Cthulhu Mythos Timeline
Contents
Snagged with permission
- I asked before snagging; got permission, but this is to be published so we need to rewrite/paraphrase everything here. Maybe break it down into components. Wow, there's a lot of shit here. Also pending - data from author on crediting the original compiler/source. I really only expect Phobia, Winthrop and PoC to find this page, as none of the rest of you seem all that interested in this wiki and I haven't linked here from anywhere. In fact, I really don't PLAN to link here from anywhere. I plan to snag tidbits and spit them out onto target pages and then eventually delete this thingey for JEB's sake. --Squashua 21:05, 17 February 2006 (EST)
CTHULHU MYTHOS TIMELINE
by James "JEB" Bowman ([email protected])
Extra special thanks to Daniel Harms, for his two Encyclopedia Cthulhiana reference books, as well as his additional help. The superb Encyclopedia Cthulhiana works (especially the 2nd Edition) were the main source for this Timeline, and excellent texts on top of that! Check out his website, The Necronomicon Files.
Much of the earliest events and certain events throughout the rest of the Timeline are derived specifically from Shannon Appel's excellent "Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos" in the Encyclopedia Cthulhiana 2nd Edition's Appendix D. Further useful timeline information for game events was graciously provided by Lynn Willis.
I also give thanks to Daniel Harms, Guy Bock, Geoff Burling and docsavage80, who brought to my attention several necessary corrections and clarifications.
Of course, thanks also go to all the great Mythos authors, especially H.P. Lovecraft!
2 trillion years ago: According to the Eltdown Shards, a Yekubian cube lands on a planet near the Milky Way Galaxy's rim. [A translation error or an indication that scientific theory is greatly mistaken?] ("The Challenge from Beyond," Moore et al)
Creation of the Universe
15 billion years ago: The universe is created in the Big Bang. According to some, Azathoth may be responsible for this. (Scientific theory; "The Plague Jar," Mackie)
Earth Forms
4.5 billion years ago: The planet Earth forms. Cthugha and its fire vampires arrive on the Earth as it cools. ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel)
3.8 billion years ago: Yidhra comes into being at the same time as life arises on Earth. ("Where Yidhra Walks," DeBill)
Shortly after the rise of Earthen life, Tsathoggua arrives. He settles in the dark gulf of N'kai. ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel)
3 billion years ago: One of the Yekubians' cubes lands on a planet near the center of the Milky Way Galaxy. ("The Challenge from Beyond," Moore et al)
2 billion years ago: Chaugnar Faugn incarnates in a primitive form on Earth. It evolves itself over the coming millenia. ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel)
1 billion years ago: The Elder Things arrive on Earth. They land in the Antarctic Ocean and found their first city there. The Elder Things create the proto-shoggoth (which may be Ubbo-Sathla), which in turn produces other creatures that act as servitors and food. ("At the Mountains of Madness," Lovecraft; "Ubbo-Sathla," Smith; ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel))
900 million years ago: By this time, Elder Thing cities have spread across the oceans of Earth. ("At the Mountains of Madness," Lovecraft; ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel))
800 million years ago: The Elder Things adapt to land. Many remain in the oceans, however. ("At the Mountains of Madness," Lovecraft; ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel))
750 million years ago: The Flying Polyps arrive on Earth, and build their basalt towers on the land. They try to expand into the oceans, sparking a bitter war with the Elder Things. Eventually, the Elder Things are victorious. ("The Shadow Out of Time," Lovecraft; "Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel)
450 million years ago: Elder Thing experiments lead to the first vertebrates, fish, which they permit to evolve. ("At the Mountains of Madness," Lovecraft; ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel))
400 million years ago: The Great Race of Yith, fleeing catastrophe on their homeworld, transmit their minds into a race of cone-shaped creatures on Earth. They drive the Flying Polyps underground and imprison them there. Following that war, they build their first and greatest city, Pnakotus, in modern-day Australia. ("The Shadow Out of Time," Lovecraft; ?? ("The Horror in the Gallery," Carter)
370 million years ago: Amphibians arise on Earth. Chaugnar Faugn later creates the Miri Nigri from amphibian flesh, as a servitor race. (Factual; "Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel)
350 million years ago: A cataclysm raises numerous new land masses, such as Ponape and R'lyeh. The disaster also destroys several marine Elder Thing cities. Cthulhu and his kin arrive from the star Xoth, and settle on the newly-risen landmasses. The Elder Things war with Cthulhu, but they eventually make peace. Cthulhu is permitted to keep his current surface territories, and the Elder Things keep the rest of the planet. ("At the Mountains of Madness," Lovecraft; ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel))
The Deep Ones enter the service of Cthulhu, and help build the city of R'lyeh. ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel)
According to legend, the foundation of the underground civilization of K'n-yan dates back to this time. ("The Mound," Lovecraft and Bishop)
Imprisonment of the Great Old Ones
300 million years ago: A cosmic cataclysm (possibly a certain configuration of the stars, possibly a war with the Elder Gods) occurs, resulting in R'lyeh sinking beneath the waves. Cthulhu is imprisoned within the city. In all likelihood, the other Great Old Ones are imprisoned around the same time. ("At the Mountains of Madness," Lovecraft; ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel))
Reptiles arise on Earth. Yig is allegedly involved in their creation. (Factual; CREATOR??)
275 million years ago: The Serpent People arise and found the kingdom of Valusia. ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel; "The Children of Yig," Appel)
Between 250 and 200 million years ago: If the G'harne Fragments are believed, the city of G'harne had been built by the Triassic period. The Fragments themselves also date from this time. ("Cement Surroundings," Lumley)
250 million years ago: The shoggoths rebel against the Elder Things, but are defeated. ("At the Mountains of Madness," Lovecraft; ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel))
Atlach-Nacha rules its arachnid Children in the early Mesozoic.
Beginning of Triassic Period
225 million years ago: The dinosaurs arise and destroy the Serpent People civilization. Those that survive go into hiding. ("Timeline of the Mythos," Appel; "The Children of Yig," Appel)
The stone tablets that become the Celaeno Fragments are scribed around the middle Triassic. One set of the tablets is eventually taken to the Great Library of Celaeno, on the fourth planet around the star Celaeno.
160 million years ago: The mi-go set up a mining operation on Earth. The Elder Things try to battle them in space, but find they have devolved so much that they can no longer do so. The mi-go eventually control much of the northern portion of Earth. ("At the Mountains of Madness," Lovecraft; ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel))
Some mi-go settle in the land that will become Mu, and worship Ghatanothoa. ("Out of the Aeons," Heald and Lovecraft)
The mi-go also bring with them two objects, later known as the Black Seal of Iraan and the Shining Trapezohedron.
150 million years ago: The Great Race of Yith foils a Yekubian invasion attempt. Sometime thereafter, the tablets later known as the Eltdown Shards, which record this event, are buried in modern-day southern England. ("The Challenge from Beyond," Moore et al)
100 million years ago: Height of the Elder Thing civilization. ("At the Mountains of Madness," Lovecraft; ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel))
Era of Cataclysm
65 million years ago: Dinosaurs are wiped out. How this affected or is connected to the alien races on the planet is unknown. (Factual)
50 million years ago: Another cataclysm strikes Earth. The Flying Polyps escape and take revenge on the Great Race, which sends its greatest minds to bodies on the planet Jupiter. From Jupiter, the Yithians proceed to bodies similar to their Earthly ones on a world orbiting a dark star near Taurus. ("The Shadow Out of Time," Lovecraft; "The Shadow Out of Space," Lovecraft and Derleth; ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel))
Many Elder Thing cities are also destroyed, including their original settlement in Antarctica. To replace it, a new Antarctic city is constructed. ("At the Mountains of Madness," Lovecraft; ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel))
A race of pre-human Lemurians build the city of Shamballah in the Great Eastern Desert. ("The Diary of Alonzo Typer," Lovecraft and William Lumley; ? GREAT? POSSIBLY GOBI?)
