You are here: Home > About Bristol 650 > Bristol's History Timeline
Bristol's History Timeline
Moments in Bristol’s history
Bristol began life as a village called Brigg Stow (Brycgstow), which means the meeting place at the bridge in the old Saxon language. At some point, a wooden bridge was erected across the Avon. (Avon is a Celtic word meaning ‘water’). The bridge was used as a meeting place and a village grew up by it. In time the name Brigg Stow changed to Bristol.
Bristol in the Saxon and Middle Ages until the 15th Century
1051: Saxon Bristol
The original town was listed in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle of 1051 as a port trading regularly with Ireland, Somerset and North Devon. Wool and leather were exported from Bristol.
1067: Bristol surrenders to William the Conqueror
Bristol submitted to William the Conqueror without a fight. William the Conqueror built a wooden fort in Bristol. In the early 12th century it was replaced by a stone castle.
1129: The Priory of St James was built in Bristol
St James Priory was founded around 1129 by Robert, first Earl of Gloucester, who owned the castle at Bristol. To start with, there were 11 or 12 monks and a Prior, who lived under the rule of the Benedictine Abbey of Tewkesbury. Robert died of fever in 1147 in Bristol and was initially buried in St James Priory.
1140: St Augustine's Abbey is founded and later becomes known as Bristol Cathedral
Bristol Cathedral is one of England's great medieval churches. It originated as an Augustinian Abbey, founded c. 1140 by prominent local citizen, Robert Fitzharding, who became first Lord Berkeley. The transepts of the church date from this period, but its most vivid remains can be seen in the Chapter House and Abbey Gatehouse.
1216: Magna Carta is revised in Bristol
The Magna Carta showed that the king and government were not above the law, but it is reissued in Bristol on 12 November 1216 after the death of King John, who had signed the first version a year before.
The first Bristol mayor was appointed.
1373: The Great Charter of Liberties
In 1373, Bristol became an independent county. This is the anniversary we are celebrating in Bristol 650. Before this, Bristol was divided geographically and administratively by the River Avon. The parishes to the west and north of the river lay in Gloucestershire, while those to the south were in Somerset. The charter of 1373 gave Bristol and its suburbs jurisdiction independent from those county authorities, making it a county in its own right. Courts sat in Bristol, so people didn’t need to go to the towns of Gloucester or Ilchester (Somerset) for Quarter Sessions (local courts held at four set times each year). The Great Charter of Liberties was granted by Edward III.
Take a look at the Bristol County Boundary 1373 Map and follow the route of the county land boundary of Bristol according to its 1373-1835 boundaries. From at least the 16-18C this was a civic ritual performed annually between the election of the new mayor and sheriffs and them taking office at Michaelmas. And it continued to be performed occasionally after that - the last occasion being in 2007 by Lord Mayor Royston Griffey. This map was created by Dr Evan Jones, Associate Professor in Economic History at University of Bristol.
1497: John Cabot sailed out of Bristol
On 2 May 1497 John Cabot sailed out of Bristol on The Matthew to try and find a new route to Asia and discovered Newfoundland. A replica of The Matthew can be seen in Bristol's Harbour today and you can go aboard and learn about the voyage.
Bristol in the 16th, 17th and 18th Centuries
1558 - 1625: Elizabethan and Jacobean Bristol
This map shows Elizabethan and Jacobean buildings and parts of buildings you can visit, as well as describing what happened at some places in Bristol the Elizabethan and Jacobean ages.
1698: Bristol’s first slave ship The Beginning sails from Bristol to the African coast
Between 1698 and 1807, 2,108 known ships left Bristol to make the trip to Africa and onwards across the Atlantic with enslaved people aboard. An average of 20 voyages set sail a year. Approximately 500,000 enslaved were brought into slavery by these ships, representing one-fifth of British Transatlantic slavery during this time. Bristol was already a comparatively wealthy city prior to this trade; as one of the three points of the slavery triangle (the others being Africa and the West Indies), the city prospered. This triangle was called the Triangular Trade. The Triangular Trade involved delivering, as well receiving, goods from each stop the ship took.
1739: John Wesley established the first Methodist chapel in Bristol
In 1739 John Wesley was asked by the members of two religious societies in Bristol to create ‘a new room’ where they could meet. The resulting building became the first Methodist chapel in the world. Visit John Wesley's New Room in the heart of Bristol.
