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Old English or Anglo-Saxon is the earliest historical form of the English Language
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The Venerable Bede, in his monastery at Jarrow, completes his history of the English church and people
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This is a work of uncertain date, celebrating the Battle of Maldon of 991, at which the Anglo-Saxons failed to prevent a Viking invasion
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is the most famous work in Old English, and has achieved national epic status in England, despite being set in Scandinavia.
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Japanese author Murasaki Shibubi produces, in The Tale of Genji, a book which can be considered the world's first novel
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The event that began the transition from Old English to Middle English was the Norman Conquest of 1066
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Dante, in exile from Florence, begins work on The Divine Comedy - completing it just before his death, 14 years later
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The courtly poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight tells of a mysterious visitor to the round table of King Arthur
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Chaucer completes Troilus and Criseyde, his long poem about a legendary love affair in ancient Troy
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It was a cultural and artistic movement in England dating from the late 15th century to the early 17th century.
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William Tyndale at Wittenberg.
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The Elizabethan era is the epoch in the Tudor period of the history of England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I.
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The Jacobean era refers to the period in English and Scottish history that coincides with the reign of James VI of Scotland (1567–1625), who also inherited the crown of England in 1603 as James I.
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James I commissions the Authorized version of the Bible, which is completed by forty-seven scholars in seven years
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Shakespeare's sonnets, written ten years previously, are published
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The Caroline or Carolean era refers to the era in English and Scottish history during the Stuart period that coincided with the reign of Charles I, Carolus being Latin for Charles.
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The Puritans were a religious collective who can be said to have invented their identity by means of the word.
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It corresponds to the last years of the direct Stuart reign in England, Scotland, Wales, and Ireland.
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The 18th century saw the development of the modern novel as literary genre, in fact many candidates for the first novel in English date from this period, of which Daniel Defoe's 1719 Robinson Crusoe is probably the best known.
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is a style of British literature produced during the reigns of Queen Anne, King George I, and George II in the first half of the 18th century and ending in the 1740s, with the deaths of Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift, in 1744 and 1745, respectively.
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The sentimental novel or "novel of sensibility" is a genre which developed during the second half of the 18th century. It celebrates the emotional and intellectual concepts of sentiment, sentimentalism, and sensibility.
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was an artistic, literary, and intellectual movement that originated in Europe toward the end of the 18th century.[78] Romanticism arrived later in other parts of the English-speaking world.
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Mary Shelley publishes Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus, a Gothic tale about giving life to an artificial man
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It was in the Victorian era that the novel became the leading literary genre in English.Women played an important part in this rising popularity both as authors and as readers.
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Charles Darwin puts forward the theory of evolution in On the Origin of Species, the result of 20 years' research
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Beatrix Potter publishes at her own expense The Tale of Peter Rabbit
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English literary modernism developed in the early twentieth-century out of a general sense of disillusionment with Victorian era attitudes of certainty, conservatism, and belief in the idea of objective truth.The movement was influenced by the ideas of Charles Darwin
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Postmodern literature is both a continuation of the experimentation championed by writers of the modernist period (relying heavily, for example, on fragmentation, paradox, questionable narrators, etc.) and a reaction against Enlightenment ideas implicit in Modernist literature.
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Ian Fleming's first novel, Casino Royale
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Stephen Hawking explains the cosmos for the general reader in A Brief History of Time: from the Big Bang to Black Holes
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In the later decades of the 20th Century, the genre of science fiction began to be taken more seriously because of the work of writers such as Arthur C. Clarke's (2001: A Space Odyssey), Isaac Asimov, Ursula K. Le Guin, Robert Heinlein, Michael Moorcock and Kim Stanley Robinson.