• February to March –
General election results in victory for the
Whigs. • 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. • 20 April –
Lady Jane Grey, a history play by the Whig writer
Nicholas Rowe is performed at the
Drury Lane Theatre. • 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 •
Impeachment of Robert Harley, Earl of Oxford. The Tory former chief minister is indicted for High Treason and other crimes. • Bolingbroke is also impeached by
Parliament. • First
Doggett's Coat and Badge rowing race held on the
River Thames. •
Nicholas Rowe is appointed as
Poet Laureate, replacing the Irish-born
Nahum Tate. The Whig Rowe has written works supportive of the
Hanoverian Succession. He holds the post until his death in 1718. • 20 August – The
Duke of Ormonde who has fled to join the
Jacobites is
attainted and his estates confiscated. • 31 August – Opening of
Old Dock,
Liverpool, the world's first enclosed commercial
wet dock (
Thomas Steers, engineer). • September
(presumed) – Staging of first
Three Choirs Festival. • 6 September – First of the major
Jacobite risings in
Scotland against the rule of King
George I:
The Earl of Mar raises the standard of
James Edward Stuart and marches on
Edinburgh. • 9 November – The
Battle of Preston begins, with Jacobite forces under
Thomas Forster surrounded by government troops under
Charles Wills. • 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. • 15 November – Third
Barrier Treaty signed by Britain, the
Holy Roman Empire and the
Dutch Republic. • 22 December –
James Edward Stuart joins Jacobite rebels at
Peterhead but fails to rouse his army. ==Publications==