1714 in Great Britain
Great Britain-related events during the year of 1714
1714 in Great Britain:
Other years
Countries of the United Kingdom
Scotland
Events from the year 1714 in Great Britain . This marks the beginning of the Georgian era .
Incumbents
Events
King George c.1714, by Sir Godfrey Kneller
2 February – Nicholas Rowe 's tragedy Jane Shore premieres at the Drury Lane Theatre in London and is a popular success.
March – the Scriblerus Club , an informal group of literary friends, is formed by Jonathan Swift , Alexander Pope , John Gay , John Arbuthnot (at whose London house they meet), Thomas Parnell , Henry St. John and Robert Harley .[ 1]
25 March – Archbishop Tenison's School , the world's earliest surviving mixed gender school, is endowed by Thomas Tenison , Archbishop of Canterbury , in Croydon .
14 April – Queen Anne performs the last touching for the "King's evil ".[ 2]
19 May – Queen Anne refuses to allow members of the House of Hanover to settle in Britain during her lifetime.[ 3]
July – first Roman Catholic seminary in Britain opens at Eilean Bàn on Loch Morar in Scotland.[ 4]
8 July – by the Longitude Act , Parliament establishes the Board of Longitude and offers substantial monetary longitude rewards to anyone who can solve the problem of accurately determining a ship's longitude .
27 July – Robert Harley, 1st Earl of Oxford and Earl Mortimer , is dismissed as Lord High Treasurer .[ 5]
29 July – Worcester College, Oxford , is founded under the will of Sir Thomas Cookes of Worcestershire on the site of Gloucester College , closed during the Dissolution of the Monasteries .
30 July – Charles Talbot, 1st Duke of Shrewsbury , becomes the new Lord High Treasurer.
1 August
18 September – King George arrives in Britain for the first time, landing at Greenwich .[ 3]
20 October – coronation of King George I[ 3] at Westminster Abbey , giving rise to Coronation riots in over twenty towns in England.[ 6]
Births
6 January – Percivall Pott , surgeon (died 1788 )
25 February – Hyde Parker , admiral (died 1782 )
26 February – James Hervey , clergyman and writer (died 1758 )
7 April – John Elwes , né Meggot, miser and politician (died 1789 )
14 April – Adam Gib , religious leader (died 1788 )
3 June – John Conder , Independent English minister at Cambridge (later President of the Independent College) (died 1781 )
1 August – Richard Wilson , painter (died 1782 )[ 7]
3 August – William Cole , antiquary (died 1782 )
25 October – James Burnett, Lord Monboddo , philosopher and evolutionary thinker (died 1799 )
13 November – William Shenstone , English poet (died 1763 )
date unknown – Peregrine Bertie, 3rd Duke of Ancaster and Kesteven , politician (died 1778 )
Deaths
2 February – John Sharp, Archbishop of York (born 1643 )
24 February – Edmund Andros , governor in North America (born 1637 )
1 March – Thomas Ellwood , religious writer (born 1639 )
15 May – Roger Elliott , general and Governor of Gibraltar (born c.1665 )
8 June – Electress Sophia of Hanover , heir to the throne (born 1630)
22 June – Matthew Henry , non-conformist minister (born 1662 )
1 August – Queen Anne (born 1665 )
26 August – Edward Fowler , Bishop of Gloucester (born 1632 )
1 November – John Radcliffe , physician (born 1650 )
Robert Ferguson , Presbyterian minister, plotter and pamphleteer (born c.1637 in Scotland)
See also
References
^ Rumbold, Valerie (2009). "Scriblerus Club (act. 1714)" . Oxford Dictionary of National Biography . Oxford University Press. Retrieved 4 February 2011 . (subscription or UK public library membership required)
^ Werrett, Simon (2000). "Healing the Nation's Wounds: Royal Ritual and Experimental Philosophy in Restoration England". History of Science . 38 : 377–99. Bibcode :2000HisSc..38..377W .
^ a b c Palmer, Alan; Palmer, Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History . London: Century Ltd. pp. 208–209. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2 .
^ "The Story of Eilean Ban" . RC Diocese of Argyll & the Isles. 5 August 2014. Archived from the original on 8 March 2016. Retrieved 8 March 2016 .
^ a b Williams, Hywel (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History . London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. pp. 294 . ISBN 0-304-35730-8 .
^ Monod, Paul Kleber (1993). Jacobitism and the English People, 1688-1788 . Cambridge University Press. pp. 173–178.
^ Lee, Sidney , ed. (1900). "Wilson, Richard" . Dictionary of National Biography . Vol. 62. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 120–23.