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词条 Timeline of Jane Austen
释义

  1. 1760s

  2. 1770s

  3. 1780s

  4. 1790s

  5. 1800s

  6. 1810s

  7. See also

  8. References

  9. Bibliography

{{Multiple image|direction=vertical|align=right|image1=William Austen family tree two generations.svg|image2=Jane Austen nephews and nieces.svg|width=450|caption1=Austen family tree, showing Jane Austen's parents and her brothers and sister|caption2=Austen family tree, showing Jane Austen's brothers' marriages and children}}Jane Austen lived her entire life as part of a family located socially and economically on the lower fringes of the English gentry.[1] The Rev. George Austen and Cassandra Leigh, Jane Austen's parents, lived in Steventon, Hampshire, where Rev. Austen was the rector of the Anglican parish from 1765 until 1801.[2] Jane Austen's immediate family was large and close-knit. She had six brothers—James, George, Charles, Francis, Henry, and Edward—and a beloved older sister, Cassandra.[3] Austen's brother Edward was adopted by Thomas and Elizabeth Knight and eventually inherited their estates at Godmersham, Kent, and Chawton, Hampshire.[4] In 1801, Rev. Austen retired from the ministry and moved his family to Bath, Somerset.[5] He died in 1805 and for the next four years, Jane, Cassandra, and their mother lived first in rented quarters and then in Southampton where they shared a house with Frank Austen's family. During these unsettled years, they spent much time visiting various branches of the family.[6] In 1809, Jane, Cassandra, and their mother moved permanently into a large "cottage" in Chawton village that was part of Edward's nearby estate.[7] Austen lived at Chawton until she moved to Winchester for medical treatment shortly before her death in 1817.[8]

Throughout their adult lives, Jane and Cassandra were close to their cousin, Eliza de Feuillide,[9] and to neighbors Mary and Martha Lloyd. Mary became the second wife of Austen's brother James, and Martha lived with the Austen family (beginning shortly after Rev. Austen's death in 1805) and married Austen's brother Frank late in life.[10] Jane and Cassandra were also friends for many years with three sisters, Alethea, Elizabeth and Catherine Bigg, who lived at Manydown Park.[11] Anne Brydges Lefroy, wife of Rev. George Lefroy, "became Jane Austen's best-loved and admired mentor, the person she would always run to for advice and encouragement" after the Lefroys moved to nearby Ashe in 1783.[12] Her death in a riding accident in 1804 left Jane grief-stricken.[13]

Austen met, danced with, and perhaps fell in love with Thomas Lefroy during the Christmas holidays in 1795. However, Lefroy departed to begin his law studies in January 1796 and he and Jane never saw each other again.[14] Samuel Blackall, a Fellow of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and a friend of Mrs. Anne Lefroy, was seriously interested in marrying Austen in 1797.[15] Austen family tradition holds that Jane and an unnamed young clergyman fell in love while the Austen family visited the seaside at Sidmouth in the summer of 1801. Cassandra is said to have approved of this young man, but he died unexpectedly several months later, before he and Jane could be together again.[16] Austen received her only proposal of marriage from Harris Bigg-Wither, brother of her friends Alethea, Elizabeth and Catherine Bigg, while visiting them at their home in December 1802. Austen at first accepted the proposal, then realized she had made a mistake and withdrew her acceptance the next day.[17] Austen biographer Park Honan suggests that Jane may have received a proposal of marriage from Edward Bridges, a brother of Edward Austen's wife Elizabeth, in 1805, but biographer Claire Tomalin dismisses this claim.[18]

Jane Austen was primarily educated at home by her father and older brothers and through her own reading.[19] Her apprenticeship as a writer lasted from her teenage years until she was about thirty-five years old. During this period, she wrote three major novels and began a fourth.[20] From 1811 until 1815, with the release of Sense and Sensibility (1811), Pride and Prejudice (1813), Mansfield Park (1814), and Emma (1815), she achieved success as a published writer. She wrote two additional novels, Northanger Abbey (originally written in 1798–1799 and revised later) and Persuasion, both published after her death in 1817, and began a third (eventually titled Sanditon), but died before it could be completed. A product of 18th-century literary traditions, Austen's works were influenced most by those of renowned writer and critic Samuel Johnson and novelists Frances Burney and Maria Edgeworth. She considered poet and novelist Sir Walter Scott a rival. Family theatricals, which included plays by Richard Brinsley Sheridan and other 18th-century dramatists, shaped Austen's writing from an early age.[21] William Cowper's poetry was a favourite as were the novels of Samuel Richardson. Austen's engagement with sensibility illustrates her debt to sentimental writers such as Laurence Sterne.[22]

{{Jane Austen Map}}
Map of places Jane Austen lived () or visited ()
(Each dot is wikilinked to the article for that place)

