The timeline of Cheshire history shows significant events in the history of the English county of Cheshire.
70: The Romans found the fortress and town of Deva Victrix, now Chester.
c. 90: Legio XX Valeria Victrix arrive in Chester.
410: Romans retreat from Britannia.
429: Germanus of Auxerre wins the Battle of Maes Garmon, near Mold, and establishes Cadell as the Christian ruler of a region, later Powys, based on pre-Roman Cornovii territory, thought to include Cheshire.
7th and 8th centuries
603: Synod of Chester.
616: Æthelfrith of Northumbria defeats a Welsh army at the Battle of Chester.
689: Church of St John the Baptist founded outside Chester city walls by King Æthelred of Mercia and Bishop Wilfrid.
874 or 875: St Werburgh's remains brought to Chester for protection against Danish invaders.
c. 890: Chester establishes a mint.
890: Plegmund, probably of Plemstall, becomes Archbishop of Canterbury.
893: First mention of Scandinavian settlers in Chester.
893–894: A Danish force overwinters in Chester.
894–895: King Alfred drives the Danes from Chester.
907: Chester refounded as a burh by Æthelflæd and King Edward the Elder, and re-fortification starts.
907: Church to St Werburgh, later Chester Cathedral, founded by Æthelflæd, rebuilt from an earlier church dedicated to St Peter and St Paul.
907: Æthelflæd founds new church dedicated to St Peter and St Paul in Chester.
914: The Iron Age hill fort at Eddisbury is re-fortified by Æthelflæd.
915: Æthelflæd builds a burh at Runcorn.
915–920: Re-fortification of Chester probably completed.
919: Edward the Elder builds a burh at Thelwall.
923–924: Chester revolts against rule from Wessex and is subdued by Edward the Elder.
17 July 924: Edward the Elder dies at Farndon or Aldford.
937: King Æthelstan defeats the armies of Dublin, Alba and Strathclyde at the Battle of Brunanburh, probably near Bromborough.
958: King Edgar of England grants a charter to St Werburgh's Abbey, Chester.
973: Edgar of England visits Chester.
980: Vikings raid Chester.
980: First recorded use of the shire or county of Chester.
1007: Eadric Streona becomes the King's ealdorman of Mercia.
1016: Edmund Ironside ravages Chester.
c. 1017: King Cnut executes Eadric Streona, and makes Leofric Earl of Mercia.
1062: Edwin succeeds as Earl of Mercia.
1069–1071: William I leads the Norman Conquest into Cheshire; besieges Chester and kills Edwin, Earl of Mercia.
1070: Hugh d'Avranches created as first Earl of Chester.
1070: Chester Castle built.
1070: Frodsham Castle built.
1075: St John the Baptist's Church, Chester becomes a cathedral.
1092: Monastery founded on site of current Chester Cathedral by Hugh d'Avranches.
1115: Norton Priory founded.
1133: Combermere Abbey founded.
1140: Serious fire in Chester.
c. 1150: Ranulf de Gernon, 4th Earl of Chester founds a Benedictine nunnery in Chester.
1157: Henry II entertained at Chester Castle.
1165: Henry II entertained at Chester Castle again.
1180: Serious fire in Chester.
1182: Cheshire land north of the Mersey becomes part of the new county of Lancashire.
1190: Ranulf de Blondeville, 6th Earl of Chester founds Little St John's Hospital in Chester.
c. 1195: Liber de Luciani laude Cestrie, the oldest surviving piece of Cheshire writing, was created.
1211: King John entertained at Chester Castle.
1215–16: In the Carta Communis Cestriensis, Ranulf de Blondeville, 6th Earl of Chester grants limited concessions to his feudal lords.
1220s: Beeston Castle built.
1236: Dominican friars arrive in Chester.
1237: 7th Earl of Chester, John, dies without a male heir. Henry IV passes the title to his son, Prince Edward – later to become King Edward I.
1237–38: Franciscan friars arrive in Chester.
1237–51: Stone walls replace the wooden palisade around Chester Castle.
1253: Aldford and Alderley markets created.
1261: Macclesfield market created.
1272: Congleton market created.
1275: Monks of St Werburgh's Abbey build Kaleyard Gate in Chester city walls.
1277: King Edward I lays foundation stone to Vale Royal Abbey.
12 May 1278: Serious fire in Chester when nearly the whole of the city is burnt.
1279–80: Timber superstructure of the Old Dee Bridge swept away.
1280: Over market created.