1766: Bristol's Theatre Royal opened and later becomes known as Bristol Old Vic
Built in 1766, Bristol Old Vic is the oldest continuously working theatre in the English-speaking world, and remains a place of joy, discovery and adventure to this day.
1774: Edmund Burke’s Speech to the Electors of Bristol
Edmund Burke, the Irish philosopher and politician, represented the city of Bristol in Parliament between 1774 and 1780. Having been a Whig MP for almost ten years, representing the Constituency of Wendover in Buckinghamshire, Edmund Burke campaigned to become MP for Bristol. He was elected alongside another MP from his own party, Henry Cruger. On 3 November 1774, Edmund Burke gave a speech to the people of Bristol who had elected him. The speech, known as ‘The Speech to the Electors of Bristol’, defined Burke’s view that an MP’s role and opinion is independent from those who had elected them.
1788: Bristol established the first committee for the abolition of the slave trade outside London
Following a visit by abolitionist Thomas Clarkson, Bristol became the first city outside of London to set up such a committee. Women took a prominent role in helping lead campaigns, one of the first political campaigns in which they were allowed to play an active role.
1795: Poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge gave an anti-slavery lecture in Bristol
In 1795 Samuel Taylor Coleridge gave a series of radical lectures in Bristol. They questioned religion, attacked the slave trade, condemned the war with France and criticised taxation. They promoted wide debate and were censured by the city’s merchants and slave traders.
Bristol in the 19th Century
1809: Bristol Floating Harbour opens
In 1809 Bristol was transformed by the opening of the Floating Harbour. 80 acres of tidal river was impounded to allow visiting ships to remain afloat all the time. Over the next two centuries the Harbour grew as a busy commercial port until it closed in 1975. Since then, it has been regenerated for leisure, commerce and residence.
1823: Bristol Institution for the Advancement of Science and Art and The Bristol Chamber of Commerce were founded. Later known as Bristol Museum & Art Gallery and Business West. St George's Bristol opens as a church
The collections of the Bristol Museum & Art Gallery date back to 1823 when the Bristol Institution for the Advancement of Science and Art was founded at the bottom of Park Street as a home for collectors and a space for lectures and debates.
The Bristol Chamber of Commerce was set up in 1823 and had its first meeting on the 25th February 1823. Members were merchants, manufacturers, bankers, tradesmen and others centred around Bristol’s port. Today, Business West is active across Bristol, Bath, Gloucestershire and Wiltshire and aims to make this area the best place to live and work. They work with 24,000 businesses to help them start and grow, as well as lobbying the government on their behalf. Profits are reinvested back into the business.
The Grade II* listed building and concert hall now known as St George's started its life as a church in 1823.
1831: Riots for political reform broke out in Bristol following the House of Lords rejecting the second Reform bill
In March 1831, the Whigs attempted to introduce a Reform Bill to solve the issue of the large discrepancies in the size of the constituencies of the House of Commons. This was defeated in Parliament, resulting in the resignation of the prime minister, Charles Grey. He subsequently returned to office and introduced a second Reform Bill. Despite being passed in the House of Commons, it was defeated in the House of Lords in October 1831. There were riots around the country in cities that weren’t fairly represented in Parliament. Bristol was represented by just two members of Parliament, so riots quickly broke out in the city centre.
1836: Bristol Zoological Gardens opens
The Bristol, Clifton and West of England Zoological Society opened the Zoo’s doors to the public for the first time, on Monday 11th July 1836. Bristol Zoo’s situation within a port greatly helped with the acquisition of animals when it first opened. Bristol Zoo Gardens closed on 3 September 2022 after 186 years in Clifton. Their work continues as they create a new Bristol Zoo at Bristol Zoo Project, and deliver their conservation projects across the world.
1841: Bristol to London Paddington rail service began
The line between Bristol and London was built by the Great Western Railway and engineered by Isambard Kingdom Brunel. It was opened in stages between 1838 and 1841. The final section, between Chippenham and Bath, was opened on completion of the Box Tunnel in June 1841.
1843: The SS Great Britain is launched
Designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel, when the SS Great Britain was launched in 1843, she was called ‘the greatest experiment since the creation’. No one had ever designed so vast a ship, nor had the vision to build it of iron. Brunel fitted her with a 1000 hp steam engine, the most powerful yet used at sea. Perhaps most daring of all, Brunel rejected using conventional paddle wheels to drive his ship. Instead, he gave the SS Great Britain a screw propeller. This was the newest invention in maritime technology.
