Timeline of Somerset history
Key dates in the history of Somerset
- 43–47 – Roman invasion and occupation
 - 491 – Battle of Mons Badonicus (may have been fought in Somerset) (uncertain date)
 - 537 – Battle of Camlann (sometimes located at Queen Camel) (uncertain date)
 - 577 – Battle of Deorham (Dyrham, Gloucestershire) – Saxons occupied Bath
 - 658 – Battle of Peonnum (Penselwood ?) – Saxons then occupied most of Somerset
 - 710 – Battle of Llongborth (? Langport)
 - 845 – First documentary reference to "Somersæte"
 - 878 – Battle of Cynwit – Saxon victory over the Danes by Ealdorman Odda
 - 878 – Battle of Ethandun – West Saxon victory over the Danes (uncertain whether in Somerset or Wiltshire)
 - 878 – Treaty of Wedmore – after defeat of Danes by King Alfred the Great
 - c900 – Kings of Wessex hold court at Cheddar
 - 973 – King Edgar of England crowned at Bath
 - 988 – St Dunstan buried at Glastonbury
 - 1013 – Danish king Sweyn Forkbeard received submission of western thegns at Bath
 - 1088 – Siege of Ilchester
 - 1191 – Discovery of "King Arthur's" tomb at Glastonbury
 - 1497 – Perkin Warbeck's rebellion supported by Somerset men
 - 1643 – Battle of Lansdowne
 - 1645 – Siege of Taunton during the English Civil War
 - 1685 – Battle of Sedgemoor – Duke of Monmouth defeated
 - 1685 – Judge Jeffries holds the "Bloody Assizes" at Taunton
 - 1770 – Start of major enclosures of Somerset Levels
 - 1805 – Somerset Coal Canal Opened
 - 1827 – Bridgwater and Taunton Canal opened
 - 1875 – Formation of Somerset County Cricket Club
 - 1898 – County boundaries altered
 - 1956 – Chew Valley Lake opened by Queen Elizabeth II
 - 1974 – Formation of County of Avon, reducing the area of the County of Somerset
 - 1996 – Abolition of the County of Avon, creating the unitary authorities of North Somerset and Bath and North East Somerset