Chronology

Full chronology version

1690

The British East India Company establishes a trading base in Calcutta.

1690

William Penn instructs Pennsylvania settlers to preserve one acre of trees for every five acres cleared.

1690s

Paris becomes the first European city with an extensive sewer system.

1690

William of Orange defeats Catholic King James II at the Battle of the Boyne which ensures the dominance of the Protestant Ascendancy.

1693

White's Club in London is founded as a Chocolate House.

1694 - 1778

Voltaire.

1694

The Hudson's Bay Company York Factory is captured by the French, but recaptured a year later.

Sealing of the Bank of England Charter by Lady Jane Lindsay.

1694

Establishment of the Bank of England.

1695

Major reserves of gold are discovered in Brazil, prompting one of the first gold rushes.

1695

‘Soft-paste’ porcelain factory set up at St Cloud in France though not a perfect imitation.

1696

Dutch traders translocate coffee plants from Yemen to Jakarta, Indonesia.

1696

Board of Trade established to promote trade in overseas plantations.

1697

The Treaty of Ryswick cedes the western third of Hispaniola to France. The enlarged colony of Saint Domingue becomes rich on the sale of sugar cane.

1698

Exiled French Huguenot weavers such as Louis Crommelin breathe new life into the Linen Industry in Ireland.

1698

William III passes the Enclosure Act for the increase and preservation of timber in the New Forest. Navy Forests are planted and serious forest management begins.

1698

Zanzibar falls under the control of the Sultan of Oman and is an important port for the Spice trade. Spices are planted on the island.

1698

Private trading of slaves introduced in British Empire.

Savery's steam engine.

1698

The steam engine in invented by Thomas Savery.

Peace conference in Karlowitz.

1699

The Ottoman Empire cedes Hungary at the Treaty of Karlowitz.

1699 - 1701

William Dampier is sent on a mission to explore New Holland and maps the coast of Western Australia.

1700

The importation of printed calico in Britain is banned.

Sir Isaac Newton by Godfrey Kneller.

1700

Isaac Newton, British Master of the Mint, values gold at nearly 85s per ounce.

Newspaper advertisement for Arline Blundell, selling mink, ermine, ocelot, sable and beaver.

1700

69,500 beaver hats are exported from British ports.

1700

In the preceeding Century exports of Madeira to North America more than quintuple from 1200 pipes a year to 6500 pipes a year.

1700

Sea coal consumption increases in England as deforestation worsens.

Battle of Lesnaya, Jean-Marc Nattier, 1717.

1700 - 1721

Great Northern War.

1700

Kaolin unwittingly discovered in Saxony and used as a hair powder.

William III and Queen Mary.

1700

Massive trend in England for the collecting of porcelain led by Queen Mary, consort of William III.

White's Club St. James's Street, London.

1701

Ellis Veryard describes how the Spanish make and drink chocolate in An Account of Divers Choice Remarks Taken in a Journey through the Low Countries, France, Italy, and Part of Spain.

1701 - 1714

War of the Spanish Succession between France, Spain, Britain, the Netherlands, Portugal and others.

Portrait of Jethro Tull.

1701

Jethro Tull improves the seed drill and his invention helps to increase cereal production.

1701

Coal is discovered near Richmond in Virginia.

1702 - 1713

Queen Anne's War. Britain and France fight in Canada, New England, the Carolinas and Florida for control of the Americas. Many Native Indians are killed and Spanish Missions in Florida are destroyed.

1703

A great storm destroys over 4,000 trees in the New Forest.

1703 - 1704

William Dampier makes a second circumnavigation and leaves Alexander Selkirk (the model for Robinson Crusoe) on a desert island after a disagreement. He returns to find him in 1709. They raid Spanish shipping.

1703 - 1791

John Wesley, Protestant reformer.

1703

The Dutch term koekje (little cake) is given to a hard baked biscuit or cookie.

1704

Isaac Newton publishes his book Opticks about lenses and light.

1704

The British Government tries to break Britain's reliance on Baltic timber by encouraging trade with the American colonies.

1704

Battle of Blenheim - combined British, Dutch, Austrian, Danish and Prussian forces under the Duke of Marlborough defeat the French and Bavarian armies, decisively changing the course of the war.

1705

The steam piston engine is invented by Thomas Newcomen.

1706 - 1790

Benjamin Franklin.

1706

Daniel Duncan writes Wholesome advice against the abuse of Hot Liquors particularly of Coffee, Chocolate, Tea, Brandy and Strong-waters.

Benjamin Franklin. Line engraving by François Denis Née after a portrait by Carmontelle.

1706

Benjamin Franklin born. He would campaign to improve sanitation in Boston.

1708

Christopher Wren completes St Paul's Cathedral in London.

1708

The East India Company formally enters the opium traffic.

A German commemorative stamp depicting Johann Friederich Böttger creating porcelain.

1708

In great secrecy in Saxony, Germany, something close to hard-paste porcelain is created by Johann Friederich Böttger and Ehrenfried Waller von Tschimaus.