20 million years ago: An early race of humans founds the land of Theem'hdra. The civilization soon dies out. Teh Atht, a wizard of the time, leaves behind a manuscript later known as Legends of the Olden Runes.
6 million years ago: A member of a race of "insect-philosophers" which hail from the fourth moon of Jupiter exchanges minds with one of the Great Race of Yith. ("The Shadow Out of Time," Lovecraft)?? INSECT PHILOSOPHERS?
5 million years ago: The Serpent People city of Yoth flourishes at this time under the guidance of their god, Yig. Their science has progressed to the point that they have created servant species, such as the gyaa-yothn and voormis. However, Yoth is destroyed by Yig when some of the Serpent People turn to the worship of Tsathoggua. A few Yig-worshipping survivors found a new civilization in Hyperborea. Tsathoggua probably journeys to Hyperborea following these events. ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel; "The Children of Yig," Appel; )
The deep one city of Yatta-uc, beneath modern Lake Titicaca, is in its heyday at this time.
3 million years ago: The voormis gain their freedom. They create a kingdom on the surface of Hyperborea, based around the worship of Tsathoggua.
Rhan-Tegoth comes to Earth from Yuggoth, and comes to dwell in the Arctic. He feeds off sacrifices and worship made by primitive natives, but eventually they forget him and he enters a state of hibernation. Rhan-Tegoth eventually changes into a statue-like form. ("The Horror in the Museum," Heald and Lovecraft)
2 million years ago: As Elder Thing civilization continues to decline, they retreat to their cities on the southernmost tip of South America and the Antarctic regions. ("At the Mountains of Madness," Lovecraft; ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel))
1.7 million years ago: Ithaqua appears in the northernmost regions of Earth, resulting in the decline of the voormis.
Between 1.6 million years ago and 10,000 years ago: The Sussex Fragments date from around this time, the Pleistocene era.
1.5 million years ago: Sarkomand, capital city of the men from Leng, is abandoned and falls into ruin when the moon-beasts enslave the Lengites and take them elsewhere. ("The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath," Lovecraft)
The being later known as Dr. Marc Souvate becomes the immortal vehicle for the worshippers of Nodens. He begins a series of jumps forward across long spans of time, heading towards the time when Nodens will return. ("Glimpses," Attanasio)
Ice Age
1 million years ago: The Ice Age is brought about by the combined power of Ithaqua and Aphoom Zhah. The voormis civilization in Hyperborea is destroyed first, replaced by equally ill-fated humans. Some great human sorcerers, including Zon Mezzamalech, live in this short-lived kingdom. The human civilization of Zobna falls next, moving to Lomar in the south and destroying the native cannibal gnophkehs. The much-devolved Elder Things, no longer able to resist intense cold as their ancestors did, develop artificial heating to try to survive. (; "Ubbo-Sathla," Smith; "At the Mountains of Madness," Lovecraft)
850,000 years ago: A king of Lomar is among those that exchange minds with one of the Great Race of Yith. ("The Shadow Out of Time," Lovecraft)
750,200 years ago: The time of the wizard Eibon, greatest wizard of Hyperborea. During his life, the worship of Tsathoggua is driven from Hyperborea by priests of Yhoundeh. Eibon disappears at the age of 132 during the Yhoundeh inquisitions, and his assistant Cyron of Varaad correlates several of his sorcerous works into the Book of Eibon. Cyron also writes the Vita Ivonis, an account of Eibon's life. ("The Door to Saturn," Smith; "The Life of Eibon according to Cyron of Varaad," Carter; "History and Chronology of The Book of Eibon," Carter)
750,000 years ago: The great polar civilzations finally fall. The Elder Things retreat to deep within the Earth, and the people of Lomar are overwhelmed by the Inuto people. The human civilization in Hyperborea splinters, and its surviving peoples scatter across the planet. A secret brotherhood saves copies of the Book of Eibon from Hyperborea and takes them to mainland Europe. Some voormis begin worshipping Ithaqua, while the rest flee and become known as the Sasquatch and Yeti. The serpent people move to Lemuria and become known as the Dragon Kings. Tsathoggua returns to N'kai. ( ("At the Mountains of Madness," Lovecraft); "Polaris," Lovecraft; "Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel; ???; "History and Chronology of The Book of Eibon," Carter; "The Children of Yig," Appel; Thongor and the Wizard of Lemuria, Carter)
Prehistory
Arise of Homo Sapiens
500,000 years ago: Homo sapiens, modern humanity, arises. These earliest true humans found the kingdom of Nemedis, and war for a thousand years with the Dragon Kings. The humans win, and the serpent people are driven south. (Thongor and the Wizard of Lemuria, Carter; "The Children of Yig," Appel)
The exiled serpent people form the second kingdom of Valusia. A few, however, hide instead among the islands of the sea of Neol-Shendis, awaiting their time to rise again. (Thongor and the Wizard of Lemuria, Carter; "The Children of Yig," Appel)
493,000 years ago: Thongor, a barbarian of Lemuria, opposes an attempt at Dragon King takeover with ancient magic. Thongor will later unite Lemuria in his Golden Empire of the Sun. (Thongor and the Wizard of Lemuria, Carter; ?; "The Children of Yig," Appel)
393,000 years ago: Lemuria is shattered by volcanic eruptions, leaving only that which ultimately becomes Hyboria. Some survivors found the First Empire of Atlantis, centered around the capital city of Caiphul. Many years later, this first Lemurian Atlantis is replaced by The Second Empire, founded by the people of Shem, who make their capital the City of the Golden Gates. (The Black Star, Carter; "Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel)
300,000 years ago: Around this time, the female deep one Pht'thya-l'yi is born to Mother Hydra.
200,000 years ago: The human kingdom in Mu reaches its height. At this time, the Muvians worship many dark gods, including Ghatanothoa, Ythogtha, and Zoth-Ommog. ("Out of the Aeons," Heald and Lovecraft)
173,148 BC: In the Year of the Red Moon, Ghatanothoa becomes the supreme god in Mu, following the god's destruction of a high priest of Shub-Niggurath. ("Out of the Aeons," Lovecraft and Heald)
161,844 BC: Ghatanothoa's worship has become so strong that other religions are outlawed. Zanthu, last high priest of Ythogtha, tries to free his god, destroying Mu. Zanthu flees to the Plateau of Tsang, where he scribes what are later known as the Zanthu Tablets. ("The Thing in the Pit," Carter; "The Dweller in the Tomb," Carter)
c. 80,000 BC: Pht'thya-l'yi, daughter of Mother Hydra, comes to live in the deep one city of Y'ha-nthlei. (The Shadow Over Innsmouth, Lovecraft)
c. 50,000 BC: A race of "great-headed brown people" dominate South Africa. One of their generals is among those who exchange minds with one of the Yithians. ("The Shadow Out of Time," Lovecraft)
c. 24,000 BC: The City of the Golden Gates, capital of the Second Kingdom of Atlantis, sinks beneath the waves as a result of dark magics. This event also devastates much of the Atlantean continent. (The Black Star, Carter; "Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel)
After the loss of contact with Atlantis, the people of K'n-yan receive only limited knowledge of the outer world for the next 25,000 or so years. ("The Mound," Bishop and Lovecraft)
Thurian Age
c. 20,000 BC: Many great countries have arisen in the Thurian continent, including Commoria, Grondor, Kamelia, Thule, and Verulia. The survivors of Lemuria and Atlantis have degenerated into barbarians; the Picts arise around this time. Valusia is taken over by humans. ("The Hyborian Age," Howard; "The Shadow Kingdom," Howard)
Some time later, the serpent people try to take back Valusia by subterfuge, but are stopped by King Kull. ("The Shadow Kingdom," Howard; "The Children of Yig," Appel)
c. 18,000 BC: A Great Cataclysm destroys the old world, bringing in the Hyborian Age.