1281: Serious fire in Middlewich.
1292–93: Chambers for the king and queen, and a new outer gatehouse built at Chester Castle.
1306: Serious fire in Northwich.
1322–25: Chester Water Tower built.
1349: The black death arrives in Cheshire.
1364: Doddington Castle built.
20 July 1376: Charter of disafforestation of Wirral issued.
1387: Major repairs to the Old Dee Bridge.
1391: Norton Priory becomes a mitred abbey.
1394: Richard II visits Chester with many of his nobles.
1397: Lands in the march of Wales added to Cheshire, and it is promoted to the rank of principality.
16 October 1398: Richard II gives 3000 marks to his Cheshire supporters at the Battle of Radcot Bridge.
1399: Henry IV (then still Duke of Lancaster) seizes Chester Castle and causes Richard II to be brought there from Flint Castle, after which Richard abdicates and Henry becomes king.
1399–1407: Tower built to fortify Chester's Dee Bridge.
1400: Unsuccessful attack on Chester Castle by supporters of deposed Richard II.
July 1403: Many Cheshire gentry support the unsuccessful uprising of Henry "Hotspur" Percy against Henry IV.
1422: First reference to Chester Mystery Plays.
1433: Famine led to food shortages in Chester.
July 1438: Serious fire in Nantwich.
1444: Henry VI visits Chester.
1445: Fee-farm (rent payable to the Crown) for Chester is halved from £100 to £50, attributed to silting of the River Dee; further reductions agreed in 1484 and 1486.
1450: A group of Cheshire gentry successfully petitions the Crown against the introduction of a parliamentary subsidy.
1452, 1455, 1459: Margaret of Anjou visits Chester.
23 September 1459: Many Cheshire gentry killed fighting on both sides in the Battle of Blore Heath, early in the Wars of the Roses.
1470: Edward IV visits Chester.
April 1484: Richard III visits Chester.
March 1486: Henry VII visits Chester.
1488: Stockport Grammar School is founded.
1492, 1494: Fires in Chester's Foregate and Northgate Streets.
July 1493: Henry VII again visits Chester.
1497: First performance of Chester Midsummer Show.
1502: Macclesfield Grammar School is founded.
1506: Great Charter establishes Chester as a county, codifies its government, and gives the city the right to hold a court of quarter sessions.
April 1506: Henry VII visits Chester.
1507: Outbreak of "sweating sickness" in Chester.
1510: St Ursula's Hospital founded in Chester.
1527: Malpas Grammar School founded.
1535: Outbreak of plague in Nantwich.
1536: Dissolution of Norton Priory.
1536: First piped water supply for civil use in Chester established.
1538: Dissolution of Vale Royal Abbey by Sir Thomas Holcroft.
July 1538: Dissolution of Combermere Abbey.
15 August 1538: Dissolution of Chester's three friaries.
20 January 1540: Dissolution of St Werburgh's Abbey.
1541: St Werburgh's abbey becomes a cathedral of the Church of England known as Chester Cathedral by order of King Henry VIII. Chester becomes a diocese.
1543: Cheshire sends its first members to sit in Parliament.
1575: Chester Mystery Plays are banned.
1577: Christopher Saxton publishes his map of Cheshire.
1578: Sandbach market opens.
December 1583: Fire destroys much of Nantwich.
1584: Elizabeth I contributes to a national fund for the rebuilding of Nantwich.
1591: Stanley Palace built in Chester on the site of the former Dominican friary.
1604: Outbreak of the plague kills around 500 people in Nantwich.
1636: Completion of Crewe Hall.
1637: First known stagecoach runs between Birmingham and Holywell via Nantwich and Chester.
1642: Failure of the Bunbury Agreement, an attempt by local gentry to keep Cheshire neutral in the English Civil War.
23–28 September 1642: Charles I in Chester.
13 March 1643: First Battle of Middlewich in English Civil War.
24 January 1644: Battle of Nantwich in the English Civil War.
November 1644–February 1645: Siege of Chester.
24 September 1645: Battle of Rowton Heath in the English Civil War.
3 February 1646: Chester surrenders to the Parliamentary forces.
21 October 1650: First record of the Cheshire cheese trade with London.
1655: Cheshire under military rule, governed by Charles Worsley.
1657: Stagecoach service begins between London and Chester.
1670: Smith-Barry family re-discovers salt in Northwich and mining restarts.
1674: John Ray's Collection of English Words includes written record of the Cheshire dialect.
1687: James II visits Chester.
