1514 – The village, by this point known as Brighthelmstone, is burned to the ground during a French raid, with the only surviving building being St Nicholas Church.[7]
1545 – A map, the oldest known of the area, is presented to the King depicting the raid of 1514. The map also shows the beginnings of Hove, inlcuding St Andrew's Church, as well as two windmills to the north of Brighton.[8]
1559 – The Old Ship Hotel, the oldest hotel in Brighton, is built.[9]
1565 – The parish population is recorded as around 900.[5]
1580 – The parish population is recorded as around 1,450.[5]
1613 – The Preston Twins, a pair of elm trees believed to be the oldest in the world, are planted.[10]
c.1630 – The parish population is recorded as around 2,700.[5]
1657 – The parish population is recorded as around 4,000.[5]
1676 – The parish population is recorded as around 2,600.[5]
1703 – 17 November: The Great storm of 1703 causes significant damage to the town, with Daniel Defoe reporting that it looked "as though it had been bombarded.[11]
1786 – George, Prince of Wales, rents a farmhouse at the Old Steine.
1787 – George, Prince of Wales, begins construction of the Royal Pavilion on the site of his farmhouse.
1788 – A census finds the population of Brighton to be over 3,600 prior to a general inoculation due to an outbreak of smallpox which kills 34 people.[12]
1849 – An epidemic of cholera kills 194 people.[18]
1851 – The 1851 census records the population of Brighton to be 65,569.[13]
1861 – The 1861 census records the population of Brighton to be 77,693 and Hove/Preston as 10,668.[13]
1866 – 6 October: The West Pier opens after three years of construction.[20]
1871 – The 1871 census records the population of Brighton to be 90,011 and Hove/Preston as 13,749.[13]
1872 – 10 August: The oldest continuously operating aquarium in the world, Brighton Aquarium, is formally opened following an inauguration by Prince Arthur earlier that year.[21]
1881 – The 1881 census records the population of Brighton to be 107,546 and Hove/Preston as 29,333.[13]
1891 – The 1891 census records the population of Brighton to be 115,873 and Hove/Preston as 33,720.[13]
2020 – 6 February: The first case in Brighton of COVID-19 was reported when a man who returned from Singapore and France to Brighton on 28 January.[37][38][39]
2021
March: DEFRA announces a bylaw first proposed by the Sussex IFCA to prevent trawling on 304 square kilometres (117sqmi) of sea bed off the coast of Sussex. The law should help the rewilding and regeneration of the Sussex kelp forest.[40][41][42]
21 March: The 2021 census records the population of Brighton and Hove to be 277,105.[13]
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