Hyborian Age
The Atlantean continent's western regions sink, leaving only the islands that become Bal-Sagoth and Poseidonis. (??western; "The Gods of Bal-Sagoth," Howard; Poseidonis??)
The last Atlanteans, who flee northward, become the barbaric Cimmerians. The surviving Lemurians are enslaved by an unknown ancient race in the eastern part of the Thurian continent.
Mu rises again, and Ghatanothoa summons his servitors, the lloigor. The lloigor enslave the humans who came to live on the newly risen land. ("The Return of the Lloigor," Wilson; ??YEAR THIS SOURCE SAYS B/T 20,000 AND 12,000)
Bokrug and the Thuum'ha come to Earth and found the kingdoms of Ib in the Middle East and Lh-yib in the land of the Cimmerians.
c. 17,500 BC: A lesser cataclysm breaks the Thurian continent in two.
c. 15,500 BC: In the eastern part of the shattered Thurian continent, the Lemurians free themselves from slavery. The Lemurians travel west and overwhelm the serpent people there, founding the kingdoms of Acheron and Stygia. They adopt the practices of the serpent people and worship many dark gods, including Nyarlat, Sebek, Set, Gol-Goroth, and Shuddam-El. The Stygians also cultivate a plant called the Black Lotus, which "enhanced" their worship of their deities. ("The Hyborian Age," Howard; "Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel; "The Children of Yig," Appel; "Dope War of the Black Tong," Price)
The surviving serpent people flee to the southern edge of the continent. ("The Children of Yig," Appel)
c. 15,000 BC: The Cimmerians, under the chieftain Crom-Ya, begin their ascent to glory. Crom-Ya is later deified as the god Crom. ("The Shadow Out of Time," Lovecraft)
c. 13,000 BC: The Hyborians, a northern people, conquer Acheron and form eight separate countries- Aquilonia, Argos, Brythunia, Corinthia, Koth, Nemedia, Ophir, and Zingara. Stygia, however, endures. ("The Hyborian Age," Howard; "Black Eons," Howard and Price)
The oldest copies of the R'lyeh Text, written on scrolls in a Chinese-esque language, date from at least this time, although they are probably older. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
c. 10,000 BC: The time of Conan. The Cimmerian barbarian wipes out the last serpent people in their Hyborian city of Yanyoga. ("Timeline of the Mythos," Appel; "The Children of Yig," Appel)
c. 9600 BC: The Hyborian Age begins to end, as the nations and peoples of the era begin to fight. Aquilonia and Hyperborea battle, the Picts and Hyrkanians wreak havoc across the land, and the Vanir destroy Stygia. The Aesir settle in Nemedia, and the Cimmerians war against the Hyrkanians before retreating to the east. The Hyborians themselves are overwhelmed by another northern people. This is the time of the heroic Ghor Kin-Slayer of the Aesir, and the warlord Gorm of the Picts. ("The Hyborian Age," Howard; "Black Eons," Howard and Price)
Modern Prehistory
c. 9550 BC: A final cataclysm destroys the Hyborian world and rises new land masses, moving the world into more or less its modern configuration. Portions of the Hyborian continent, Poseidonis, and Mu all sink beneath the waves. In later times, this event is remembered as the Great Flood. ("The Hyborian Age," Howard; "Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel)
The lloigor scatter across the world, settling in the Middle East, New England, Wales, and elsewhere. ("The Return of the Lloigor," Wilson)
The Black Lotus is taken from the collapsing Stygia to the Plateaus of Leng and Sung, where it continues to be cultivated. In the remnants of Stygia, the Vanir found the country of Khem. ("Dope War of the Black Tong," Price; "Black Eons," Howard and Price)
The Brythunians emigrate to a land east of Khem and become the priests of Mitra, keeping their bloodline pure and separate from the local population. (The Winds of Zarr, Tierney)
The city of Sarnath is founded in Mesopotamia by another group of humans, near the Thuum'ha city of Ib. The people of Sarnath grow to dislike the people of Ib. ("The Doom that Came to Sarnath," Lovecraft; 9550???)
The province of Averoigne is founded by a people called the Averones (survivors of Atlantis) in modern-day France.
Between c. 9550 BC and c. 7000 BC: The First Dynasty of Khem falls. A race of human-alien hybrids takes their place, building the earliest pyramids. (Khai of Ancient Khem, Lumley)
c. 9000 BC: The men of Sarnath slaughter the Thuum'ha of Ib, and are visited thereafter by omens promising doom. ("The Doom that Came to Sarnath," Lovecraft; 9000??)
c. 8000 BC: Bokrug, god of the Thuum'ha, brings doom to Sarnath. ("The Doom that Came to Sarnath," Lovecraft; Encyclopedia Cthulhiana 2nd Ed., Harms)
Followers of the prophet Kish, who foretold Sarnath's doom, flee the city. The Testament of Kish, which tells of Sarnath's destruction, is written shortly afterwards- however, it is wholly lost. Kish's followers also translate the Book of Eibon into the Mnar language. (??; "History and Chronology of The Book of Eibon," Carter
c. 7000 BC: Khasathut, decadent sixth pharaoh of the Second Dynasty of Khem, is overthrown by Khai, a probable descendant of the Vanir. Khai brings about the Third Dynasty of Khem. However, the country has been doomed by the sorcerous battle with Khasathut to become a desert. (Khai of Ancient Khem, Lumley; ?Vanir)
c. 5000 BC: E-poh, leader of the Tcho-Tcho of the Plateau of Sung, is born.
c. 4200 BC: The Seven Cryptical Books of Hsan are translated into ancient Chinese. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
c. 4000 BC: The Seven Books of Tan, which may be one and the same as the Seven Cryptical Books of Hsan, date back to this time.
Ancient History
Bronze Age
c. 2613 BC: Nephren-Ka, a truly foul pharaoh, rises to power in Third Dynasty Egypt. He revives the worship of dark gods such as Nyarlat, whom he renames Nyarlathotep. He also finds the Shining Trapezohedron and builds a temple around it. The pharaoh Snefru overthrows Nephren-Ka, and his name is utterly erased from Egyptian history. However, the dark religions he rediscovered are not forgotten again. (; "Fane of the Black Pharaoh," Bloch)
Nephren-Ka and his followers flee to the underground catacombs of Kish, where Nephren-Ka sacrifices a hundred victims to Nyarlathotep. In exchange, Nephren-Ka is given the gift of prophecy, and he spends the rest of his days drawing the future of the Earth on the walls of his tomb. ("Fane of the Black Pharaoh," Bloch)
c. 2200 BC: Queen Nitocris, the Ghoul-Queen, rises to power in Sixth Dynasty Egypt. She revives the worship of Nyarlathotep once more, and uncovers the Shining Trapezohedron. She engages in many unspeakable acts during her reign, weakening her nation sufficiently to usher in the First Intermediate Period of Egyptian history. She leaves behind an artifact known as the Mirror of Nitocris. (??; "Imprisoned with the Pharaohs," Lovecraft and Houdini; "The Mirror of Nitocris," Lumley)
c. 2150 BC: The Black Pharaoh, sometimes called Khotep, lives at the end of the Sixth Dynasty of Egypt. ("Curse of the Black Pharaoh," Carter)
Between 2000 BC and 1750 BC: A reference to Leng is found in a papyrus written during Egypt's Middle Kingdom. ("Long Meg and Her Daughters," Finch)
Between 1991 BC and 1783 BC: Nyarlathotep is worshipped, in the form of the Bringer of Pests, during Egypt's Twelfth Dynasty.
