Roman period – The Roman settlement of Clausentum in Roman Britain is located 20 miles (32 km) west of Noviomagus Reginorum (Now Chichester) and 10 miles (16 km) from Venta Belgarum (Now Winchester), which is roughly in the area of Bitterne Manor.
400 – The Anglo-Saxons moved the centre of the town across the River Itchen to what is now the St Mary's area.
500 – The area now known as Southampton Common can be traced back to this year.
700 to 850 – The settlement of Hamwic is founded and becomes an important port and traded with the continent. During this period, it has a population of 2,000 to 3,000.
1553 – The 'Free Grammar School off the Mayor Baliffs and Burgesses of the Towne and County of Southampton', which is now known as King Edward VI School, is granted letters patent by Edward VI.
1554
Southampton is granted a monopoly on the export of wool to the Mediterranean and on the import of sweet wine.
1642 – A Parliamentary garrison moves into Southampton.
1644 – In March, a Royalist army advanced as far as Redbridge, but are prevented from taking the town by Colonel Richard Norton. In the same month, the Battle of Cheriton subsequently removes the threat to Southampton.
1664 – In June, the Black Death returns to Southampton. By the time the epidemic ended in November 1666, 1,700 people had died.
1689 - The right to vote in parliamentary elections, which had previously been limited to freemen, was extended to include those paying Scot and lot in Southampton.
Georgian and Regency periods
1740 - Southampton becomes a spa town, with the town becoming a popular site for sea bathing in the 1760s.
1759 to 1803 – Walter Taylor's 18th century mechanisation of the block-making process in Southampton wins him a monopoly on the supply of wooden rigging blocks for the Royal Navy and was a significant step in the Industrial Revolution
22 April: The Titanic Engineers' Memorial is unveiled in East Park to commemorate the engineers who lost their lives on the RMS Titanic 2 years prior.
4 August: Southampton was designated No. 1 Military Embarkation Port following the outbreak of World War I, and much of Southampton Common is taken over by the military.
1914 to 1918: Over 8 million troops pass through Southampton on the way to Mainland Europe to fight in World War I. Alongside this, A steady flow of refugees, prisoners of war and over 1 million wounded came back to England through Southampton.
1919
January: Soldiers returning from World War I are mutinied in the port.
Bitterne Parish Council and Itchen Urban District Council are incorporated into the borough of Southampton. Bassett and Swaythling are incorporated into Southampton at the same time.
The Cenotaph (war memorial) is unveiled in Watts Park.
1929 – On 26 March, Southampton Corporation purchases Northam Bridge from the Northam Bridge Company, with the tolls being removed on 16 May. At the same time, the tolls at Lances Hill, Hedge End and the bridge at Bursledon were also abolished.
November: During the Blitz, 476 tons of bombs are dropped on Southampton.
D-day operations of 1943–1944:
July 1943 – Military exercise Harlequin tested the ports' capacity for embarking troops and equipment.
1 April to 25 August: During D-day preparations, Southampton was within Regulated Area (No 2), which placed the local population under certain restrictions that were intended to secure the military operation.
After: Southampton continued to work at full capacity to re-supply the Allied Forces on mainland Europe.
1944
12 July: The only flying bomb to hit Southampton lands in Sholing.
5 November: The last air raid takes place in Southampton.
1947 – 14 April: The RMS Queen Elizabeth runs aground on a sandbank just outside of Southampton.
1950 to 1999
By the 1950s – Mayflower Park is laid out.
1952 – The Hartley University College is granted a Royal Charter to give the University of Southampton full university status.
2002 – Southampton is twinned with Trieste in Italy.
2004 – The Southampton park run begins, with the group using Southampton Common since 2015.
2005 – Southampton Solent is given University status, which includes Southampton College of Art, the Southampton College of Technology, and later the College of Nautical Studies from its previous merger as the Southampton Institute of Higher Education in 1984.
2012 – April: Southampton commemorates the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the RMS Titanic with ships sounding their horns at 12 pm and a memorial service. SeaCity Museum also opens to commemorate this.
2013 – Bargate Shopping Centre closes, and its demolition begins on 24 November 2017.
2015 – 3 January: The Ro-Ro car carrier Hoegh Osaka became stranded on a sandbank outside of Southampton Water after developing a major list from an unstable load of cars. She was eventually refloated on 22 January, and all of her 24 crew survived with minimal injuries.
2016 – WestQuay Watermark opens.
2017
November: The council selects an official flag for the city through a competition to design one.
Warsash Maritime School relocates to its current campus in St Mary's as part of Solent University's major redevelopment work, which is opened by HRH Anne, Princess Royal on 18 January 2018. The STCW training centre in Warsash village remains part of the university, the former teaching and accommodation facilities are set to be converted into flats, and the simulation centre on the main university campus has major upgrade work. All of this is completed by 2019.
14 June: Southampton is twinned with Miami in Florida.
2020 to 2039
2020
23 March: Southampton goes into a nationwide lockdown with the rest of the UK due to the COVID-19pandemic.
5 November: Southampton joins the rest of the UK in a nationwide lockdown that lasts until 2 December in an attempt to reduce the number of cases.