Austen published all of her novels in the Regency period, during which King George III was declared permanently insane and his son was appointed as Prince Regent, and the novels are firmly rooted in the social context of the time. Throughout most of Austen's adult life, Britain was at war with revolutionary France. Fearing the spread of revolution and violence to Britain, the government tried to repress political radicals by suspending habeas corpus and passing the Seditious Meetings Act and the Treasonable Practices Act, known as the "Gagging Acts". Many reformers still held out hope for change in Britain during the 1790s, but by the first two decades of the 19th century, the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars had exhausted the country and a deep conservative reaction had set in. While Austen's novels rarely explicitly touch on these events, she herself was personally affected by them, as two of her brothers served in the Royal Navy.[23] When Napoleon was finally defeated at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815, Britain rejoiced. However, economic hardships in the 1810s increased the income disparity in the country and class conflict rose as the Industrial Revolution began.[24]

1760s

YearAustenLiterary historyPolitical history
1764
  • 26 April – Marriage of Rev. George Austen, rector of Steventon parish, and Cassandra Leigh[25]
1765
  • 13 February – James Austen (Jane's brother) born at Deane, Hampshire[25]
  • Publication of William Shakespeare's collected works edited by Samuel Johnson[26]
  • Publication of Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto, widely considered the first Gothic novel[27]
  • Publication of the final ten volumes of L'Encyclopédie (begun 1751)[28]
  • March – Riots erupt in American colonies after the British parliament levies the stamp tax[29]
1766
  • 26 August – George Austen (Jane's brother) born at Deane[25]
  • Publication of Oliver Goldsmith's novel The Vicar of Wakefield[30]
1767
  • 7 October – Edward Austen (Jane's brother) born at Deane[25]
  • Publication of Laurence Sterne's novel A Sentimental Journey through France and Italy (pictured)[27]
  • James Cook voyages to Australia and New Zealand (1768–1771)[26][29]
1768
  • July–August – Austen family moves to Steventon, Hampshire[25]
1769
  • David Garrick's Shakespeare Jubilee celebration at Stratford-on-Avon[27]

1770s

YearAustenLiterary historyPolitical history
1770
  • Publication of Goldsmith's poem The Deserted Village[26]
  • January – Frederick, Lord North becomes Prime Minister of Great Britain (1770–1782)[29]
1771
  • 8 June – Henry-Thomas Austen (Jane's brother) born at Steventon[25]
  • Publication of the first edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica completed (begun 1768)[27]
  • Richard Arkwright opens the first cotton mill in Cromford, Derbyshire, England[29]
1772
  • Publication of final volumes of plates of the Philosophes' Encyclopédie (begun 1751)[28]
  • 22 June – Slavery is effectively outlawed in England[29]
1773
  • 9 January – Cassandra Elizabeth Austen (Austen's sister) born at Steventon[25]
  • 23 March – Rev. Austen becomes rector of Deane parish in addition to Steventon[25]
  • Pupils live at Steventon from 1773 to 1796
  • 16 December – American colonists protest against British policies by dumping tea into Boston Harbour[29]
1774
  • 23 April – Francis-William (Frank) Austen (Jane's brother) born at Steventon[25]
  • Publication of Goethe's novel The Sorrows of Young Werther[27]
  • May – Louis XVI (pictured) ascends to the throne of France[27]
  • Warren Hastings becomes the first Governor-General of India[30]
1775
  • 16 December – Jane Austen born at Steventon[25]
  • Publication of Samuel Johnson's travel narrative A Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland[30]
  • 19 April – American War of Independence begins with the Battle of Lexington (1775–1783)[26][29]
1776
  • Publication of Adam Smith's An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations[30]
1778
  • Publication of Frances Burney's novel Evelina[26]
  • Publication of Jean-Jacques Rousseau's Reveries of a Solitary Walker[30]
1779
  • 23 June – Charles John Austen (Jane's brother) born at Steventon[25]
  • 3 July – James Austen matriculates at St. John's College, Oxford
  • Publication of Johnson's (pictured) biographies Lives of the Poets (1779–1781)[26]