Iron Age
Between 1783 BC and 1674 BC: The Thirteenth-Dynasty Egyptian high priest Luveh-Keraph, worshipper of Bast, writes the Black Rites in the Scroll of Bubastis.
c. 1733 BC: Nophru-Ka, a Nyarlathotep-worshipper, founds an Egyptian separatist movement. He tries to overthrow Pharaoh Khasekhemre Neferhotep I, but is slain by the ruler. Nophru-Ka's followers are later killed by Shudde-M'ell and his spawn, but his line continues on, eventually leading to the Brotherhood of the Beast.
Between 1640 and 1674 BC: Khephnes, who lives during the Fourteenth Dynasty of Egypt, learns the secrets of Nyarlathotep. He is also among those who temporarily exchanges minds with one of the Great Race of Yith. ("The Shadow Out of Time," Lovecraft)
c. 1674 BC: The Hyksos, a nomadic people who may have Stygian blood, take over Egypt. The first Hyksos pharaoh travels to G'harne and brings back the worship of Shudde-M'ell.
c. 1600 BC: Syro-Phoenician scholar Imilcar Narba translates the Book of Eibon into Punic."History and Chronology of The Book of Eibon," Carter
c. 1370 BC: During the 18th Dynasty of Egypt, Akhenaten raises the mummy of Nephren-Ka, who converts him to the worship of "Aten." Aten is in truth a disguise for Yog-Sothoth, imprisoned in nearby Mt. Sinai. (?; The Winds of Zarr, Tierney)
c. 1290 BC: During the 19th Dynasty of Egypt, the Zarr come to Earth to free Yog-Sothoth. As they do so, they attack the great cities of Egypt. Yog-Sothoth returns to his other-dimensional home. (The Winds of Zarr, Tierney)
c. 1000 BC: The Phoenicians are at their height. They hold Atlach-Nacha in reverence. (Factual; ??
Between 1000 BC and 40 AD: The people of K'n-yan find a way to halt the aging process and prevent death by any means save violence, accident, or personal will. ("The Mound," Bishop and Lovecraft)
c. 300 BC: The Picts are shattered into several smaller tribes that feud among themselves. ("Worms of the Earth," Howard)
The R'lyeh Text is translated into Chinese. (Call of Cthulhu 5th Ed., Petersen and Willis et al (G))
Between the Late 3rd Century BC and the Early 2nd Century BC: The R'lyeh Text is translated into Latin. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
213 BC: China's first emperor, Chin Shi Huang Di, orders the Burning of the Books, wherein many texts not in favor with the emperor are destroyed. Among these texts, according to some, are the Seven Cryptical Books of Hsan. A few copies are reputedly confiscated and stored in the Imperial Library, only to be destroyed in that building's razing six years later. Subsequent Chinese authors compile corrupted versions of the Seven Cryptical Books, using their own memories and what few fragments can be found, to replace the Chinese originals. (Factual; (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
c. 200 BC: Theodotides, a Greco-Bactrian official, is among those that exchanges minds with one of the Great Race of Yith. ("The Shadow Out of Time," Lovecraft)
c. 100 BC: Possible first appearance of the Cabala of Sabaoth. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G))
The earliest known Greek translation of the Book of Eibon, the Peri ton Eibon, dates from this time. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
Between 82 BC and 75 BC: During the time of the Roman dictator Sulla, a quæstor named Titus Sempronius Blaesus is among those that exchange minds with one of the Great Race of Yith. ("The Shadow Out of Time," Lovecraft)
c. 80 BC: Chaugnar Faugn is discovered by a Roman legion. It destroys the legion, but retreats with the Miri Nigri to the Plateau of Tsang. Faugn leaves its brothers behind.
Between 51 BC and AD 486: During the Roman period of Gaul, the towns of Simaesis and Avionium (later Ximes and Vyones) in Averoigne are feared due to worship of a god named Sadoqua.
AD 9: The battle of Teutoberger Wald occurs; among the Germanic tribesmen in the battle was Wolfred Herman Freimann, who later exchanged minds with a Yithian. (The Transition of Titus Crow, Lumley)
c. AD 10: Simon of Gitta is born.
AD 27: Simon of Gitta accidentally helps to summon Cthulhu.
AD 31: Simon of Gitta disrupts a plot involving Shub-Niggurath. ("The Seed of the Star-God," Tierney)
AD 37: The Roman Emperor Tiberius acquires the Serpent Ring of Set through one of his nobles, shortly before he dies. Simon of Gitta is rumored to be connected to Tiberius' death.
Between AD 37 and AD 41: The Roman Emperor Caligula takes a copy of the Book of Thoth from Egypt, to experiment with it. Shortly before he dies, the book is destroyed. Simon of Gitta is rumored to be connected to Caligula's death.
Between AD 41 and 54: Simon of Gitta enters the service of the Roman Emperor Claudius.
AD 41: Simon of Gitta befriends some of the last of the serpent people.
AD 42: Simon of Gitta battles the forces of Cthugha.
Between AD 43 and AD 450: Roman legionnaires occupying the Severn Valley in Britain discover the Great Old One Byatis imprisoned behind a stone door in an ancient camp. Horrified, they imprison it behind a five-pointed star. However, from time to time, Byatis breaks free, stalking victims. This creates the legend of the "Berkeley Toad." ("The Room in the Castle," Campbell)
Between AD 69 and AD 79: During the reign of the Roman emperor Vespasian, the Priscus family is wiped out, and its name excised from Roman records. ("The Tomb of Priscus," Mooney)
c. AD 100: One source dates the Greek Testament of Carnamagos back to this time. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G))
2nd Century AD: According to some, the Seven Cryptical Books of Hsan are written by Hsan the Greater in this century. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G))
AD 125: Titus Tetericus, three-years-dead son of the retired Roman senator Felicius Tetricus of Eboracum (later to become York), seemingly returns to life for about a year before he returns "to the land of shades." (The Transition of Titus Crow, Lumley)
AD 126: A force of legionnaires travels north of Hadrian's Wall into Pictish territory on a mysterious mission. Their fate is never uncovered. (Shadows of Yog-Sothoth, Chaosium)
AD 138: Lollius Urbicus, a Roman scholar living near modern-day York, writes Præsidia Finium. (The Transition of Titus Crow, Lumley; (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley))
c. AD 150: An Irish translation of the Book of Eibon is created by travelling Irish scholars. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
c. AD 165: Occultus is written by Hieriarchus.
c. AD 200: The Daemonolorum is written by an Egyptian sect. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G))
A Latin translation of the R'lyeh Text appears.
AD 206: Bran Mak Morn, great chieftain of the Picts, summons the Worms of the Earth (degenerate descendants of the Serpent People) to battle the Romans. ("Worms of the Earth," Howard; "The Children of Yig," Appel?? YEAR?)
AD 207: Bran Mak Morn calls back King Kull of Atlantis.
AD 208: Bran Mak Morn battles the Worms of the Earth, the same that he once called allies.
c. AD 210: Bran Mak Morn dies as a result of the treachery of a Roman general. A cult later springs up around the legendary Pict chieftain. (??; "The Children of the Night," Howard)
c. AD 300: Flavius Alesius' Annales make reference to the Liber Ivonis as a set of tablets held by the Averones. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley) NOT ORIGINAL SOURCE)
AD 389: The Serapiam of Alexandria is burned by Christians. In the process, several Greek and Latin versions of the Book of Eibon are destroyed. (Factual; Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
Between c. 390 and c. 400: Valerius Trevirus writes the poem De Noctis Rebus, which makes reference to the Liber Ivonis. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley) NOT ORIGINAL SOURCE
Middle Ages
c. AD 400: The Codex Dagonensis, the Codex Maleficum, the Codex Spitalski, and the Cthäat Aquadingen are known in northern Germany by this date. The books all contain similar material, including various Sathlattae. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
Confessions of the Mad Monk Clithanus is written by Clithanus himself. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G))
466: The wizard Azédarac and his manservant both disappear from Averoigne. ("The Holiness of Azédarac," Smith)
475: An individual named Brother Ambrose comes to live with the sorceress Moriamis in Averoigne. ("The Holiness of Azédarac," Smith)
6th Century: Nestar Mobedan Mobed, a self-proclaimed Zoroastrian prophet, leads a group of followers to break from their more orthodox contemporaries. During their self-imposed exile, Mobed writes the Letters of Nestar, which detail rituals to summon Cthugha and his servitors. Twenty years later, he and his now-numerous followers return to the city they left, and attempt to conquer it by summoning Cthugha. Nestar is slain by the city guard, and most of his followers captured. The rest flee, under his letters of instruction, to India and Russia.
