1715 in Great Britain
Events from the year 1715 in Great Britain.
Incumbents
Events
- February to March – General election results in victory for the Whigs.[1]
- 27 March – Henry St John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke flees to France. His part in secret negotiations with France leading to the Treaty of Utrecht has cast suspicion on him in the eyes of the Whig government. He becomes secretary of state to the Pretender, James Edward Stuart.[2]
- 3 May – A total solar eclipse is seen across southern England and Scandinavia, the last total eclipse visible in London for almost 900 years.
- 10 June
- 9 July – Imprisonment of Robert Harley, Earl of Oxford, in the Tower of London for his part in the negotiations over the Treaty of Utrecht.[2]
- 12 July – Habeas Corpus Act suspended due to fear of Jacobite rebellion.[2]
- 1 August
- 31 August – Opening of Old Dock, Liverpool, the world's first enclosed commercial wet dock (Thomas Steers, engineer).[5][6]
- September (presumed) – Staging of first Three Choirs Festival.[7]
- 6 September – First of the major Jacobite Rebellions in Scotland against the rule of King George I:[2] The Earl of Mar raises the standard of James Edward Stuart and marches on Edinburgh.
- 13 November – Battle of Sheriffmuir is fought between Jacobites and the Duke of Argyll's army. Although the action is inconclusive, Argyll halts the Jacobite advance.
- 14 November – Battle of Preston: Government forces defeat a Jacobite incursion at the conclusion of a five-day siege and action, the last battle fought on English soil.[1][2]
- 15 November – Third Barrier Treaty signed by Britain, the Holy Roman Empire and the Dutch Republic.[3]
- 22 December – James Edward Stuart joins Jacobite rebels at Peterhead[2] but fails to rouse his army.
Undated
- The Septennial Act extends the maximum duration of Parliaments from three years to seven (in effect from 1716 to 2011).[8]
- Colen Campbell begins publication of his pattern book Vitruvius Britannicus, or the British Architect.
- Elizabeth Elstob publishes the first grammar of Old English, The Rudiments of Grammar for the English-Saxon Tongue, first given in English; with an apology for the study of northern antiquities.
Births
Deaths
References
See also