1780s

YearAustenLiterary historyPolitical history
1780
  • Publication of The Education of Humanity by Gotthold Ephraim Lessing[30]
  • 2–11 June – Gordon Riots in London, protesting the Catholic Relief Act[26][29]
1781
  • Publication of Schiller's drama The Robbers[30]
  • Publication of Immanuel Kant's philosophical treatise Critique of Pure Reason[30]
  • 19 October – Franco-American force defeats the British at the Battle of Yorktown, effectively ending the fighting in America during War of Independence[29]
1782
  • December – First amateur theatrical production at Steventon – Matilda
  • Publication of Frances Burney's (pictured) novel Cecilia[27]
  • Posthumous publication of the first part of Rousseau's autobiographical Confessions[30]
  • Publication of Pierre Choderlos de Laclos's novel Les Liaisons dangereuses[30]
1783
  • Edward Austen adopted by Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Knight of Godmersham, Kent[25]
  • Spring – Jane Austen, Cassandra Austen, and Jane Cooper sent to live with Mrs. Cawley in Oxford to be educated
  • Summer – Mrs. Cawley moves to Southampton and the girls fall ill
  • 3 September – Treaty of Versailles signed, formally ending the American War of Independence[27]
  • December – William Pitt becomes Prime Minister of Great Britain[26][29]
1784
  • Amateur theatricals at Steventon continue – The Rivals
  • Pitt's India Act gives the British Crown (rather than officers of the East India Company) the power to guide Indian politics [30]
1785
  • Spring – Austen and Cassandra attend Abbey School, Reading, Berkshire[25]
  • Publication of William Cowper's (pictured) poem The Task[26]
1786
  • Edward Austen takes the Grand Tour of the Continent (1786–90)
  • April – Francis Austen enters the Royal Naval Academy at Portsmouth
  • November – James Austen travels to the Continent
  • December – Austen and Cassandra leave Abbey School[25]
  • Publication of Robert Burns's Poems Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect[30]
  • December – Shays' Rebellion in the United States (December 1786 – January 1787)[27]
  • Beginning of impeachment proceedings in British Parliament brought by Edmund Burke against Warren Hastings, Governor-General of India[30]
1787
  • Austen begins writing juvenilia (pictured)[25]
  • Autumn – James Austen returns from the Continent
  • December – Amateur theatricals at Steventon continue – The Wonder
  • 13 May – First fleet of convicts sails to penal colony in Australia from Britain[29]
  • 22 May – Committee for the Abolition of the Slave Trade is formed in Britain[29]
1788
  • January – Amateur theatricals continue at Steventon – The Chances
  • March – Amateur theatrical continue at Steventon – Tom Thumb
  • 1 July – Henry Austen matriculates at St. John's College, Oxford
  • Summer – Mr. and Mrs. Austen take Jane and Cassandra to Kent and London
  • 23 December – Francis Austen leaves the Royal Naval Academy and sails to the East Indies
  • Winter – Amateur theatricals continue at Steventon – The Sultan and High Life Below Stairs
  • 1 January – First edition of The Times is published[29]
  • Publication of Charlotte Smith's (pictured) novel Emmeline[30]
  • November – Beginning of the Regency Crisis, caused by George III's madness[29]
1789
  • Publication of the first issue of James Austen's periodical The Loiterer; issued weekly until March 1790
  • 29 April – Publication of former slave Olaudah Equiano's autobiography The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano[30]
  • Publication of William Blake's poems Songs of Innocence[89]
  • Posthumous publication of the second part of Rousseau's autobiographical Confessions[30]
  • 14 July – Storming of the Bastille in Paris (pictured)[30]
  • 26 August – The French Assembly adopts the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen[27][31]
  • 5–6 October – "October days"; Parisian women, unable to buy bread, march to Versailles and bring the royal family back to Paris[27]
  • December – End of the Regency Crisis (George III recovers)[29][32]