592: The planet Shaggai is destroyed, possibly by Ghroth the Harbinger. The surviving members of the Shan race scatter; one group travels to the planet Xiclotl, and calls the other Shan from their planetary colonies to join them. ("The Insects from Shaggai," Campbell; "The Tugging," Campbell; Delta Green: Countdown, Detwiller, Glancy, and Tynes, et al (G)))
c. 595: The oldest known written copy of the Book of Dzyan is found by traders in a Chinese cave. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
c. 600: The traders' Book of Dzyan comes into the possession of the Sui Dynasty's Prince of Shu, who is later exiled for practicing black magic. His copy of the Book is later donated to the Imperial Library by a famous poet; there it is copied before being returned. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
7th Century: The Arabian astrologer Ibrahim al-Araq refers to the star Algol as "the Demon Star" or "the star from whence the Demon comes." ("Strange Manuscript Found in the Vermont Woods," Carter)
640: The Great Library at Alexandria is burned. Certain texts escape the Library's destruction, and eventually make their way the the monastery of Perigon in Averoigne. (Factual; "The End of the Story," Smith)
655: Possible year of Abdul Alhazred's birth.
c. 700: U Pao, one of Burma's earliest scholars, writes the Black Sutra. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G))
c. 730: Abdul Alhazred writes the Kitab Al-Azif. (The Lurker at the Threshold, Lovecraft and Derleth) ORIGINAL SOURCE??)
738: Abdul Alhazred dies. According to popular lore, he is killed in the marketplace of Damascus by an invisible monster. ("History of the Necronomicon," Lovecraft)
760: Shortly before this time, a translation of the Kitab Al-Azif into Duriac (an obscure Middle Eastern dialect) is made.
c. 792: The Shan leave Xiclotl (taking servitors from among the planet's natives along) and travel to a planet they name Thuggon. However, they only remain there less than a year before they travel to L'gy'hx, known to humans as Uranus. ("The Insects from Shaggai," Campbell)
9th Century: Caius Phillippus Faber translates the Book of Eibon into Latin, retitling it Liber Ivonis. (Call of Cthulhu 5th Ed., Petersen and Willis et al (G))
Sicily is a stronghold of Shub-Niggurath's cult during this century.
c. 900: The Kitab Rasul Al-Albarin is written by Ibn el-Badawi. An English translation is made some time later. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G)); English???
935: A copy of the Testament of Carnamagos is found in a Graeco-Bactrian tomb, along with a copy of the Book of Eibon. Two copies of the former text, translated into Greek, are later made by a monk. ("History and Chronology of The Book of Eibon," Carter; ??ORIGINS OF CARNAMAGOS, MONK
950: Theodorus Philetas of Constantinople translates the Kitab Al-Azif into Greek, and renames it the Necronomicon. ("History of the Necronomicon," Lovecraft)
960: Theodorus Philetas has correlated several copies of the Book of Eibon into a medieval Greek translation by this time. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
c. 1000: A "strange and powerful dynastic order" builds a stone priory atop an ancient temple in modern-day Anchester, the site of which eventually becomes Exham Priory. ("The Rats in the Walls," Lovecraft)
Between the 11th and 12th centuries: A Latin version of the Cthäat Aquadingen is made during this time. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G))
11th Century: The Christian Church tries to suppress the worship of Sadoqua in Averoigne. However, their efforts are ruined when local church officials also take up Sadoqua's worship.
1050: Patriarch Michael, disturbed by rumors about experimentation with the Necronomicon, has many copies of the book burned. According to Olaus Wormius in his introduction to the Latin edition, all known copies of the Arabic versions are destroyed as well. ("History of the Necronomicon," Lovecraft)
Between 1095 and 1099: During the time of the First Crusade, Norsemen land on the isle of Bal-Sagoth, reputed to be the last surviving fragment of Atlantis. At this point, the advanced natives worship a god named Gol-goroth. ("The Gods of Bal-Sagoth," Howard?? Atlantis Bal-Sagoth connect?)
1099: A copy of Al-Azif is found in Jerusalem. It is eventually placed in the hands of the Comte de Champagne, who forms an order of knights known as the Templars to guard it.
c. 1100: A Bulgarian translation of the Necronomicon is made. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
12th Century: The Brotherhood of the Beast is founded in the memory of Nophru-Ka.
Bartolomeo Corsi, a Florentine monk, is possessed by one of the Great Race of Yith, and subsequently goes mad. He is eventually exiled to the island of Stromboli and writes the Harmaticon. ("The Shadow Out of Time," Lovecraft; Encyclopedia Cthulhiana 2nd Ed., Harms)
Ibn Khallikan writes a biography of Abdul Alhazred. ("History of the Necronomicon," Lovecraft)
Early 12th Century: The Vatican's only Averone version of the Book of Eibon disappears. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
c. 1135: Construction is begun on the cathedral in Vyones. ("The Maker of Gargoyles," Smith)
1138: November A series of brutal murders and other disturbing events perpetrated by apparent "demons" occur in Vyones. In the middle of the month, they cease as abruptly as they began. ("The Maker of Gargoyles," Smith)
1166: A man named Azédarac comes to hold the position of bishop of Ximes. ("The Holiness of Azédarac," Smith)
1175: Summer A Brother Ambrose disappears in the Inn of Bonne Jouissance in Averoigne, after drinking a draught of red wine. ("The Holiness of Azédarac," Smith)
1198: Bishop Azédarac apparently dies. He is canonized as St. Azédarac. ("The Holiness of Azédarac," Smith)
13th Century: Adolphus Clesteros writes the Kagwamon K'thaat. The book is in a language of the author's invention called W'hywi, and only a single copy is made.
One of the two Greek copies of the Testament of Carnamagos is destroyed by the Inquisition.
The Necronomicon is translated into French, and enters the collections of several monasteries in southern France.
The local clergy in Avebury begins efforts to remove certain local standing stones, efforts that continue into the 14th century; many of the stones are destroyed. ("Cement Surroundings," Lumley)
The building later known as Delaware House is built by Sir Ranulf de la Weir on the site of Saxon ruins near modern-day Weirton in England. ("Dreams in the House of Weir," Carter)
1204: Sedefkhar, owner of the Simulacrum that bears his name, is killed when the Fourth Crusade sacks Constantinople. During the same attack, Theodoros Philetos' original manuscript of the Necronomicon, along with a copy of Peri ton Eibon, is destroyed by Roman Catholic priests. (???; Wilbur Nathaniel Hoag's sonnet-cycle, Dreams from R'lyeh is published by Miskatonic University almost thirty years after their discovery among the poet's papers. ("Dreams from R'lyeh," Carter; (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley))
1228: Olaus Wormius (a monk, not the famous doctor who came later) translates the Greek Necronomicon into Latin. He dubs his translation De Normis Necium. ("History of the Necronomicon," Lovecraft; Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
c. 1230: The future sorcerer, Nathaire, is born. ("The Colossus of Ylourgne," Smith)
1230: A man claiming to be Brother Ambrose appears briefly in the Inn of Haute Esperance (formerly the Inn of Bonne Jouissance), then disappears. ("The Holiness of Azédarac," Smith)
1232: Pope Gregory IX bans the Greek and Latin Necronomicons. ("History of the Necronomicon," Lovecraft)
c. 1240: Gaspard du Nord translates the Book of Eibon into Norman French. Presumably, it is around the time of this translation that he writes his commentary Selections du Livre d'Ivon, which includes spells that protect a user of the Book from the forces of evil. (?? ORIGINAL SOURCE?? "History and Chronology of The Book of Eibon," Carter; ??
