London timeline
The Scottish National Party, or SNP, is founded to campaign for an independent Scotland
In I, Claudius the autobiography of the Roman emperor is ghost-written by Robert Graves
Berthold Lubetkin and Ove Arup provide a modernist pool for the penguins in London Zoo
In A Handful of Dust Evelyn Waugh sends his hero Tony Last to a disastrous fate, far away in the Amazon rain forest
15-year-old English ballerina Margot Fonteyn makes her first appearance, dancing as a Snowflake in Nutcracker
T.S. Eliot's play Murder in the Cathedral has its first performance in Canterbury cathedral
Marie Rambert's London-based company, deriving originally from her school, takes the name Ballet Rambert
British publisher Allen Lane launches a paperback series to which he gives the name Penguin Books
Salvador Dali creates a stir by attending the opening of London's Surrealist exhibition in a diving suit
In response to the gang violence of Oswald Mosley's black-shirted thugs, a Public Order Act in the UK bans political uniforms
British mathematician Alan Turing writes an influential paper On Computable Numbers, with an Application to the Entscheidung Problem
John Maynard Keynes defines his economics in The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money
In Language, Truth and Logic 26-year-old A.J. Ayer produces a classic exposition of Logical Positivism
Terence Rattigan's first play, French without Tears, is performed in London
Alexander Korda's bleakly visionary film Things to Come is based on the H.G. Wells novel of 1933
The prototype of the Spitfire, designed by Reginald Mitchell, has its first test flight
Unemployed English workers march for 26 days from Jarrow, in Tyne and Wear, to demonstrate at Westminster
Wallis Simpson wins a decree nisi against her second husband and is therefore free to marry Edward VIII
The British Broadcasting Corporation puts out its first high-definition public television broadcast
Edward VIII informs Baldwin, the UK prime minister, that he intends to marry the American divorcée Wallis Simpson
Edward VIII, forced to choose between the British throne and Wallis Simpson, opts for the path of love and abdicates
Edward VIII is succeeded on the British throne by his brother, as George VI
Richmond Bridge is widened, to accommodate modern traffic, with the original stones used to clad the extension
British artist Ben Nicholson does the first of his characteristic abstract white reliefs
William Walton writes Crown Imperial for the coronation of George VI