1790s

YearAustenLiterary historyPolitical history
1790
  • James Austen takes up residence as curate of Overton, Hampshire
  • Autumn – Edward Austen returns to England from Grand Tour
  • 1 November – Publication of Edmund Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France[30]
  • Parliament withdraws motions for the repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts[32]
1791
  • Charles Austen enters the Royal Naval Academy
  • 15 September – James Austen becomes vicar of Sherborne St John, Hampshire
  • 27 December – Edward Austen marries Elizabeth Bridges; they move to Rowling House, Edward's residence in Kent
  • February–March – Publication of Part I of Thomas Paine's pamphlet Rights of Man[27][32]
  • Publication of Elizabeth Inchbald's novel A Simple Story[32]
  • Publication of James Boswell's biography Life of Johnson[32]
  • Publication of Ann Radcliffe's novel The Romance of the Forest[27]
  • Publication of Smith's novel Celestina[30]
  • 19 April – The British parliament rejects William Wilberforce's bill to abolish the slave trade[29]
  • 14–17 July – Priestley Riots; rioting aimed at religious Dissenters in Birmingham[32]
  • August – 100,000 slaves and ex-slaves revolt against planters and the local government in French-controlled San Domingo, the wealthiest colony of the West Indies and main source of sugar and coffee in Europe[30]
1792
  • 27 March – James Austen marries Anne Mathew; they move to the parsonage in Deane
  • October – Jane and Cassandra Austen visit the Lloyds at Ibthorpe House, near Hurstbourne Tarrant, Hampshire
  • Winter? – Cassandra Austen engaged to Rev. Tom Fowle
  • Publication of Robert Bage's novel Man As He Is[32]
  • Publication of Hannah More's pamphlet Village Politics[32]
  • Publication of Smith's novel Desmond[30]
  • 7 March – Sierra Leone is established under British rule as a home for former slaves[29]
  • 10 August – Attack on the Tuileries Palace leads to the deposition of Louis XVI and the dissolution of the Legislative Assembly[27]
  • 2–6 September – "September Massacres"; 12,000 political prisoners murdered in France[30]
  • 21 September – Newly elected National Convention abolishes the monarchy and officially declares France a Republic[27]
1793
  • ? – Austen begins to write, then sets aside, Sir Charles Grandison or the happy Man, a comedy in 6 acts[33]
  • 23 January – Edward Austen's first child, Fanny, born
  • Spring – Henry Austen becomes a lieutenant in the Oxfordshire Militia
  • 15 April – James Austen's first child, Anna, is born
  • 3 June – Jane Austen writes last item of juvenilia[25]
  • Winter – Francis Austen returns home from the Far East
  • December – Jane and Cassandra Austen visit Butler-Harrison cousins in Southampton
  • 14 February – Publication of William Godwin's treatise Political Justice[27][32]
  • Publication of Smith's novel The Old Manor House[30]
  • 21 January – Execution of Louis XVI[30]
  • 1 February – France declares war on England[30]
  • 11 March – Civil war erupts in France with the revolt in the Vendée[30]
  • July – Beginning of the Reign of Terror in France[27]
  • 16 October – Execution of Marie Antoinette (pictured)[30]
1794
  • 22 February – Eliza de Feuillide's husband is guillotined in Paris
  • Midsummer – Jane and Cassandra Austen visit the Leighs at Adlestrop, Gloucestershire
  • August? – Jane and Cassandra Austen visit Edward and Elizabeth Austen at Rowling
  • September – Charles Austen leaves the Royal Naval Academy and goes to sea
  • Autumn? – Austen possibly writes Lady Susan
  • 28 May – Publication of Godwin's novel Caleb Williams[27][32]
  • Publication of Blake's poems Songs of Experience[32]
  • Publication of Radcliffe's novel The Mysteries of Udolpho[27]
  • 4 February – France abolishes slavery in its colonies[30]
  • 7 May – The writ of habeas corpus is suspended in Britain[27]
  • Late July – Robespierre is executed and the Reign of Terror ends[27][30]
  • November – British radicals are acquitted at the 1794 Treason Trials[27][32]
1795
  • Austen probably writes Elinor and Marianne[25]
  • 3 May – Death of Anne Mathew (James' wife) at Deane; infant Anna sent to live at Steventon rectory
  • Autumn – Rev. Tom Fowle joins William Craven, 1st Earl of Craven, as his private chaplain for the West Indian campaign
