher. 12 (6): 455–457. JSTOR 40555167.
  10. ^ William Cotton (1873), An Elizabethan Guild of the city of Exeter, Exeter: Pollard, OL 7153277M
  11. ^ Jump up to: a b Ian Maxted (2006), "Exeter", Devon book and paper trades: a biographical dictionary, Exeter Working Papers in British Book Trade History, retrieved 17 September 2013
  12. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Devon newspaper bibliography: Exeter". Local Studies. Devon County Council. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
  13. ^ First Part of a Catalogue of the Extensive, Curious, and Valuable Library, of the Late Mr. Gilbert Dyer, Bookseller, Exeter. 1825.
  14. ^ "Exeter". Newspaper Press Directory. London: Charles Mitchell. 1847.
  15. ^ S. Heriz-Smith (1988). "Veitch Nurseries of Killerton and Exeter c. 1780 to 1863". Garden History. 16 (1): 41–57. doi:10.2307/1586904. JSTOR 1586904.
  16. ^ Report, Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature, and Art, 1863
  17. ^ Yearbook of the Scientific and Learned Societies of Great Britain and Ireland, London, 1922
  18. ^ "Exeter", Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.), New York, 1910, OCLC 14782424
  19. ^ "Exeter (England) Newspapers". Main Catalogue. British Library. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
  20. ^ "Devon and Cornwall Record Society". Local Studies. Devon County Council. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
  21. ^ Jump up to: a b "Movie Theaters in Exeter, England". Los Angeles: CinemaTreasures.org. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
  22. ^ "Exeter Pictorial Record Society". Local Studies. Devon County Council. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
  23. ^ Jump up to: a b Parker, David (2014). Exeter: remembering 1914–18. Great War Britain. Stroud: The History Press. ISBN 978-0-7509-6026-7.
  24. ^ Venning, Norman (1988). Exeter: the Blitz and Rebirth of the City. Exeter: Devon Books. ISBN 0-86114-830-4.

Bibliography[]

Published in 17th–18th centuries[]

  • John Ogilby (1699), "(Exeter)", Traveller's Guide, or, A Most Exact Description of the Roads of England, London: Abel Swall
  • Richard Izacke; Samuel Izacke (1724) [1677], Remarkable Antiquities of the City of Exeter, London: Printed for Edw. Score
  • Antient History and Description of the City of Exeter. Exeter: Andrews and Trewman. 1765. Compiled and digested from the works of Hooker, Izacke, and Others
  • Daniel Defoe; Samuel Richardson (1778), "Devonshire: (Exeter)", A Tour Through the Island of Great Britain (8th ed.), London: J.F. and C. Rivingdon

Published in 19th century[]

1800s–1840s[]

1850s–1890s[]

Published in 20th century[]

  • A.R. Hope Moncrieff, ed. (1902), Black's Guide to Exeter and East Devon, London: A. & C. Black
  • G.K. Fortescue, ed. (1902). "Exeter". Subject Index of the Modern Works Added to the Library of the British Museum in the Years 1881–1900. London. hdl:2027/uc1.b5107011.
  • J.G. Bartholomew (1904), "Exeter", Survey Gazetteer of the British Isles, London: G. Newnes
  • A.M. Shorto (1906). Story of Exeter: for use in schools. Exeter: James G. Commin.
  • "Exeter". List of Works Relating to British Genealogy and Local History. New York: New York Public Library. 1910.
  • Great Britain. Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts (1916), Report on the records of the City of Exeter, London, OCLC 924383, OL 7065949M
  • "Exeter". England. Blue Guides. London: Macmillan. 1920.
  • W. G. Hoskins. Industry, Trade and People in Exeter, 1688–1800 (1935)
  • W. Stanley Lewis and A. H. Shorter (1939). "The Evolution of Exeter". Geography. 24 (3): 149–161. JSTOR 40561002.
  • W. G. Hoskins. Exeter" History Today (May 1951), Vol. 1 Issue 5, p28-37 online.
  • Aileen Fox. Roman Exeter (1952)
  • Connie S. Evans (2000). "'An Echo of the Multitude': The Intersection of Governmental and Private Poverty Initiatives in Early Modern Exeter". Albion: A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies. 32 (3): 408–428. JSTOR 4053912.

Published in 21st century[]

  • "Exeter". Brewer's Britain and Ireland. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. 2005. ISBN 1849721858 – via Credo Reference.(subscription required)
  • Tim Isaac and Chris Hallam Secret Exeter (2018)

External links[]

  • Royal Albert Memorial Museum. "Exeter Time Trail". Exeter City Council.
  • "Devon", Historical Directories, UK: University of Leicester. Includes digitised directories of Exeter, various dates
  • "Timeline". Exeter Memories. David Cornforth.
  • Digital Public Library of America. Works related to Exeter, various dates

Coordinates: 50°43′00″N 3°32′00″W / 50.716667°N 3.533333°W / 50.716667; -3.533333

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