Invasion of England
The term Invasion of England may refer to the following planned or actual invasions of what is now modern England, successful or otherwise:
Pre English Settlement of parts of Britain
- The 55 and 54 BC Caesar's invasions of Britain.
- The 43 AD Roman conquest of Britain.
- The 296 Roman invasion during Carausian Revolt.
- The fifth to sixth century Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain
Post English settlement of parts of Britain
- The eighth to eleventh century invasions of the British isles by the Vikings.
- The 1066 Norman conquest of England under William the Conqueror.
- The 1216 invasion of England by Louis VIII of France and Alexander II of Scotland, during the First Barons' War.
- Various invasions by the Scots from 1314-1513 during the Wars of Scottish Independence, the Hundred Years' War, and further Anglo-Scottish Wars.
- The 1326 invasion of England by Isabella of France and Roger Mortimer, leading to Isabella's regency until the ascendancy of her son, Edward III.
- The 1386 invasion by France was organised but never executed during the Hundred Years' War.
- The 1487 invasion from Ireland of the pretender Lambert Simnel.
- The 1495 landing with troops at Deal by Perkin Warbeck, who claimed to be Richard of Shrewsbury, the rightful King.
- The 1513 invasion of England by the Scots under James IV, which culminated in the Battle of Flodden
- The 1545 French invasion of the Isle of Wight during the Italian Wars.
- The 1588 Spanish Armada was a failed invasion of England after it was heavily defeated by storms and the English fleet.
- The 1596 2nd Spanish Armada shattered by storms off Cape Finisterre
- The 1597 3rd Spanish Armada dispersed by storms off the Lizard; landfall by small number of Spanish troops in Cornwall and Wales.
- The 1648 invasion of England by a Scottish army in support of Charles I (King of Scots) against the English parliament, defeated at Preston.
- The 1667 Raid on the Medway and Felixstowe Landguard during the Second Anglo-Dutch War.[1]
- The 1685 landing in England by the Duke of Monmouth and his supporters during the Monmouth Rebellion
- The 1688 invasion of England by the Dutch Republic, also known as the Glorious Revolution. (last successful invasion of England)
- The 1690 attack by the French on Teignmouth, Devon.
Following the Acts of Union 1707
- The (1708) planned French Invasion to put James Edward Stuart on the British throne as part of the War of the Spanish Succession.
- The 1715 Jacobite rising, from a Scottish base, in support of James III (the Old Pretender), defeated at Preston.
- The (1744) planned French invasion of Britain as part of the Austrian War of Succession.
- The 1745 French-backed Jacobite invasion of Britain led by Bonnie Prince Charlie.
- The (1759) planned French invasion halted by their naval defeat by Britain at the Battle of Quiberon Bay.[2]
- The (1779) never executed Franco-Spanish plans to invade Great Britain during the American Revolutionary War.
- Landing of a small French force, led by the Irish-American William Tate, at Fishguard in February 1797
- The (1803–1805) planned but never executed Napoleonic invasion of Britain.
- The (1940) partially planned but never executed German Invasion of England, better known as Operation Sea Lion.
Fiction
There have been numerous portrayals of an invasion of Britain in fiction including:
Films
- Went the Day Well? (1942)
- It Happened Here, a 1966 film portraying a Nazi invasion
- Jackboots on Whitehall (2009)
- How I now live American film depicting the invasion of England by unknown terrorists
Books
- SS-GB by Len Deighton
- The Swoop! by P. G. Wodehouse
- Asterix in Britain portraying a Roman
- Rule Britannia by Daphne du Maurier - an invasion by the United States
- The Long White Winter by Sebastian Faulks
- The Battle of Dorking by George Tomkyns Chesney
- Fatherland by Robert Harris
- Resistance by Owen Sheers
See also
- Border Reivers
- Scottish Marches
- Prehistoric settlement of the British Isles
- Historical immigration to Great Britain
- Invasion of Ireland (disambiguation)
- Invasions of the British Isles
References
- ↑ http://www.modern-day-commando.com/Landguard-Fort.html
- ↑ The Seven Years War in Europe, 1756-1763 by Franz A. J. Szabo
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