  • December–January 1796 – Austen's flirtation with Tom Lefroy on his visit to Ashe rectory
  • Hannah More (pictured) begins publishing the Cheap Repository Tracts to counteract radical publications[30]
  • 29 October – On the way to parliament, George III is attacked by a hungry mob[27]
  • 18 December – Seditious Meetings Act and Treasonable Practices Act passed (also known as the "Two Acts" or the "Gagging Acts")[27][32]
  • The Famine Year[27][30]
1796
  • January – Tom Lefroy (pictured) leaves Ashe for London
  • January – Tom Fowle sails for the West Indies
  • April – Jane and Cassandra Austen visit the Coopers at Harpsden, Oxfordshire
  • Summer? – James Austen courts Eliza de Feuillide
  • August – Edward and Francis Austen take Jane to Rowling via London; she returns to Steventon in late September or early October
  • October – Austen begins writing First Impressions (Pride and Prejudice)[25]
  • November – James Austen engaged to Mary Lloyd
  • Publication of Bage's novel Hermsprong[32]
  • Publication of Mary Hays's novel Memoirs of Emma Courtney[32]
  • Publication of Burney's novel Camilla[27]
  • Publication of Matthew Lewis's novel The Monk[30]
  • Publication of Madame de Staël's essay De l'Influence des passions[27]
  • December – Failed French landing at Bantry Bay, West Cork, Ireland[32]
  • Failure of peace negotiations between Britain and France[32]
1797
  • 17 January – James Austen marries Mary Lloyd
  • January – Anna returns to live at Deane
  • February – Tom Fowle dies of fever in San Domingo and is buried at sea
  • August – Austen finishes First Impressions
  • 1 November – Revd. Austen unsuccessfully offers First Impressions to Thomas Cadell, London publisher[25]
  • November – Austen begins to revise Elinor and Marianne, which eventually becomes Sense and Sensibility[25]
  • November – Mrs. Austen, Jane, and Cassandra visit the Leigh-Perrots in Bath
  • November – Edward Austen and family move from Rowling to Godmersham Park, near Godmersham, Kent
  • Winter – Rev. Samuel Blackall visits Ashe; mild courtship of Jane Austen
  • 31 December – Henry Austen marries Eliza de Feuillide
  • 20 November – Publication of the first issue of the government-sponsored journal, the Anti-Jacobin Review[27]
  • Publication of Radcliffe's novel The Italian[27]
  • February – Bank of England suspends cash payments[30]
  • April–June – Naval mutinies occur at Spithead and the Nore[29]
  • Failure of French landing in Wales[32]
1798
  • August – Mr. and Mrs. Austen, Jane, and Cassandra visit Godmersham
  • August – Austen possibly begins writing Susan (which eventually becomes Northanger Abbey)[25]
  • 9 August – Lady Williams (Jane Cooper) killed in a road accident
  • 24 October – Austen and her parents leave Godmersham and return to Steventon
  • October–November – Mrs. Austen ill
  • 17 November – James Austen's son, James-Edward, born
  • June – Publication of Thomas Robert Malthus's An Essay on the Principle of Population[27][34]
  • Publication of William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poems Lyrical Ballads[32]
  • Publication of Smith's novel The Young Philosopher[30]
  • 26 May – Society of United Irishmen rebel against British rule in Ireland[29]
  • August–September – French landing in Ireland[32][35]
  • 1 August – Horatio Nelson's victory over Napoleon's fleet at the Battle of the Nile (pictured)[32][36]
1799
  • February – Jane Austen possibly visits the Lloyds at Ibthorpe
  • March – Cassandra returns to Steventon from Godmersham
  • 17 May–June – Mrs. Austen and Jane arrive in Bath, with Edward and Elizabeth
  • End of June – Austen probably finishes Susan (Northanger Abbey)
  • Late summer – The Austens pay a round of visits to the Leighs at Adlestrop, the Coopers at Harpsden, and the Cookes at Great Bookham[37]
  • 14 August – Austen's aunt, Mrs. Leigh Perrot, charged with theft and committed to Ilchester Gaol[25]
  • Publication of More's Strictures on the Modern System of Education[30]
  • Publication of Jane West's novel A Tale of the Times[32]
  • Religious Tract Society formed in Britain[32]
  • 9 November – 18 Brumaire; Napoleon overthrows the Directory and becomes First Consul of France[30]

