London timeline
US author Jack London publishes a novel, The Call of the Wild, in which a huge pet dog has alarming adventures
Emmeline Pankhurst founds the Women's Social and Political Union to fight for women's political rights in the UK
Erskine Childers has a best-seller in The Riddle of the Sands, a thriller about a planned German invasion of Britain
Henry James publishes The Ambassadors, the second of his three last novels written in rapid succession
The present granite Kew bridge, designed by Sir John Wolfe Barry and wider and flatter than its predecessor, is completed. The Ceremonial Opening is performed by King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra.
Ernest Rutherford and Frederick Soddy identify the phenomenon of radioactive half-life
An eight-storey riverside brick building, for use in the process of malting, is added to the ever-expanding Mortlake brewery
British philosopher G.E. Moore publishes Principia Ethica, an attempt to apply logic to ethics
Charles Rennie Mackintosh completes the Willow Tea Rooms in Glasgow for Miss Cranston
Work begins on England's first garden city, at Letchworth, based on the theories of Ebenezer Howard
Radnor House and grounds are opened to the public.
Charles Rolls and Henry Royce meet in a historic encounter in Manchester and launch their first car, the Rolls-Royde 10 hp, later in this same year.
Joseph Conrad publishes his novel Nostromo, about a revolution in South America and a fatal horde of silver
A new nave, chancel and north aisle, designed by Charles Innes, are added to St Mary's
France and Britain sign an Entente Cordiale, resolving several colonial disputes and laying the foundation for a new alliance
Henry James publishes his last completed novel, The Golden Bowl
The publisher Walter Blackie moves into Hill House at Helensburgh, designed for him by Charles Rennie Mackintosh
J.M Barrie's play for children Peter Pan, or the Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up has its premiere in London
Under the pseudonym Saki, H.H. Munro publishes Reginald, his first volume of short stories
Dublin's Abbey Theatre opens as a new home for the Irish National Theatre Society
The American sculptor Jacob Epstein moves from New York to settle in London
The Bloomsbury Group gathers for informal evenings at the family home of Virginia and Vanessa Stephens (later Virginia Woolf and Vanessa Bell)
Oscar Wilde's De Profundis, a letter of recrimination written in Reading Gaol to Lord Alfred Douglas, is published posthumously
The Ulster Unionist Party is founded in Belfast to oppose Home Rule
English physiologists William Bayliss and Ernest Starling coin the word 'hormone' for glandular secretions into the bloodstream