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Romanticism

1798

Modernism 1900-current

Sources

Medieval 1066

Neoclassical 1660

Victorian

1832

British Lit. Timeline

Anglo-Saxon 449

Anglo-Saxon

449

Characterized by an oral tradition of epic poems, songs, and poetry. Old English or Anglo Saxon literature was well established by pre-Christian Germanic settlers. One of the most well known works of this time period is “Beowulf”, an epic poem about the eponymous Geatish warrior.

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The Anglo-Saxon would live in huts and work outside of their houses on working tables.

Shaping the Thinking

  • Christianity was brought in
  • They embraced the wisdom of the east
  • They inspired Europe's first renaissance
  • They preached the language of the people
  • They shaped the modern day England

Innovations/Inventions

  • Metal working
  • Jewelry
  • Wind mill

Innovations

Medieval 1066

Medieval or Middle English was prompted by the invasion of the Normans into Britain, when the Duke of Normandy defeated King Harold of Britain at the Battle of Hastings. The language was a dialect was of French descent with Germanic influences, usually called Anglo-Norman. This diversion brought English closer to what we know and use today. Famous works during this period include the History of the Kings of Britain (containing the legend of King Arthur) and the Canterbury Tales. This period had a large focus on Roman Catholic church, as it was an essential part of everyday life for both royalty and peasants.

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People tended to live near other people in the same building and it would be located right off the street.

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Shaping the Thinking

  • The Declaration of the Magna Carta
  • The Great Famine
  • The Hundred Years War
  • The Blck Death
  • The Great Schism

Innovations/Inventions

Innovations

  • Coffee House
  • Public Library
  • Flying Buttress
  • Water and Wind Mills
  • Paper Money

Renaissance 1485

The English Renaissance saw the rise of the merchant class in Britain. Math, science, technology, education, and exploration became more accessible to the masses. The feudal system was slowly dissolving as middle class merchants rose in wealth. Plays became popular as they appealed to all classes. Notable playwrights include Christopher Marlowe, and William Shakespeare, arguably the greatest dramatist of all time.

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Houses started to become more personalized and more stone work was used.

Shaping the Thinking

  • The Age of Exploration began
  • Italian Wars came to a close
  • Start of the Reformation
  • The peace of Augsburg

Shaping the Thinking

Innovations/Inventions

Innovations

  • Submarines
  • Mechanical Clock
  • Match
  • Printing Press
  • Wallpaper
  • Flushing Toilets

Neoclassical 1660

Neoclassical writers tried to imitate the style of the Roman and Greeks, “Neo” meaning “new” and “classical” referring to classic works. This era was the starting point of the modern middle class and the tradition of afternoon tea. People would gather to discuss politics and other ideas of the Enlightenment. Characteristics of writing focused primarily on people's appearances rather than their true feelings or intentions. In contrast to the renaissance that saw people as inherently good, Neoclassical literature saw man as ‘flawed’.

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House were getting bigger and had columns.

Shaping the Thinking

  • The Enlightenment
  • The Restoration Age
  • The beginning of the Romanticism period helped end the Neoclassical and further developed the way people viewed life and art.

Innovations/Inventions

Innovations

  • Bifocals
  • Franklin Stove
  • Odometer
  • Telescope
  • Pressure Cooker
  • Steam Engine

Romanticism 1798

Romanticism shifted from reason, logic, and science to a belief in the senses. Feelings, imagination, and experiences were valued above all. Previously an emphasis was on an interest in urban society, during this movement, people focused on rural and natural life. Works consisted of extremely personal works that touched on the mysterious and infinite world.

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House were gradually becoming more and more complex, people had more money so they could afford to have big houses with big windows.

Shaping the Thinking

  • Industrial Revolution
  • French Revolution
  • The publishing of The Marriage of Heaven and Hell

Shaping the Thinking

Innovations/Inventions

Innovations

  • Tuba
  • Saxaphone
  • Oboe
  • Flute
  • Telephone
  • Wagon

Victorian 1832

Beginning with the crowning of Queen Victoria and culminating the year of her death, the Victorian era saw a battle between romantic/gothic and neoclassical/enlightenment ideas. During this time, the middle class far outnumbered the nobles. Many upper middle class members felt that they could join the ranks of their betters and focused on acting like the dignitaries of the time. Characters and authors of this time period are often stereotyped as being stuffy, hypocritical, and narrow-minded.

Charles Dickens is a well-known Victorian author.

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Houses were huge, complex, and having pointy roofs were the trend.

Shaping the Thinking

  • Irish Potato Famine
  • The Communist Manifesto was published
  • The great Exhibition
  • The Crimean War broke out

Innovations/Inventions

Innovations

  • Postage Stamp
  • Christmas Card
  • Morse Code
  • Concrete
  • Chocolate Easter Eggs
  • Post Boxes

Modernism 1900-current

Modernist British authors had a sense of betrayal after being devastated by two world wars in Europe. They lost faith in their institutions of government, which they once believed in and now saw as having led them into bloody conflicts. They no longer saw their government or even their religions as reliable means to provide answers in life, therefore turning away and looking to seek the answers themselves. Sometimes using allegory or even fantasy to do so.

Disillusioned by the atrocities of war, writing became focused more on form than content. Popular British Modernists include: George Orwell, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, T.S. Eliot, and Aldous Huxley.

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Houses are differntly shaped, they tend to go for a more "clean" look with glass and go for a black and white look.

Shaping the Thinking

  • World War 1
  • World War 2
  • Secularism

Shaping the Thinking

Innovations/Inventions

Innovations

  • Typewriter
  • TV
  • Automobiles
  • Dynamite
  • Machine Guns
  • Barbed Wire
  • Electirc Lightbulb

Sources

  • http://www.primaryhomeworkhelp.co.uk/victorians/inventiotimeline.html
  • http://short-schrift.blogspot.com/2008/07/modernist-inventions.html?_sm_au_=i5VZZqZDBSJ75Z7N
  • https://www.liveabout.com/musical-instruments-of-the-romantic-period-3976120
  • https://slideplayer.com/slide/2349325/
  • https://prezi.com/_qnczgrm6dym/inventions-in-the-neoclassical-period/
  • https://www.historyextra.com/period/anglo-saxon/michael-wood-how-what-did-anglo-saxons-do-british-history/
  • http://www.thefinertimes.com/Middle-Ages/events-in-the-middle-ages.html
  • https://neoclassical-poetry.bloomyebooks.com/p/the-age.html

Sources

  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neoclassicism
  • https://www.shmoop.com/british-romanticism/timeline.html
  • https://www.slideshare.net/ShiraleeSaul/birth-of-modernism

Sources