1800s

YearAustenLiterary historyPolitical history
1800
  • 29 March – Mrs. Leigh Perrot tried at Taunton and acquitted[25]
  • October – Edward Austen visits Steventon and takes Cassandra back to Godmersham with him via Chawton and London
  • October - Jane visits her friends, the Bramstons, at Oakley Hall near Steventon Rectory
  • End of November–mid-December – Jane Austen visits the Lloyds at Ibthorpe
  • December – Revd. Austen decides to retire and move to Bath[25]
  • ? – Austen revises and completes Sir Charles Grandison[33]
  • Publication of Maria Edgeworth's novel Castle Rackrent[30]
  • Publication of Mary Robinson's (pictured) Lyrical Tales[30]
  • Publication of Elizabeth Hamilton's Memoirs of Modern Philosophers[30]
  • Food riots in Britain[32]
  • Robert Owen founds model factory at New Lanark[32]
1801
  • January – Henry Austen resigns commission in Oxfordshire militia and sets up as a banker and army agent in London
  • End of January – Jane Austen visits the Bigg-Wither family at Manydown
  • February – Cassandra returns to Steventon from Godmersham via London
  • May – Austen family leaves Steventon and settles in Bath[25]
  • May – Mrs. Austen and Jane travel to Bath via Ibthorpe, and stay with the Leigh-Perrots
  • May – James Austen and his family move to Steventon rectory
  • End of May – Austen family takes a West Country holiday, probably visiting Sidmouth and Colyton
  • End of May – Jane Austen's West Country romance with a young clergyman may have occurred
  • September – Austen family visits Steventon and Ashe
  • 5 October – Austen family returns to Bath
  • Publication of Edgeworth's novel Belinda[30]
  • Publication of Hamilton's Letters on Education[30]
  • 1 January – Act of Union creates the United Kingdom[29]
  • 1 October – Truce between Britain and France[30]
1802
  • April – James, Mary, and Anna visit the Austen family at Bath
  • Summer – Charles Austen joins the Austens for the holidays
  • 1 September – Jane and Cassandra Austen arrive at Steventon
  • 3 September – Charles takes Jane and Cassandra to Godmersham
  • 28 October – Charles brings his sisters back to Steventon
  • 25 November – Jane and Cassandra visit the Biggs family at Manydown
  • 2 December – Harris Bigg-Wither unexpectedly proposes marriage to Jane Austen; she accepts[25]
  • 3 December – Austen rejects Bigg-Wither's proposal; she and Cassandra return to Steventon and leave at once for Bath
  • Winter – Austen revises Susan (Northanger Abbey)[25]
  • Publication of Walter Scott's (pictured) collection of ballads Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border[30]
  • Publication of West's novel The Infidel Father[32]
  • 27 March – Treaty of Amiens signed; 18-month break in wars with France[30]
1803
  • Spring – Austen sells copyright for Susan to Benjamin Crosby, a London publisher, for £10[25]
  • 18 May – Henry and Eliza nearly trapped in France when Napoleon breaks the Peace of Amiens
  • Summer – Austen possibly visits Charmouth, Up Lyme, and Pinny
  • July – Francis Austen stationed at Ramsgate
  • September–October – Rev. and Mrs. Austen, probably accompanied by Jane and Cassandra, stay at Godmersham
  • October – Jane and Cassandra visit Ashe
  • 24 October – Jane and Cassandra return to Bath
  • November – Austen family visits Lyme Regis
  • 12 May – Peace of Amiens ends; war resumes with France[30]
1804
  • Jane Austen probably writes The Watsons
  • Spring – Mrs. Austen seriously ill
  • Summer – Austens, with Henry and Eliza, visit Lyme Regis
  • 25 October – Austens return to Bath and move to 3 Green Park Buildings East
  • 16 December – Jane Austen's long-time friend, Mrs. Anne Lefroy of Ashe, killed in a riding accident[25]
  • Publication of Edgeworth's collection of stories Popular Tales[32]
  • 18 May – Napoleon (pictured) crowns himself emperor of the French[30]
1805
  • 21 January – Rev. George Austen (Jane's father) dies suddenly in Bath[25]
  • 25 March – Mrs. Austen and her daughters move to 25 Gay Street, Bath
  • June – Mrs. Austen, Jane, and Cassandra travel to Godmersham via Steventon, taking Anna with them
  • 18 June – James Austen's daughter, Caroline, born
  • Summer – Possible courtship of Jane Austen by Edward Bridges
  • Summer – Martha Lloyd joins the Austen household
  • 17 September–November – Jane and Cassandra travel to Worthing
  • Publication of Edgeworth's (pictured) The Modern Griselda[30]
  • Publication of Amelia Opie's novel Adeline Mowbray[30]
  • Publication of William Godwin's novel Fleetwood[32]
  • 21 October – Nelson's fleet defeats combined French and Spanish fleet at the Battle of Trafalgar[29]
1806
  • January – Mrs. Austen and her daughters visit Steventon
  • 29 January – Mrs. Austen returns to Bath and takes lodgings in Trim Street
  • February–mid-March – Jane and Cassandra visit the Biggs sisters at Manydown, returning to Bath via Steventon
  • 2 July – Mrs. Austen and her daughters finally leave Bath, and go via Clifton to Adlestrop
  • 24 July – Francis Austen marries Mary Gibson
  • 14 August–mid-October – Mrs. Austen and her daughters visit the Coopers at Hamstall Ridware
  • October – Austen family takes lodgings in Southampton with Francis Austen and Mary[25]
  • Winter – Cassandra Austen visits Godmersham
1807
  • March – Austen family moves into a house in Castle Square, Southampton[25]
  • April – Henry brings Cassandra back to Southampton from Godmersham via London
  • 19 May – Charles Austen marries Fanny Palmer in Bermuda
  • September – Edward Austen arranges family gathering at Chawton Great House, followed by further family gathering in Southampton
  • Publication of William Wilberforce's (pictured) A Letter on the Abolition of the Slave Trade[30]
  • 25 March – Britain abolishes the slave trade[29]
1808
  • January–March – Jane and Cassandra stay at Steventon, Manydown, and with the Fowles at Kintbury
  • 15 May – Henry and Jane Austen at Steventon en route to London
  • 14 June – Jane Austen travels to Godmersham with James and Mary
  • 8 July – Austen returns to Southampton
  • 28 September – Cassandra travels to Godmersham
  • 10 October – Elizabeth Austen (Edward's wife) dies after eleventh childbirth
  • Publication of Scott's poem Marmion[30]
  • Publication of Hamilton's novel Cottagers of Glenburie[32]
  • Publication of More's novel Coelebs in Search of a Wife[32]
1809
  • February – Cassandra returns to Southampton
  • 5 April – Austen attempts unsuccessfully to pressure Crosby to publish Susan[25]
  • 15 May – Mrs. Austen and her daughters begin visit to Godmersham
  • 7 July – Austen family and Martha Lloyd move to Chawton Cottage (pictured)[25]
  • August – Jane Austen's interest in writing revives
  • October – Edward Austen and Fanny visit Chawton
  • Foundation of The Quarterly Review, the chief Tory periodical[30]
  • Publication of Edgeworth's story collection Tales of Fashionable Life (1809–1812)[32]

