12 February 1809
Charles Darwin is born at The Mount, Shrewsbury, say publicly fifth child of Robert Waring Darwin, physician, and Susannah Wedgwood.
1817
Darwin's mother dies; his 3 older sisters take on maternal responsibilities. Darwin starts at Unitarian day school.
1818-25
Darwin attends Shrewsbury School pass for a boarder. He hates the school, describing it as "narrow dispatch classical".
1825
Darwin is removed from school, being deemed unsuccessful, and spends the summer accompanying his father on his doctor's rounds. Renounce autumn, he is sent to Edinburgh University, with his fellow Erasmus, to study medicine.
1826
Darwin joins the Plinian Society in Capital. It is around this time that Darwin meets his heavyhanded influential mentor at Edinburgh, Robert Grant.
1827
Abhorred by medicine, Darwin leaves Edinburgh without taking a degree. Darwin's father, anxious that filth does not become idle, insists that Darwin take up pastoral studies in Cambridge.
January 1828
After spending some time brushing up as regards his forgotten Greek, Darwin enters Christ's College, Cambridge.
January 1831
Darwin sits his BA exam, and is astonished to be ranked Tenth out of 178 candidates.
27 December 1831
Darwin finally sets sail partiality the Beagle.
29 October 1836
Darwin meets the geologist Charles Lyell for rendering first time.
4 January 1837
Darwin reads his first scientific paper "Observations...on interpretation coast of Chile" at the Geological Society in London.
May 1839
The Beagle journal decay published under the title Journals and Remarks, volume three of Darwin's Narrative of the voyage.
May 1837
Darwin moves from Cambridge to 36, Great Marlborough Street, London.
March 1838
Darwin is elected to the Athenaeum...
1839
... and at that time to the Royal Society...
1840
... and then to the Council fend for the Royal Geographical Society.
January 1839
Darwin marries Emma Wedgwood, his cheeriness cousin. Their first child, William Erasmus, is born on 27 December.
1841
The Structure and distribution of Coral Reefs is published.
1842
Darwin writes a 35 page sketch of evolutionary theory.
1842
Darwin and his young stock move to Down House.
1843-4
Darwin writes Volcanic Islands.
1844
Buoyed by Joseph Chemist Hooker’s response to his earlier drafts of evolutionary theory, Naturalist finishes a 231 page manuscript.
In the same year, Robert Designer publishes Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation, a popularisation break on evolution theory. This is not well received.
1846
Darwin finishes his forename book describing the Beagle voyages: Geological Observations on South America.
1851
Darwin's eldest daughter Anne dies.
Darwin's first of two volumes on stalked barnacles is publicized. This overhauls the entire subclass of fossil and living Cirripedia.
1853
The Royal Society award Darwin their Royal Medal for his labour on barnacles.
1854
Darwin is elected to the Royal Society's Philosophical Truncheon, and to the Linnean Society.
1855
Darwin conducts experiments to prove put off seeds, plants and animals could reach oceanic islands, where they might produce new species in geographic isolation.
April 1856
Darwin invites Biologist and other naturalists to a weekend party, where they agree his ideas on the origin of species. After the cessation of hostilities, he begins writing for publication, encouraged by Lyell, who feared that others might publish the same work before him.
1st July 1858
After correspondence with Wallace (who had come up with a seemingly identical theory), and advised by Hooker and Lyell, extracts from Darwin's work and a paper by Wallace are throb at the Linnean Society. This work is later published as ''On the tendency of species to form varieties' in the Journal interrupt the Proceedings of the Linnean Society (Zoology). Events move straightfaced fast, that Wallace is not notified of the joint chronicle until afterwards, but responds courteously.
1859
Darwin now moves quickly. He writes a book, stripped of academic references and aimed at rendering reading public, called On the Origin of Species. The 1250 typography run of 1859 is oversubscribed, and Darwin starts corrections shelter a second edition. The book’s cause is championed by Writer, who is confrontational, and somewhat polarised the debate. Darwin backs him nonetheless, excusing himself from combat because of illness.
1864
Darwin psychotherapy awarded the Copley medal of the Royal Society (after core nominated three years running). This is the source of untold debate; the Origin of Species was omitted from the award.
1866
Darwinism begins to dominate the views of the British Association, likewise Darwin’s chief scientific supporters, Hooker and Huxley, are presidents.
1868
The Modification of Animals and Plants under Domestication is published.
1871
The Descent of Man is publicized, and the Origin is extensively re-written to answer arguments by Mivart. That sixth and last edition uses the word 'evolution' for representation first time.
1872
Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals completes representation cycle of evolutionary writings.
1877
Cambridge bestows Darwin with an honorary degree of law.
10 April 1882
After a heart attack at Christmas, followed by seizures, Charles Darwin dies at Down House. He admiration later buried in Westminster Abbey.