1709 - 1784

Samuel Johnson.

1709

Abraham Darby of Coalbrookdale, England uses coal instead of wood for manufacturing iron.

1710

Porcelain factory created at Meissen, Germany, under auspices of the Augustus the Strong, Elector of Saxony. ‘Hard-paste’ porcelain is produced.

A Javanese labourer busy in the fields of the the coca- and coffee-plantation Margo Molio near Soemberglatik, East-Java.

1711

Dutch traders plant Indonesian grown seedlings in Java.

1711

A vineyard is established at Chateau d'Yquem and becomes famous for sweet Sauternes wine.

1711

The British East India Company establishes a trading base at Canton.

Title page of an edition of Rousseau's Discourse on Inequality.

1712 - 1778

Jean-Jacques Rousseau.

1712 - 1786

Frederick the Great, King of Prussia.

Illustration of the Newcomen steam engine at Landgoed Groenedaal.

1712

Thomas Newcomen develops the first truly successful steam engine.

1713 - 1784

Denis Diderot, editor of the Encyclopédie.

1713

The Dutch provide French King Louis XIV with a coffee bush.

A first edition of the Treaty of Utrecht in Spanish (left), and a copy printed in 1714 in Latin and English (right).

1713

The Treaty of Utrecht ends the War of Spanish Succession and Queen Anne's War. The French and Spanish crowns are separated and Spain's Italian and Spanish possessions are reallocated. Britain is given Gibraltar and Minorca and France recognises the Hudson's Bay Company territories.

1714

Britain acquires Gibraltar from Spain having captured it in 1704.

1715

France captures Mauritius.

1715 - 1774

Reign of Louis XV of France.

1715 - 1717

The Yamasee War between the Yamasee Nation and the British.

1715 - 1900

Collecting of porcelain begins to attract ridicule and satire. “… a fine lady valued her mottled-green pottery quite as much as she valued her monkey, and much more than she valued her husband.” William Macauly.

1716

John Law sets up the Mississippi Company to assist French trade in North America. In 1717 it becomes the Company of the West.

1716

The Chianti region is established as a regional wine growing area.

1716

Establishment of Banque Générale in France.

Twining's trade card.

1717

Thomas Twining opens Twining's Golden Lyon Tea Shop on the Strand - London's first tea shop.

Trade card: Moët and Chandon Champagne.

1718

Canon Godinot publishes champagne making rules that he says were established by Benedictine monk, Dom Pérignon.

1718

The Ottoman Empire cedes Belgrade and Serbia to the Habsburgs at the Treaty of Passarowitz.

1718 - 1730

The Tulip Age of the Ottoman Empire. Greatly diminished it tries to establish peaceful relations with European states.

1718

The Bahamas are made a British crown colony.

1719

Daniel Defoe publishes Robinson Crusoe set on a desert island in the Caribbean.

1720 - 1728

German naturalist Daniel Messerschmidt is tasked by Peter the Great with the exploration of Siberia. He finds the first mammoth fossils.

1721

Germany's first coffee house opens in Berlin.

1721

Parliament removes all duty from timber imported from the American colonies.

1721 - 1728

A rabies epidemic sweeps across Eastern Europe.

1723 - 1792

Joshua Reynolds.

1723

Gabriel de Clieu transplants coffee plants to Haiti.

1723

A commission in Boston discovers lead in alcohol stills is found to cause illness.

1724 - 1804

Immanuel Kant.

Blenheim Palace from Jones's Views of the Seats of Noblemen and Gentlemen.

1724

Blenheim Palace is constructed to mark the success of the Duke of Blenheim in the wars against France.

Commemorative plate from Vitus Bering Park.

1725 - 1728

Vitus Bering explores Kamchatka and sails through the strait that now bears his name.

1725

Poet John Gray writes a poem, “To a lady on her passion for Old China”, satirizing porcelain as his rival in love; China’s the passion of her soul; A cup, a plate, a bowl; Can kindle wishes in her breast; Inflame with joy, or break her rest.

Title page of first edition.

1726

Gulliver's Travels is written by Jonathan Swift.

Mr and Mrs Andrews by Thomas Gainsborough.

1727 - 1788

Thomas Gainsborough.

1727

Coffee is introduced to Brazil via Dutch Guiana.

1727

Criollo Cacao trees in Trinidad are blighted causing a massive crop failure. Plans are made to replant with the hardier Forastero cacao tree from the Amazon.

1727

Virginia recognises 'tobacco notes' as legal tender.

Emperor Yongzheng.

1728 - 1729

China’s Yongzheng Emperor issues a ban that distinguishes illegal opium mixed with tobacco from unadulterated medicinal opium.

1729 - 1797

Edmund Burke.

1729

Stephen Gray conducts electricity over long distances.

1730

Coffee is planted in Jamaica.

1730

The Virginia Inspections Acts are passed to prevent the adulteration of tobacco.

1730

Sweet Tokaj wine is recognised as a regional variety from Slovakia.