1810s

YearAustenLiterary historyPolitical history
1810
  • July–August – Jane Austen (pictured) and Cassandra visit Manydown and Steventon
  • November – Edward Austen and Fanny visit Chawton
  • Winter – Sense and Sensibility accepted for publication by Thomas Egerton, London publisher[25]
  • Publication of Scott's poem "Lady of the Lake"[30]
  • Publication of West's novel The Refusal[32]
  • October – George III recognized as insane[30][32]
1811
  • February – Jane Austen starts planning Mansfield Park[25]
  • March – Austen stays with Henry in London[25]
  • March – Austen corrects proofs of Sense and Sensibility[25]
  • March – Cassandra visits Godmersham
  • August – Charles Austen and family return to England
  • 30 October – Sense and Sensibility published anonymously[25][30]
  • November – Jane Austen visits James at Steventon
  • Winter? – Jane Austen begins revising First Impressions, later published as Pride and Prejudice[25]
  • February – George, Prince of Wales becomes Prince Regent[32]
  • Luddites protest industrialization in Britain (1811–1812)[29]
1812
  • April – Edward Austen and Fanny visit Chawton
  • 9–25 June – Mrs. Austen and Jane visit Steventon; Cassandra goes to Godmersham
  • 14 October – Edward Austen officially adopts "Knight" as surname
  • Autumn – Jane Austen sells copyright of Pride and Prejudice to Egerton for £110[25]
  • Publication of Lord Byron's poem Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Cantos I and II[30]
  • Publication of Anna Laetitia Barbauld's poem Eighteen Hundred and Eleven[30]
  • Publication of West's novel The Loyalists[32]
  • June – Napoleon invades Russia[30]
  • 18 June – United States declares war on Great Britain[30]
  • October–December – Napoleon's defeated army retreats from Russia (pictured)[30]
1813
  • 28 January – Pride and Prejudice published anonymously[25][30]
  • 21 April – Edward Austen and family come to Chawton Great House and stay for four months
  • 22 April – Jane Austen goes to London to attend the dying Eliza de Feuillide
  • 25 April – Eliza dies
  • 1 May – Austen returns to Chawton
  • 19 May – Henry Austen takes Jane to London for a fortnight
  • July? – Austen finishes Mansfield Park[25]
  • September – Edward Austen and Jane travel via London to Godmersham (her last visit there)
  • 13 November – Edward Austen takes Jane back to Chawton via London
  • November – Second editions of Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility released[25]
  • November – Mansfield Park probably accepted for publication
  • Publication of Byron's poems The Giaour and The Bride of Abydos to great acclaim[30]
  • May – Publication of Percy Bysshe Shelley's (pictured) poem Queen Mab[30]
1814
  • 21 January – Austen begins Emma[25]
  • 1 March – Henry Austen takes Jane to London
  • April – Jane Austen returns to Chawton via Streatham
  • April – Edward Austen and family stay at Chawton Great House for two months
  • 9 May – Mansfield Park (pictured) published anonymously by Egerton[25][30]
  • Midsummer – Austen visits the Cookes at Great Bookham, Surrey
  • August – Austen visits Henry in London
  • August – Francis Austen and family move into Chawton Great House and stay there for about two years
  • 3 September – Henry Austen takes Jane home to Chawton
  • 6 September – Charles's wife Fanny dies after childbirth
  • 25 November – Austen visits Henry in London
  • 5 December – Henry takes Jane back to Chawton
  • 25 December – Jane and Cassandra stay with Mrs. Heathcote and Miss Bigg in Winchester
  • Publication of Walter Scott's novel Waverley[30]
  • Publication of Burney's novel The Wanderer[30]
  • Publication of Edgeworth's novel Patronage[30]
  • Publication of Byron's poem The Corsair, instantly popular[30]
  • Publication of Wordsworth's poem The Excursion[30]
  • Publication of Mary Martha Sherwood's children's book The History of Little Henry and his Bearer[32]
  • 6 April – Napoleon abdicates and is exiled to Elba[30]
  • 24 December – Treaty of Ghent ends war between the United States and Britain[30]
1815
  • 2–16 January – Jane and Cassandra stay at Steventon; they also visit Ashe and Laverstoke
  • 29 March – Emma finished[25]
  • March or April? – Jane and Cassandra probably visit Henry in London
  • 8 August – Austen begins Persuasion[25]
  • August – Austen possibly goes to London to negotiate publication of Emma, returning early in September
  • 4 October – Austen moves to London to nurse Henry[25]
  • 13 November – Austen visits the Prince Regent's Library at Carlton House; receives invitation to dedicate a future work to him[25]
  • 16 December – Austen returns to Chawton
  • End of December – Emma published by John Murray, dedicated to the Prince Regent[25]
  • Publication of Scott's novel Guy Mannering[30]
  • March – Napoleon returns from Elba[32]
  • May – Corn Laws passed[29]
  • 18 June – Duke of Wellington (pictured) defeats Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo[29]
  • Restoration of Louis XVIII in France[30]
  • 20 November – Treaty of Paris, officially ending Napoleonic wars[30]
1816
  • Spring – Jane Austen begins to feel ill[25]
  • Spring – Henry buys back manuscript of Susan[25]
  • Spring – Austen revises Susan as Catharine, intending to publish it[25]
  • 15 March – Henry's bank fails and he leaves London[25]
  • 22 May – Jane and Cassandra go to Cheltenham via Steventon
  • 15 June – Jane and Cassandra return to Chawton via Kintbury
  • 18 July – First draft of Persuasion finished[25]
  • 6 August – Persuasion revised and finished[25]
  • Second edition of Mansfield Park published by Murray[25]
  • December – Henry is ordained and becomes curate of Chawton[25]
  • Publication of Coleridge's poem "Christabel"[30]
  • Publication of Coleridge's poem "Kubla Khan"[30]
  • Publication of Byron's poem Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Canto III[30]
  • Byron (pictured) leaves England because of personal troubles, never to return[30]
  • April – Riots in East Anglia and manufacturing districts in Britain[32]
  • Elgin marbles exhibited in the British Museum[30]
1817
  • 27 January–18 March – Austen works on novel later published as Sanditon[25]
  • 18 March – Austen ceases work on Sanditon
  • 27 April – Austen makes her will[25]
  • 24 May – Cassandra takes Jane to Winchester for medical treatment[25]
  • 18 July – Austen dies early in the morning[25]
  • 24 July – Austen is buried in Winchester Cathedral (pictured)[25]
  • End of December – Northanger Abbey and Persuasion are published together by Murray along with Henry's "Biographical Notice of the Author"[25]
  • Publication of Coleridge's Biographia Literaria[30]
  • Publication of Edgeworth's novels Ormond and Harrington[30]
  • Publication of Byron's poem Manfred[30]
  • Publication of Godwin's novel Mandeville[32]
  • Publication of Scott's novel Rob Roy[32]

See also

{{Portal|Jane Austen|Literature}}
  • Timeline of the French Revolution
  • Napoleonic era