1261: King Henry III of England grants the site of Exham Priory to Gilbert de la Poer, also known as Baron Exham. The building itself is constructed atop the previously existing ruins some time thereafter. ("The Rats in the Walls," Lovecraft)
Between 1271 and 1272: The Ninth Crusade, last of the Crusades, occurs. According to Ludwig Prinn, he was the only survivor of that Crusade, but that claim is dubious at best, considering he died over 250 years later. (Factual; "The Shambler from the Stars," Bloch)
1278: Nathaire is stoned by an angry crowd for his alleged sorceries, and is permanently lamed as a result. He never forgives this incident. ("The Colossus of Ylourgne," Smith)
1281: Early Summer The wizard Gaspard du Nord of Vyones dispels the sorcerous works of his evil former master, Nathaire. This saves the city of Vyones, and gives him immunity from persecution by the Church. ("The Colossus of Ylourgne," Smith)
c. 14th Century: The Cthäat Aquadingen is translated into English. (Call of Cthulhu 5th Ed., Petersen and Willis et al (G))
14th Century: According to some sources, the Hyperborean edition of the Book of Eibon survived up until this time.
1307: The Knights Templar in England are disbanded by King Edward II. ("The Curate of Temphill," Robert M. Price and Cannon)
Afterwards, some of the former Templars settle the village of Goatswood in the Severn River Valley. Other ex-Templars settle in the nearby town of Temple Hill (later Temphill) and try to assimilate themselves into the local religious community, with little success. ("The Curate of Temphill," Robert M. Price and Cannon)
A chronicle refers to the de la Poer family as "cursed of God." ("The Rats in the Walls," Lovecraft)
1315: Enguerrand de Marigny, a court official and ancestor of Étienne-Laurent and Henri-Laurent de Marigny, is executed on trumped-up charges of sorcery.
1369: Summer A red comet heralds the coming of the "Beast of Averoigne." It is eventually defeated by the wizard Messire le Chaudronnier. ("The Beast of Averoigne," Smith)
1373: By this time, the Louvre's Latin copy of the Necronomicon had vanished.
Modern Era
Early Modern Period
15th Century: A flawed English translation of the Book of Eibon is made. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G)
According to rumor, the Pnakotic Manuscripts are published in English by an anonymous translator in this century. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G))
c. 1400: A man described as a "ghoul" is buried in a Holland graveyard, along with a jade amulet of the "corpse-eating cult" of the Plateau of Leng. ("The Hound," Lovecraft)
1419: The Duc de Bourgoyne dies. Shortly before that, his copy of the Averone Book of Eibon disappears. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
1472: A version of the Olaus Wormius Necronomicon is printed in Lyons, France.
Late 15th Century: A black-letter printing of the Latin Necronomicon is made in Germany. ("History of the Necronomicon," Lovecraft; "Out of the Ages," Carter)
1484: [According to some, this is the year De Vermis Mysteriis is written. However, most evidence renders this unlikely.] (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
1490: [According to some, De Vermis Mysteriis is printed in this year.] ("The Plague Jar," Mackey)
c. 1500: [According to the 1484 source, a German-language edition of De Vermis Mysteriis is printed in Mannheim.] (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
A German edition of the Necronomicon is published in Wurttemburg. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
16th Century: Monstres and Their Kynde is compiled by an unknown author, probably using several other Mythos texts as sources. Only one copy is known to exist. (Call of Cthulhu 5th Ed., Petersen and Willis (G)) SOURCE SAYS C. 16TH
A partial English manuscript of the Book of Dzyan begins circulating in this century. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G))
1501: A folio edition of the Greek Necronomicon is made on printing presses in Italy, leading to its suppression by religious authorities. ("History of the Necronomicon," Lovecraft; Call of Cthulhu 5th Ed., Petersen and Willis et al (G))
c. 1512: Future conquistador Pánfilio de Zamacona y Nuñez is born. ("The Mound," Bishop and Lovecraft)
1515: François I captures a copy of the Latin Necronomicon when he conquers Milan. He gives it to Leonardo da Vinci. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
1519: Leonardo da Vinci dies, and his library is scattered. Among the lost books is his copy of the Latin Necronomicon. (Factual; Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
1526: A Muslim army marches into the area of modern-day Stregoicavar, Hungary. Disgusted by the abhorrent cult they find there, they wipe it and the locals out. ("The Black Stone," Howard)
1527: John Dee is born. (Factual)
c. 1530: The Chinese Imperial Library's original duplicate of the Book of Dzyan is stolen. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
1532: Pánfilio de Zamacona y Nuñez leaves his native port of Luarca for the New World at age 20. He later accompanies Coronado in his expedition across the modern western United States. ("The Mound," Bishop and Lovecraft)
Between 1540 and 1808: Due to the Inquisition, the allegedly sorcerous ancestors of Simon Maglore leave Italy and travel to the new world. ("The Mannikin," Bloch)
1540: Ludwig Prinn is imprisoned by the Roman Inquisition. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G))
1541: Coronado turns back from his explorations. However, on October 7, Pánfilio de Zamacona y Nuñez continues on, eventually finding the underground civilization of K'n-yan. He is forbidden to leave, and is eventually killed in an attempt to escape. ("The Mound," Bishop and Lovecraft)
1542: Ludwig Prinn writes De Vermis Mysteriis in his cell. Just before his death at the hands of the Inquisition, the book is somehow smuggled out. ("The Shambler from the Stars," Bloch; Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G))
John Dee enters Cambridge at age 15. (Factual)
1543: A Latin edition of De Vermis Mysteriis is published in Cologne. ("The Shambler from the Stars," Bloch)
c. 1550: The Portuguese first "glimpse" the city of the "Fishers from Outside" in Zimbabwe. ("The Fishers from Outside," Carter)
The Necronomicon is translated into Russian. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
Between 1558 and 1610: A Sir Randolph Carter, ancestor of the man who will have the same name, studies magic during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. ("The Silver Key," Lovecraft)
1558: Queen Elizabeth I ascends to the British throne. John Dee is high in her favor. (Factual)
1567: An Italian edition of the Greek Necronomicon is published.
1569: Pope Pius V bans De Vermis Mysteriis.
1573: Noted magician (and fraud) Edward Kelley's English translation of De Vermis Mysteriis is published in London. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
Late 16th Century: A sect of Yog-Sothoth worshippers is founded in the mountains of Romania. Their leader is a man named Chorazos, and they are thus called the Chorazos Cult.
1576: Miguel Cervantes is held as a favored slave and prisoner in Algiers. While there, he writes Don Quixote. According to some, he also makes a (heavily expurgated) Spanish translation of the Necronomicon, which he titles El Libro de los Normos de los Perdidos. (Factual; Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley; heavily expurgated??)
1579: Miguel Cervantes completes El Libro de los Normos de los Perdidos; later that year, his captivity ends. ("The Invisible Empire," van Pelt; factual)
1581: John Dee begins his experiments into crystal-gazing, which eventually leads to his first contact with "angels" through the medium of Edward Kelley. The "angels" dictate their language of Enochian to Dee. (Factual)
1583: John Dee and Edward Kelley begin their journeys across Europe. (Factual)
1586: John Dee and Edward Kelley arrive in Prague. While there, Dee finds a copy of the Latin Necronomicon, which he translates into English. He also adds material from a Greek manuscript in the possession of a Transylvanian noble, and his own commentary on certain subjects. (Factual; "Dreams from R'lyeh," Carter; Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G); commen??)