1730

The "tree huggers" belonging to the Bishnois branch of the Hindu faith in India are killed while trying to protect trees from foresters.

Portrait of Charles Townshend, 2nd Viscount Townshend.

1730

Charles Townshend advocates the four crop rotation system using wheat, turnips, barley and clover.

1730

British East India Company importing 517,000 pieces of porcelain a year.

1732 - 1809

Joseph Haydn.

1733

John Kay invents the flying shuttle, speeding up the process of weaving.

1733

The UK Molasses Act placed a tax on all sugar from non-British colonies, widely encouraging sugar smuggling.

1733

First reference in EIC records of exports of Indian opium to China.

1733

Augustus the Strong of Saxony dies with a collection of 20,000 items of porcelain.

1735

The tea trade takes off in Russia.

1735

In France, an ‘unfaithful’ workman carries the secrets of the St Cloud factory to a new manufacturing centre at Chantilly.

1735

Factory founded by Florentine nobleman Marquis Ginori at La Doccia in Italy.

James Watt makes improvements to the Newcomen steam engine. Watt engines, powered by coal, are used in industrial and commercial capacities.

1736 - 1790

Ancient porcelains reproduced in Jingdezhen.

Thomas Paine.

1737 - 1809

Thomas Paine.

An existing tannery at Fes, Morocco.

1739

Benjamin Franklin petitions the Pennsylvania Assembly to stop waste dumping and remove tanneries from the commercial district.

1740 - 1749

A lucrative trade develops for sea otter pelts in the Pacific North West. A population of 150,000 to 300,000 is rapidly reduced to one or two thosand.

Maria Theresa, Holy Roman Empress as Queen of Hungary, holding the Holy Crown of Hungary.

1740 - 1748

The War of the Austrian Succession is fought in Europe, India and North America. France, Spain, Prussia, Bavaria are pitted against Britain, the Dutch Republic, Hanover and the Holy Roman Empire. Marie Theresa retains the Austrian throne and Prussia controls Silesia.

1740 - 1744

George Anson sails around the world on the Centurion. He stops in Chile and China before capturing a Manila galleon with 1.3m pieces of eight.

Marquis Ginori was influential in encouraging porcelain production in Italy.

1740

Marquis Ginori charters a ship and sends it to China to bring back earths used in the composition of porcelain for his La Doccia factory.

1740

Louis XV’s mistress Madame de Pompadour becomes a major patron of porcelain art.

1741

The Netherlands establish a colony in Demerara.

1742

The first cotton factories open in England, industrialising the weaving process.

1742 - 1743

James Isham documents his explorations in Canada on behalf of the Hudson's Bay Company.

1743 - 1826

Thomas Jefferson.

1743

Emiliam Basov establishes a fur trade post on Bering Island.

1743

First porcelain factory in Britain at Chelsea under patronage of George II.

Hogarth's Marriage A-la-mode

1743

Porcelain makes appearances in satirical and moralist paintings of William Hogarth (Marriage A-la-mode) as a symbol of excess and ill-spent money.

1744 - 1797

William Hodges - the official artist on board James Cook's second voyage of discovery well known for his paintings of Table Bay, Tahiti and Antarctica.

1744

Major new gold deposits are discovered in Russia.

Tea plantations in the Green Tea District, China - the largest importer of tea to the UK. From R. Fortune's Visit to the Tea Districts...

1745

In the UK, tea tax is reduced from 4s to 1s, making tea more affordable and popular.

1745

French porcelain manufacture begins at Vincennes under the name Charles Adam – the finance minister’s brother – partly in order to compete with Britain and to try and halt costly imports.

1746 - 1828

Francisco Goya.

The Art of Cookery made Plain and Easy.

1747

Hannah Glasse's The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy offers the first Western curry recipe. Curry powder (a blend of spices including coriander, tumeric, red pepper, fenugreek and others) starts to be imported to the West.

1747

German scientist Andreas Sigismund Marggraf discovers a way to extract sugar from sugar beet.

1747

William Hogarth depicts the Lord Mayor of London with a top hat, which then becomes fashionable.

1747 - 1756

Peak of Dutch East Indies imports of Bengal opium (average of 1,241 chests per year).

1748 - 1762

The American Jared Eliot writes Essays upon Field Husbandry.

1748

Coal production on a commercial scale begins in the USA for the first time. Coal mining began around Richmond, Virginia and was used in the manufacturing of war materials for the Revolutionary War.

1749 - 1832

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.

1750

Coffee is planted in Sulawesi.

From Essay on Sugar... by Robert Niccol.

1750

There are over 100 sugar refineries in England, yielding significant tax for the Government.

1750

China proclaims Tibet as a protectorate.

1750

A typhus epidemic sweeps through London killing thousands.

1750

Porcelain factory at Dresden accused of producing pieces slowly to keep prices high.

An example of Jingdezhen porcelain for the European market.

1750

Jingdezhen export porcelain begins to be sent unpainted to Guangzou for enameling and decoration so merchants could supervise patterns.