References

1. ^Mary Lascelles. Jane Austen and Her Art. Oxford: Oxford University Press (1939), 2.
2. ^Honan, Park. Jane Austen: A Life. New York: St. Martin's Press (1987), {{ISBN|0-312-01451-1}}, 14, 17–18.
3. ^Jan Fergus, "Biography", Jane Austen In Context, Ed. Janet Todd. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (2005), {{ISBN|0-521-82644-6}}, 3; Clare Tomalin. Jane Austen: A Life. New York: Alfred A. Knopf (1997), {{ISBN|0-679-44628-1}}, 142; Honan, 23, 119.
4. ^Honan, 24–25, 84–85, 127–128; Tomalin, 26, 38, 75–79, 191–192, 235.
5. ^Fergus, "Biography", 8; Tomalin, 168-75; Honan, 215.
6. ^Tomalin, 194–206.
7. ^Tomalin, 194–206; Honan, 237-45.
8. ^Tomalin, 254–271, Honan, 385–405.
9. ^Deirdre Le Faye. Jane Austen: A Family Record. 2nd Edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (2004), {{ISBN|0-521-53417-8}}, 57, 199–201; Honan, pp.42–55, 66–68.
10. ^Le Faye. Family Record, 68–69, 74, 111, 149, 178; Honan, 41, 77–79.
11. ^Le Faye. Family Record, 117; Honan, 85–86, 91–92.
12. ^Tomalin, 39.
13. ^Honan, 210-11.
14. ^Tomalin, 12–120; Honan, 105–111.
15. ^Honan, 113–114; Tomalin, 129–130.
16. ^Honan, 185–186; Tomalin, 178. The travel to Sidmouth, but not the relationship, is described in Le Faye. Family Record, 135–136.
17. ^Tomalin, 178–181; Honan, 189–198.
18. ^Honan, 121; Tomalin, 309, note 4.
19. ^Isobel Grundy, "Jane Austen and Literary Traditions", The Cambridge Companion to Jane Austen, Eds. Edward Copeland and Juliet McMaster. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (1997), {{ISBN|0-521-49867-8}}, 190–91; Tomalin, 28–29, 33–43, 66–67; Honan, 31–34; Lascelles, 7–8.
20. ^These included the original versions of and revisions to the novels later published as Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice and Northanger Abbey, and a novel fragment, The Watsons. Kathryn Sutherland, "Chronology of Composition and Publication", Jane Austen in Context, Ed. Janet Todd. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (2005), {{ISBN|0-521-82644-6}}, 13.
21. ^George Holbert Tucker, "Amateur Theatricals at Steventon", The Jane Austen Companion, Ed. J. David Grey, New York: MacMillan (1986) {{ISBN|0-02-545540-0}}, 1–2; Tomalin, 31–32, 40–42, 55–57, 62–63; Honan, 35, 47–52, 372, 423–24, n. 20.
22. ^Jane Stabler, "Literary influences", Jane Austen in Context. Ed. Janet Todd. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (2005), {{ISBN|0-521-68853-1}}, 41–50.
23. ^Janet Todd, The Cambridge Introduction to Jane Austen. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (2006), {{ISBN|978-0-521-67469-0}}, 13–14.
24. ^Todd, 14–15.
25. ^10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 "Chronology". A Memoir of Jane Austen and Other Family Recollections. Ed. Kathryn Sutherland. Oxford: Oxford University Press (2002), {{ISBN|0-19-284074-6}}, lviii–lxii.
26. ^"Timeline". The Norton Anthology of English Literature: The Restoration and the Eighteenth Century. 7th ed. New York: W. W. Norton and Co. (2000), {{ISBN|0-393-97567-3}}, 2069–70.
27. ^10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 Jack Lynch. Eighteenth-century Chronology. Retrieved on 5 August 2007.
28. ^Robert Darnton. The Business of Enlightenment: A Publishing History of the Encyclopédie 1775–1800. Cambridge: Harvard University Press (1979), {{ISBN|0-674-08785-2}}, 13.
29. ^10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 BBC British History Timeline. Retrieved on 5 August 2007.
30. ^10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 Laura Mandell and Alan Liu. [https://web.archive.org/web/20000817030559/http://english.ucsb.edu:591/rchrono/default.htm Romantic Chronology]. Retrieved on 5 August 2007.
31. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/19970809045433/http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/rightsof.htm Declaration of the Rights of Man]. Avalon Project at Yale Law School. Retrieved on 6 August 2007.
32. ^10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 Gary Kelly, "Chronology". English Fiction of the Romantic Period, 1789–1830. London: Longman (1989). {{ISBN|0-582-49261-0}}. 274–82.
33. ^Brian Southam, "Grandison", The Jane Austen Companion, 187-89.
34. ^Doyle, The Old European Order, 69–70.
35. ^William Doyle, The Oxford History of the French Revolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press (1989), {{ISBN|0-19-822781-7}}, 341–43.
36. ^"French revolutionary and Napoleonic wars". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Retrieved 6 August 2007.
37. ^Le Faye, Family Record, xxiii.

Bibliography

  • Le Faye, Deirdre. A Chronology of Jane Austen and her Family: 1700–2000. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006. {{ISBN|0-521-81064-7}}.
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