20 December: Southampton moves to Tier 4 restriction after being in Tier 3 restrictions since 2 December.
2021
4 January: The Prime Minister Boris Johnson announces that Southampton, along with the rest of the UK, will go into another nationwide lockdown to control the new variants of COVID-19 from 6 January, which will last at least until the Spring. Then on 22 February, he announces plans to bring the UK, including Southampton, cautiously out of lockdown, with plans for restrictions to be fully lifted by 21 June.
16 May: The P&O cruise ship 'Iona' is christened in Southampton by Dame Irene Hays, with her maiden voyage taking place on 7 August to Scotland and the Channel Isles.
14 June: Plans to end COVID-19 restrictions are delayed by 4 weeks to 19 July due to a sharp rise of the Delta variant.
19 July: COVID-19 restrictions in England, including Southampton, come to an end after Prime Minister Boris Johnson confirms this on 12 July.
September: Southampton secures its place in its bid to become the City Of Culture in 2025.
9 November: Southampton Airport is named as the best in the UK and the third best globally for sustainability performance as part of COP26 in Glasgow.
8 December: Prime Minister Boris Johnson announces plan B of COVID-19 restrictions due to a sharp increase of the Omicron variant.
Southampton's population is 261,729.
2022
26 January: Plan B measures for COVID-19 restrictions across the UK, including Southampton, come to an end after Prime Minister Boris Johnson announces this on 19 January following a decline in the Omicron variant.
18 February: Red Funnel's 'Red Falcon' crashes into Southampton's ferry terminal as a result of Storm Eunice, but she only sustains light damage to her hull near the bow.
24 February: Prime Minister Boris Johnson removes the last of the COVID-19 restrictions (compulsory isolation with a positive test) in Southampton and the rest of the UK.
4 March: AIDAcosma, which is owned by AIDA Cruises, makes her maiden voyage from Southampton.
9 March: Solent Sky is given permission to build its £5,000,000 extension to house more aircraft and other attractions.
21 March: Southampton is announced as one of the four cities to be shortlisted to be the City Of Culture in 2025 alongside Bradford, County Durham and Wrexham County, but loses to Bradford on 31 May.
2 July: Plans for a new underground link between Southampton's and Netley's railway lines are announced. If approved, this would link Southampton Central station and the Netley line to provide a more direct and faster route to Portsmouth at a cost of £45 billion.
27 July: Red Funnel's staff go on strike over their pay, affecting evening services.
12 August: A drought is officially declared in the south of England, including Southampton, during the second heatwave of this year.
8 November: An 'Operational incident' is declared at the nearby Fawley Refinery, causing an orange glow to be seen up to 25 miles away across Hampshire and the South Coast and with flares being seen in Southampton.
29 November: First Bus South end all bus services in Southampton, with Bluestar taking over their routes.
18 December: P&O Cruises' newest ship Arvia arrives in Southampton for her inaugural voyage on 23 December.
December: Royal Mail strikes affect Southampton's Christmas post.
7 November: easyJet take off from Southampton Airport for the first time, with routes to Belfast International and Glasgow airports.
Southampton's mainline railway services continue to be affected as the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT) rail strikes continue into this year.
^Lipman, Vivian David, and William D. Rubinstein. "Southampton." Encyclopaedia Judaica. Ed. Michael Berenbaum and Fred Skolnik. 2nd ed. Vol. 19. Detroit: Macmillan Reference USA, 2007. 60–61. Gale Virtual Reference Library. Web. 1 Oct. 2013
^Alwyn A. Ruddock (1946). "Alien Merchants in Southampton in the Later Middle Ages". English Historical Review. 61 (239): 1–17. JSTOR554835.
^Óscar Alfredo Ruiz Fernández, England and Spain in the Early Modern Era: Royal Love, Diplomacy, Trade and Naval Relations (London: Bloomsbury, 2019), p. 87.
^ abSamuel Tymms (1832). "Hampshire". Western Circuit. The Family Topographer: Being a Compendious Account of the … Counties of England. Vol. 2. London: J.B. Nichols and Son. OCLC2127940.
^"About Us". City of Southampton Society. Retrieved 23 September 2013.
^Steven P. Pinch, Colin M. Mason and Stephen J. G. Witt (1989). "Labour Flexibility and Industrial Restructuring in the UK 'Sunbelt': The Case of Southampton". Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers. 14 (4): 418–434. doi:10.2307/623009. JSTOR623009.
^John Hansard Gallery. "About Us". University of Southampton. Archived from the original on 19 December 2016. Retrieved 23 September 2013.
^"The Museum". Solent Sky Museum. Retrieved 23 September 2013.
John Parker Anderson (1881), "Hampshire: Southampton", Book of British Topography: a Classified Catalogue of the Topographical Works in the Library of the British Museum Relating to Great Britain and Ireland, London: W. Satchell
Ruth Hutchinson Crocker (1987). "Victorian Poor Law in Crisis and Change: Southampton, 1870–1895". Albion: A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies. 19 (1): 19–44. doi:10.2307/4049658. JSTOR4049658.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Southampton.
"Southampton: Timeline". Port Cities UK. UK: New Opportunities Fund. Archived from the original on 14 December 2003.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)