1587: John Dee's arrangement with Edward Kelley sours when a summoned "angel" commands them to share their wives in common. (Factual)
1589: John Dee returns to England to find his home and library has been ransacked by a mob. He is appointed to be the Warden of Christ's College in Manchester, but is unhappy and eventually returns home to Mortlake. (Factual)
1591: A man named Claes van der Heyl does something horribly spectacular later noted by occultist Alonzo Typer. ("The Diary of Alonzo Typer," Lovecraft and William Lumley)
1593: Famous English playwright Christopher Marlowe dies in a tavern brawl. One of his works, The King in Yellow, is incomplete, with only the first two scenes written. William Shakespeare and John Croft attempt to complete it, but Shakespeare's scruples make the attempt fruitless.
1594: The Chorazos Cult is exiled from Romania and moves to England, building a temple in Finchley. Unusually, the Cult is popular with Queen Elizabeth.
1595: Late in this year, the Chorazos Cult's former patron forces them out of London. They move to a house known as the Oaks.
Remigius' Daemonolatreia is published in Lyons. ("The Festival," Lovecraft)
1596: The Oaks is burned down by angry villagers, and the few survivors of the Chorazos Cult (including their founder) retreat to Scotland. Soon after this, however, the locals in their new area destroy the sect once and for all following a number of disappearances.
1598: Baron Frederic of Sussex's partial (and confused) translation of the Latin edition of the Necronomicon is published, in an octavo edition, under the title Cultus Maleficarum. It later comes to be known as the Sussex Manuscript.
Konrad von Gerner's Fischbuch is published. ("Name and Number," Lumley)
c. 1600: A meteor containing an alien city crashes into the Severn Valley. The being known as Glaaki lives within. The meteor crater slowly fills with water, eventually becoming a lake. ("Timeline of the Cthulhu Mythos," Appel; "The Inhabitant of the Lake," Campbell)
According to rumors that Morgan Smith had lived over 300 years in exchange for eventually serving as a vessel for Nyarlathotep, Smith would have been born around this year.
17th Century: The small German town of Freihausgarten begins to worship the Great Old One Cyaegha. ("Darkness, My Name Is," Bertin)
According to some, it is in this century that Eberhard Ketzer, a member of the court of the King of Prussia who hailed from Schleswig-Holstein, writes Die Geschichte den Planeten. If this is true, then L'Histoire des Planetes is likely a French translation of this work.
An isle in the Severn River near the town of Severnford is the site of witches' sabbats during this century. ("The Stone on the Island," Campbell)
The book True Magik, by "Theophilus Wenn," is usually dated back to this time, though some say it comes from medieval times. (Call of Cthulhu 5th Ed., Petersen and Willis et al (G)) SPOURCE SAUYS C. 17
Early 17th Century: According to rumor, at least two Tibetan copies of the Seven Cryptical Books of Hsan are smuggled out of Tibet by Dominican priests, who give them to the Papal Library. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
1600: Graf Gauberg's Unter Zee Kulten is written. According to more traditional accounts, most copies are destroyed by the end of this century. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G); ??? destroyed?)
1608: John Dee dies in Mortlake. (Factual)
Between 1610 and 1625: During the reign of King James I and after 1610, Walter de la Poer slays his decadent relatives and leaves his home of Exham Priory. ("The Rats in the Walls," Lovecraft)
Between 1610 and 1643: Pierre-Louis Montagny, an aged Frenchman living during the reign of Louis XIII, is among those that exchange minds with a Yithian. ("The Shadow Out of Time," Lovecraft)
c. 1611: During the reign of King James I, a scholar involved in the translation of the King James Bible translates the Book of Eibon into English. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
1612: A Lancashire witch named Liz Southern is executed. ("The Return of the Lloigor," Wilson)
1616: Captain John Smith, while exploring the New England coast, discovers Devil's Reef off the coast of modern Innsmouth and gives it its name. (Escape from Innsmouth, Ross (G))
1618: Most of the home of a family that dealt with the de la Poers of Exham Priory and the monks of Falstone Castle is destroyed in a fire. The property later comes into the possession of the Marriot family. ("Recognition," Lumley)
1623: A version of the Wormius Necronomicon is printed in Spain. ("History of the Necronomicon," Lovecraft; "Out of the Ages")
1627: A priest steals a copy of the Greek Necronomicon from Baron Hauptmann of Romania.
1630: March 10 Possible date of John Grimlan's birth, if one believes he was 300 years old when he died. ("Dig Me No Grave," Howard)
Between 1632 and 1680: Portions of the Necronomicon are circulated widely in France, and are used as ritual material for many black masses of the period. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
1635: Antoine-Marie Augustin de Montmorency-les-Roches is born. According to some, he is later known as the Comte d'Erlette, author of Cultes des Goules. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
1636: Jean-Francois Charriere is born in Bayonne, France. ("The Survivor," Lovecraft and Derleth)
1638: Hendrik van der Heyl emigrates to New-Netherland (later New York). ("The Diary of Alonzo Typer," Lovecraft and William Lumley)
1639: Settlers from southern England and the Channel Islands found Kingsport on the coast of Massachusetts, south of modern-day Arkham. Kingsport quickly becomes a major shipbuilding and overseas trade center. (Kingsport: City in the Mist, Ross (G))
Between 1639 and 1692: A cult arises in Kingsport, with meetings held in the town's Congregational Church. (Kingsport: City in the Mist, Ross (G))
1641: Joachim Kindler's My Understanding of the Great Booke is printed in the city of Buda. The book speaks of a version of the Necronomicon in Gothic, a language of an ancient Germanic tribe. This Necronomicon is reputedly missing all the allegory and obscurity of other versions, and is thus far more dangerous than any other.
1643: The town of Innsmouth is founded in Massachusetts. (The Shadow Over Innsmouth, Lovecraft)
The Shan leave L'gy'hx and travel to Earth, landing near Goatswood; however, they find that they cannot leave. They and their Xiclotl servants begin to prey on nearby villagers. ("The Insects from Shaggai," Campbell; Delta Green: Countdown, Detwiller, Glancy, and Tynes, et al (G))
A mysterious coven begins congregating in worship in the woods outside Goatswood. ("The Insects from Shaggai," Campbell)
1644: Autumn Witch-finder Matthew Hopkins destroys a cult in Brichester and imprisons a "Hobgoblin Monstre" with the Elder Sign. ("The Awakening," Sumpter)
1647: Liber Damnatus Damnationum, by Janus Aquaticus, is published in London.
c. 1650: A Chinese copy of the Dhol Chants is found in an Asian monastery. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
Between 1651 and 1658: During Oliver Cromwell's time as Lord Protector of England, James Woodville of Suffolk exchanges minds with a Yithian. After he is restored to his rightful body, Woodville writes a book called Wondrous Intelligences, which details his unusual sex life and the Great Race of Yith. ("The Shadow Out of Time," Lovecraft; "City in the Sands," DiTillio and Willis (G))
1652: Witch-hunter Matthew Hopkins comes to the Severn Valley. Among the victims of his inquisition are the entire membership of the Goatswood coven. ("The Insects from Shaggai," Campbell; Delta Green: Countdown, Detwiller, Glancy, and Tynes, et al (G))
1653: Chronike von Nath is written by Rudolf Yergler, a German mystic. Soon after he completes it, he goes blind. German authorities put Yergler in a Berlin madhouse after the work is published, and attempt to suppress the book. Soon afterwards, Yergler dies. ("Music of the Stars," Rimel; dies?)
Jean-Francois Charriere begins his studies in Paris, under the tutelage of Royalist exile Richard Wiseman. ("The Survivor," Lovecraft and Derleth)
1656: Jean-Francois Charriere ends his education under Richard Wiseman and sets out on his own. ("The Survivor," Lovecraft and Derleth)
1657: The Masters of the Silver Twilight are founded.
1662: A Latin text of the Book of Eibon is printed in Rome. It is probably based of Faber's 9th-century translation.