6 June 1690: William III stays at Combermere Abbey on his way to the Battle of the Boyne.
1700: Brine springs are discovered at Winsford.
1735–36: The New Cut dug along the River Dee from Chester to Connah's Quay because of silting of the river.
1744: Charles Roe builds a watermill in Macclesfield and triggers start of the silk industry.
1763: Cheshire Hunt founded.
March 1776: Bridgewater Canal complete throughout its length from Manchester to Runcorn.
1777: Completion of the Trent and Mersey Canal.
1779: The Chester Canal opens between Chester and Nantwich.
1780: Chester Eastgate rebuilt.
1780: Marston salt mine opens.
1781: Chester Northgate rebuilt.
1784: First mail coach runs through Cheshire, between London and Holyhead.
1788: Chester Watergate rebuilt.
1788–1815: Major rebuilding of Chester Castle by Thomas Harrison
1795: The Chester Canal extended to Ellesmere Port.
July 1804: Runcorn to Latchford Canal opens.
1806: The Middlewich Branch opens, linking the Shropshire Union and the Trent and Mersey Canals.
1808–10: Chester Northgate rebuilt.
8 May 1817: Early paper on Cheshire dialect read at Society of Antiquaries by Roger Wilbraham.
1832: The future Queen Victoria opens the Grosvenor Bridge in Chester.
1837: Crewe railway station is built in fields near to Crewe Hall.
1838: First meeting of the Cheshire Agricultural Society.
1839: Foundation of Chester Diocesan Training College, now the University of Chester.
1840: Crewe–Chester–Birkenhead railway line opens.
1843: Crewe Railway Works opens.
1845: Crewe Railway Works completes its first locomotive, Columbine.
24 May 1847: Five people are killed in the Dee bridge disaster when a girder of the railway bridge crossing the River Dee fractures.
1848: Chester railway station opens.
1855–76: George Gilbert Scott works on restoring Chester Cathedral.
1857: Cheshire Constabulary founded.
1862: Chester Exchange is gutted by fire.
1865–66: Devastating outbreak of rinderpest (cattle plague) causes the collapse of the county's economy.
1867: Grosvenor Park opens in Chester.
21 May 1868: The first train crosses Runcorn Railway Bridge.
1869: Railway line opens between Weaver Junction and Liverpool via Runcorn.
15 October 1869: Chester Town Hall opened by Prince of Wales, later King Edward VII.
1874: John Brunner and Ludwig Mond found Brunner Mond in Winnington near Northwich and start manufacturing soda ash.
1874: Cheshire Lines Committee opens railway line between Manchester and Chester via Altrincham.
1875: Anderton Boat Lift opens.
1877: Glossary of Cheshire dialect published by Egerton Leigh.
1881: The west tower of St John the Baptist's Church, Chester collapses.
1886: The Grosvenor Museum opens in Chester.
1886: Rail tunnel under the River Mersey opens between Liverpool and Birkenhead.
1889: Cheshire County Council founded.
21 May 1894: Manchester Ship Canal officially opened by Queen Victoria.
27 May 1899: Official opening of Eastgate Clock in Chester on Queen Victoria's 80th birthday.
29 May 1905: Widnes-Runcorn Transporter Bridge officially opened by Sir John Brunner.
1921: Cheshire School of Agriculture opens at Worleston.
1926: Imperial Chemical Industries is created.
1931: Chester Zoo opens.
1938: Newgate opens in Chester.
1951: Chester Mystery Plays are revived.
21 July 1961: Runcorn-Widnes road bridge (later named the Silver Jubilee Bridge) is opened by Princess Alexandra.
1964: Runcorn New Town is designated.
1969: First conservation areas designated, including Chester and Nantwich.
1 April 1974: Cheshire boundaries changed by Local Government Act 1972. Runcorn and Widnes merge to form the Borough of Halton.
1982: Norton Priory Museum opens.
1983: Anderton Boat Lift closes.
26 February 1993: IRA explosive devices go off at Warrington gasworks.
20 March 1993:: IRA explosive devices kill two children and injure 54 people in Warrington.
1 April 1998: Halton and Warrington become unitary authorities.
2002: Anderton Boat Lift reopens.
1 September 2007: The Cheshire Regiment merges into the Mercian Regiment.
1 April 2009: Two unitary authorities of Cheshire West and Chester and Cheshire East replace Cheshire County Council and its districts.
Timeline of Cheshire history Wikipedia (Text) CC BY-SA