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. • 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". • 19 May –
Queen Anne refuses to allow members of the
House of Hanover to settle in Britain during her lifetime. • July – first
Roman Catholic seminary in Britain opens at Eilean Bàn on
Loch Morar in Scotland. • 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. • 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 •
Hanoverian succession: George, elector of
Hanover, becomes King
George I of Great Britain on the death at
Kensington Palace following a stroke of his second cousin, Queen Anne, without surviving issue ==Births==