1864: Clifton Suspension Bridge opens
Clifton Suspension Bridge was also designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel. He was 24 when he was appointed for the project which came about through a competition. The bridge took 33 years to complete and opened to much fanfare in 1864. It is arguably Bristol's most famous landmark to this day. Brunel never got to see the bridge finished as he died in 1859, age 53.
1868: The Bristol and West of England Society for Women’s Suffrage established
Outside of London, Bristol had the highest level of activity for the suffragists and suffragettes. The Bristol and West of England Society for Women’s Suffrage was one of the earliest groups to campaign for votes for women. Together, they continued to work for women’s suffrage until the vote was won in the early 20th century.
1897: Cabot Tower is built
Cabot Tower was built right on top of Brandon Hill to commemorate the 400th anniversary of John Cabot's voyage to Newfoundland. Climb the 105ft tower for breathtaking views across Bristol and the Mendip Hills beyond.
Bristol in the 20th Century
1940: Start of the Bristol Blitz
The longest period of regular bombing, known as the 'Bristol Blitz', began in autumn 1940 and ended the following spring. The first bombs of the Bristol Blitz fell at around 6pm on Sunday 24 November 1940. A further six bombing raids took place until the last major attack in April 1941. The bombing changed the landscape of the city forevermore.
1948: HMT Empire Windrush arrives at Tilbury docks in Essex
The arrival of the ship HMT Empire Windrush at Tilbury docks in 1948, bringing 500 passengers from the Caribbean, is a moment that shaped modern Britain. On 22 June 2023 the world marks its 75th anniversary. Activity will be taking place across the country as well as here in Bristol.
1957: New Bristol Airport opens at Lulsgate
Built on the site of a former RAF airfield, Bristol Airport opened in 1957 as Bristol (Lulsgate) Airport, replacing Bristol (Whitchurch) Airport as Bristol's municipal airport. Now Bristol Airport offers direct services from over 100 destinations across Europe.
1963: Bristol Bus Boycott
A major civil rights campaign and bus boycott forced the Bristol Omnibus Company to end its colour bar and paved the way for Race Relations Acts. Raghbir Singh was appointed as Bristol’s first bus conductor of colour a month later.
1967: St Pauls Carnival was held for the first time
The first St Pauls Festival was in 1968. The organisers were local residents and activists who aimed to bring together the European, African-Caribbean and Asian communities. They wanted to challenge negative stereotypes of the area. In the early days, it was very much a community event with local residents selling home-cooked food from their front gardens. Over time, it became known as St Pauls Carnival and in 1991 was renamed St Pauls Afrikan Caribbean Carnival to put greater emphasis on the African-Caribbean community. By this time, the event was attracting thousands of revellers from across the city with its spectacular parade, booming sound systems, and food stalls.
1969: Concorde makes its maiden flight from Filton
The first flight of the British-assembled 002 Concorde took place on 9 April 1969. Crowds of reporters came to watch the flight from the airfield at Filton, South Gloucestershire. Watch archive footage of the flight here.
1970: The SS Great Britain returns home to Bristol for the last time
After 47 voyages and 88 years working as a luxury transatlantic passenger liner, emigrant steam clipper, cargo ship and, later, a floating store, the SS Great Britain was finally scuttled in the Falkland Islands on 12 April 1937. In 1969 a rescue mission costing £150,000 was launched by Ewan Corlett, a British naval architect. The aim was to bring the ship back to Bristol, where she was originally built. The SS Great Britain was towed on a giant floating pontoon (raft) across the Atlantic Ocean. The journey was 8,000 miles and took nearly three months. In July 1970 as she was towed up the River Avon and under the Clifton Suspension Bridge. The ship’s return drew an excited crowd of approximately 100,000 people, who came to witness the return of Brunel’s great ship to her Bristol birthplace.
1971: The first Bristol Harbour Festival was held
On the weekend of 26-27 June 1971, the first Bristol Water Festival, later known as Bristol Harbour Festival took place. The festival's main aim was to show that the inland waterway of the city was a perfect location for people to enjoy leisure. The festival now attracts thousands of visitors every year who come to enjoy the free festival and the harbourside.
