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CHRONOLOGY OF LOCKE’S LIFE - John Locke, A Letter concerning Toleration and Other Writings [2010]

Edition used:

A Letter concerning Toleration and Other Writings, edited and with an Introduction by Mark Goldie (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2010).

About Liberty Fund:

Liberty Fund, Inc. is a private, educational foundation established to encourage the study of the ideal of a society of free and responsible individuals.


CHRONOLOGY OF LOCKE’S LIFE

1632Born at Wrington, Somerset, 29 August
1642Outbreak of the Civil Wars
1643Troops of Col. Popham, Locke’s future patron, despoil Wells Cathedral
1645Defeat of Charles I at Naseby by Oliver Cromwell
1647Admitted to Westminster School, London
1648Treaty of Westphalia ends European Thirty Years’ War
1649Execution of Charles I; England a republic
1651Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan
1652Elected a Student of Christ Church, Oxford
1652–67Usually resident in Oxford
1655Graduates as a bachelor of arts
1658Graduates as a master of arts; death of Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell
1660Restoration of monarchy under Charles II
1660–62Writes Two Tracts on Government, against toleration (published 1967)
1661–64Lecturer in Greek, rhetoric, and moral philosophy
1662Act of Uniformity reimposes Anglicanism; dissenting worship illegal
1663Attends chemical and medical lectures
1663–64Writes Essays on the Law of Nature (published 1954)
1665–66Embassy secretary sent to the Elector of Brandenburg at Cleves (Kleve)
1666Licensed to practice medicine
Granted dispensation to retain Studentship without taking holy orders
Great Fire of London
1667Joins Lord Ashley’s household; usually resident in London until 1675.
Writes Essay Concerning Toleration (published 1876)
1668Oversees lifesaving operation on Ashley
Elected a Fellow of the Royal Society
1669Helps draft The Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina
1670Baruch Spinoza, Tractatus Theologico-Politicus
1671Secretary to the Lords Proprietors of Carolina (until 1675)
First drafts of An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
1672Ashley created Earl of Shaftesbury and Lord Chancellor
Appointed secretary for ecclesiastical presentations (to 1673)
First visit to France
Samuel Pufendorf, On the Law of Nature and Nations
1673Secretary to the Council of Trade and Plantations (to 1674)
Charles II’s brother and heir, James, Duke of York, converts to Catholicism
Shaftesbury ousted from office; begins to lead opposition
1675Shaftesburian manifesto, A Letter from a Person of Quality
Graduates as a bachelor of medicine
To France; chiefly resident at Montpellier until 1677; then mainly Paris
1676Translates three of Pierre Nicole’s Essais de Morale
1677Repeal of writ De haeretico comburendo, abolishing burning for heresy
Andrew Marvell, An Account of the Growth of Popery
1678Popish Plot revealed; executions of Catholics follow (to 1681)
1679Returns to England
Habeas Corpus Act
1679–81Exclusion Crisis; Whigs seek to exclude Catholic heir from the throne
Whig victory in three general elections, but Whigs outmaneuvered by the king
1680Signs London’s “monster petition,” demanding sitting of Parliament
1679–83Resides in London, Oxford, and Oakley (James Tyrrell’s home)
Writes Two Treatises of Government
1681Writes a defense of toleration against Edward Stillingfleet
Assists Shaftesbury at the Oxford Parliament
Oxford Parliament dismissed; Charles summons no more parliaments
Beginning of royal and Tory backlash against Whigs and dissenters
Shaftesbury accused of treason; charge dismissed by a Whig grand jury
1682Court coup against Whigs in City of London; Shaftesbury flees to Holland
1683Death of Shaftesbury in Holland; Locke attends funeral in Dorset
Whig Rye House Plot, to assassinate the king, exposed
Executions of Lord William Russell and Algernon Sidney
Earl of Essex’s suicide in the Tower; Whigs suspect state murder
Judgment and Decree of Oxford University against seditious doctrines
1683–89Exile in Holland; lives mainly in Utrecht, Amsterdam, and Rotterdam
1684Expelled in absentia from Studentship of Christ Church
1685Death of Charles II; accession of James II and VII
Abortive rebellion of the Whig Duke of Monmouth; his execution
Louis XIV revokes Edict of Nantes; persecution of Huguenots
Writes Epistola de Tolerantia (Letter Concerning Toleration)
1686Pierre Bayle, Philosophical Commentary on religious persecution
1687James II issues Declaration of Indulgence (edict of toleration)
1688Reviews Newton’s Principia Mathematica for Bibliothèque universelle
Culmination of resistance to James II’s Catholicizing policies
“Glorious Revolution”: invasion of England by William of Orange
James II overthrown and flees to France
1689National Convention installs King William and Queen Mary
Nine Years’ War against Louis XIV opens
Toleration Act: freedom of worship for Protestant dissenters
Returns to England; declines an ambassadorship
Appointed Commissioner of Appeals in Excise
Publication of A Letter Concerning Toleration
Publication of Two Treatises of Government
Publication of An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
1690Battle of the Boyne: William defeats Jacobites in Ireland
Letter Concerning Toleration attacked by Jonas Proast
Publication of A Second Letter Concerning Toleration
1691Publication of Some Considerations of the . . . Lowering of Interest
Settles at Oates in Essex in Damaris Masham’s household
1692Publication of A Third Letter for Toleration
Memorandum on the naturalization of immigrants
1693Publication of Some Thoughts Concerning Education
1694Founding of the Bank of England; invests 500
Triennial Act, requiring regular parliamentary elections
1695Advises on the ending of press censorship and the recoinage
Publication of The Reasonableness of Christianity
The Reasonableness attacked by John Edwards; publishes Vindication
Publication of Further Considerations Concerning . . . Money
1696Appointed a member of the Board of Trade and Plantations (to 1700)
The Essay attacked by Bishop Edward Stillingfleet
John Toland, Christianity not Mysterious
Pierre Bayle, Historical and Critical Dictionary
1697Treaty of Ryswick: temporary peace with France
Publication of Second Vindication of the Reasonableness of Christianity
Publication of two replies to Stillingfleet in defense of the Essay
Composes An Essay on the Poor Law
Composes report on the government of Virginia
Composes The Conduct of the Understanding
Thomas Aikenhead hanged at Edinburgh, Britain’s last heresy execution
1698Molyneux’s Case of Ireland cites Two Treatises in defense of Ireland
Algernon Sidney, Discourses Concerning Government (posthumous)
1701Act of Settlement, ensuring Protestant (Hanoverian) succession
Renewal of war against France
1702Final visit to London
Composes A Discourse on Miracles
Death of William III; accession of Queen Anne
World’s first daily newspaper, in London
1703First major critique of Two Treatises, by Charles Leslie
1704Completes A Paraphrase and Notes on the Epistles of St. Paul
Battle of Blenheim: Duke of Marlborough’s victory over France
Capture of Gibraltar begins Britain’s Mediterranean naval dominance
Dies at Oates, 28 October; buried in High Laver churchyard, Essex
1705–7Publication of A Paraphrase and Notes on the Epistles of St. Paul
1706Publication of the unfinished Fourth Letter for Toleration
1710First French and German editions of A Letter Concerning Toleration
1714First edition of the Works of Locke
1743First American edition of A Letter Concerning Toleration
1764Voltaire’s edition of A Letter Concerning Toleration
1765Thomas Hollis’s edition of the Letters Concerning Toleration