1973: Bristol 600 celebrations
On the 600th anniversary of Bristol becoming an independent City and County in 1973, Queen Elizabeth II came to open the celebrations, being driven through the cheering thousands on the Centre to be greeted by the Lord Mayor at the Council House. Later she visited an exhibition on the Downs, being driven through more crowds while standing behind the cab of an open-back vehicle. Amongst the events were medieval jousting and a display by the Army Motor Cycle Team.
1977: The first Bristol Gay Festival is held
The Bristol Gay Festival was one of the earliest regional queer events outside of London, and featured events and film screenings at Arnolfini and Bristol Arts Centre. It was organised as a fundraiser to help Gay News, a newspaper for LGBTQIA+ people, in its legal battle against Mary Whitehouse, who had accused the paper of blasphemy.
1979: The first Bristol Balloon Fiesta takes place
The first ever Bristol Balloon Fiesta took place in September 1979 after Don Cameron and others came up with the idea over a pint. Just 27 balloons took off.
1982: Watershed Media Centre opens
Established in 1982, Watershed was the United Kingdom's first dedicated media centre and the first full-time multi-screen independent cinema outside London.
1997: Local artist Banksy paints his first major mural
Banksy's first known large wall mural was The Mild Mild West painted in 1997 to cover advertising of a former solicitors' office in Stokes Croft in Bristol. It depicts a teddy bear lobbing a Molotov cocktail at three riot police.
1998: Tobacco Factory Theatres opens
The theatre space at Tobacco Factory Theatres was created on the first floor of the building in 1998 and the first performance was staged by theatre company Show of Strength who presented ‘A Journey to Bristol’ - a short 18th century comedy set in the city and performed in promenade across the whole building.
Bristol in the 21st Century
2003: Concorde makes its last ever flight to Filton
Concorde Alpha Foxtrot G-BOAF flew into Filton in November 2003. She was the last Concorde ever to fly. You can visit Concorde Alpha Foxtro at Aerospace Bristol, a centre dedicated to Bristol's amazing aviation achievements.
2008: Bristol becomes the UK's first Cycling City, the first Upfest is held and Cabot Circus opens
International graffiti artists paint the city in the first–ever Upfest.
2010: Peaches Golding becomes Bristol’s High Sheriff, the first Black woman to be appointed
On her 2010 appointment as High Sheriff of Bristol, Peaches Golding became the second Black person and the first Black woman to hold the position.
2012: Bristol Pound launched
The Bristol Pound was launched as a form of local currency, encouraging people to spend money in local, independent businesses around the city. It ceased operating in August 2020.
2012: Bristol votes for its first elected mayor
Bristol became the only city to vote for a directly elected mayor in a day of referendums in ten cities: Birmingham, Bradford, Coventry, Leeds, Manchester, Newcastle upon Tyne, Nottingham, Sheffield and Wakefield. George Ferguson was sworn in as mayor of Bristol in November 2012.
2015: Bristol is European Green Capital for 2015
Bristol was the first UK city to ever be awarded the accolade of European Green Capital in 2015. Bristol’s year as European Green Capital was a a city-wide initiative with many organisations involved.
2016: Bristol elects Marvin Rees as Mayor
Marvin Rees was first elected mayor in May 2016. On that day, Bristol became the first major European city to have elected a mayor of Black African heritage.
2018: Bristol’s Lord Lieutenant, Peaches Golding, elected Mayor, Marvin Rees, and Lord Mayor, Cleo Lake, all have Black African heritage
In 2018 Bristol’s Lord Lieutenant, Peaches Golding, elected Mayor, Marvin Rees, and Lord Mayor, Cleo Lake, all have Black African heritage.
2020: Bristol Youth Strike 4 Climate
Tens of thousands of people attended a Bristol Youth Strike 4 Climate event addressed by activist Greta Thunberg in February 2020. Bristol’s climate strikes began in February 2019.
2020: Black Lives Matter protestors topple statue of slave trader Edward Colston
In response to the murder of George Floyd in the United States, protests took place around the globe. In June 2020, Bristol joined the protests tied to the Black Lives Matter movement. It was during this that the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was toppled, graffitied and pushed into Bristol Harbour. Four protesters were later cleared of criminal damage, and the statue was exhibited in the M Shed museum for a period from June 2021.
2022: A referendum sees Bristol reject the post of directly elected mayor in favour of a committee system
The position of mayor will decease in 2024, at the end of Marvin Rees’s second term.
2023: Bristol 650
Bristol will mark the 650th anniversary of Bristol becoming an independent City and County.