1663: The wizard Nicholas Zegrembi transcribes the book thereafter known as the Zegrembi Manuscript from the original, which was located in an alternate universe. He copies it in three languages- alien hieroglyphs, a rune-like script, and Latin. ("The Black Mirror," Glasby)
February 18 Joseph Curwen is born in modern-day Danvers, Massachusetts.
c. 1664: The Kaballist Nathan of Gaza circulates the Sepher ha-Sha'are ha-Daath among his brethren, which is a commentary on a work he calls the "Book of the Alhazred." (This is said by some to be a Hebrew translation of the Necronomicon.) ("The Necronomicon Anti-FAQ," Low)
c. 1665: If Antoine-Marie Augustin de Montmorency-les-Roches is indeed the Comte d'Erlette, then Cultes des Goules is probably completed around this time. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
1666: Nathan of Gaza is discredited when the would-be Messiah Shabbetai Tzevi, whom he supported, converts to Islam. (Factual)
The Shakespeare/Croft sections of The King in Yellow are destroyed in a house fire, but the Marlowe sections are accidentally bound into a book of the house owner's wife's poetry and thus saved.
September 2 The Great Fire of London occurs. Some suggest that a summoning of one of Cthugha's servitors is what started the blaze. (Factual; ??
During the Great Fire of London, Nicholas Zegrembi flees with the Zegrembi Manuscript and his other papers, settling in the village of Torpoint. Several years later, he disappears, and his library is burned by the local clergy. Allegedly, however, a secretive cult saves the Zegrembi Manuscript for themselves. ("The Black Mirror," Glasby)
1670: Ward Phillips's lineage can be traced by genealogists to as far back as this date. ("The Winfield Inheritance," Carter)?? ORIGINAL SOURCE???
1674: Dr. Jean-Francois Charriere, a surgeon in the French army, goes on duty in Pondicherry, and later, the Caronmandall Coast of India. ("The Survivor," Lovecraft and Derleth)
Late 17th Century: The town of Arkham is founded in Massachusetts by free-thinkers.
The version of the Necronomicon that will become part of the University of Buenos Aires' collections is said to arrive in South America. (Call of Cthulhu 5th Ed., Petersen and Willis et al (G))
1675: A Latin edition of Confessions of the Mad Monk Clithanus is published.
1678: Martin's shipyard begins building ships for Innsmouth's growing fishing and trade industry. (Escape from Innsmouth, Ross (G))
1680: The town of Agua Blanca is founded.
1681: Antoine-Marie Augustin de Montmorency-les-Roches vanishes. It is probable that he was taken to prison, as he was unpopular with the French nobility. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
Joseph Glanvil's Saducismus Triumphatus is published. ("The Festival," Lovecraft)
1685: William Bain builds the Strange High House in the Mist on the highest mountain of Kingsport Head. He eventually shuns the town and comes to be known only as "the One." (Kingsport: City in the Mist, Ross (G))
c. 1686: A Greek translation of the Cabala of Sabaoth is made. ("The Mannikin," Bloch)
1690: The Geoffrey family of merchants moves to New York. They are ancestors of Justin Geoffrey. ("The House in the Oaks," Howard and Derleth)
According to some, the Salem Academy, which later becomes Miskatonic Liberal Seminary, is founded.
According to others, Arkham College is founded in this year instead. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
December 14 Reputed witch Abigail Prinn, a descendant of Ludwig Prinn, dies. She allegedly lays a curse on Salem before she expires. This prompts the people of Salem, in an attempt to avoid her wrath, to bury her with a stake through her heart. ("Wilbur Whateley Waiting," Price; "The Salem Horror," Kuttner)
1691: Dr. Jean-Francois Charriere moves to Quebec. ("The Survivor," Lovecraft and Derleth)
December Believers living around Salem receive premonitions of danger and a need to move to a location northwest from the city. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
1692: March A witch hysteria engulfs Salem, Massachusetts. Many innocent citizens are accused of witchcraft and executed. An ancestor of Richard Upton Pickman is among those that are hung. (Factual; "Pickman's Model," Lovecraft)
The danger drives Joseph Curwen to move to Providence, Rhode Island. Others, a group of Believers (including the Whateley and Bishop families), move to north-central Massachusetts. There, they found the town of New Dunnich. ("The Case of Charles Dexter Ward," Lovecraft; "The Dunwich Horror," Lovecraft; Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
Edmund Carter, ancestor of Randolph Carter, is nearly hung in Salem and flees to the hills behind Arkham. ("The Silver Key," Lovecraft; ("Through the Gates of the Silver Key," Lovecraft and E. Hoffman Price)
The last known copy of the Greek Necronomicon is burned during the witch-hunt. (Call of Cthulhu 5th Ed., Petersen and Willis et al (G))
Soon after the witch panic begins in Salem, it spreads to Arkham. As a result, they send one witch, Keziah Mason, to Salem for trial. However, Mason disappears from her cell before she can be executed. ("The Dreams in the Witch-House," Lovecraft)
The witch panic also spreads to Kingsport, which results in the hanging of thirteen reputed witches. (Kingsport: City in the Mist, Ross (G))
c. 1693: Antoine-Marie Augustin de Montmorency-les-Roches dies, presumably in prison. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
1693: Isaiah Hoag, ancestor of Abner Exekiel Hoag and Wilbur Nathaniel Hoag, and his family move to Arkham from Plymouth, England. ("Dreams from R'lyeh," Carter)
Ward Phillips, first president of the future Miskatonic University, donates what becomes the nucleus of the Miskatonic University Library. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
1696: Jeremiah Whateley, eldest son of Whateley patriarch Absalom, builds the first of several mills in New Dunnich. Dunwich (as the town is later known) prospers. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
1697: Abner Exekiel Hoag is born in Arkham. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G))
Dr. Jean-Francois Charriere leaves Quebec. He moves to Providence and builds a home (later known simply as the Charriere house) on Benefit Street. ("The Survivor," Lovecraft and Derleth)
1699: The branch of the Whateley family from which Cyrus and Aberath Whateley descend comes to Dunwich from England. ("The Watchers Out of Time" [incomplete], Lovecraft and Derleth)
c. 1700: An English translation of Præsidia Finium is published in London under the title Frontier Garrison. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
18th Century: Liyuhh, a German translation/analysis (with commentary) of the R'lyeh Text, is published in a limited 400-copy run.
Early 18th Century: The town of Agua Blanca changes its name to Castronegro.
Rumors that the slain witches of Kingsport have returned from the dead circulate. (Kingsport: City in the Mist, Ross (G))
1700: Kazaj Heinz Vogel immigrates to America from Germany. He later returns and completes an untitled book (later known as Von denen Vertdammen). After it is published, the German authorities seize and destroy all but two copies, which are held in the restricted collections of German libraries. ("Darkness, My Name Is," Bertin; Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G))
1702: Necrolatry, by Ivor Gorstadt, is published in Leipzig. ("Dreams from R'lyeh," Carter)
1703: François-Honoré Balfour, if he is the Comte d'Erlette as some believe, probably publishes Cultes des Goules in this year, before shutting himself out from the world. (Call of Cthulhu 5th Ed., Petersen and Willis et al (G))
Absalom Whateley, his assistant John Bishop, and his two sons Jeremiah and Jacob perfect an alchemical process that converts baser materials to gold. However, the process is prohibitively costly and difficult. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
Sir Edward Orme builds a home in Dunwich that eventually comes into the possession of Cyrus Whateley and his descendants. ("The Watchers Out of Time" [incomplete], Lovecraft and Derleth)
1704: Goody Fowler is hung by an angry mob when she returns to Arkham.
Jacob Whateley has his first magical success when he summons a byakhee atop Wizard's Hill. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
1705: The first sawmill in Dunwich is built by Jeremiah Whateley. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
1706: John Bishop builds the old Bishop house. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
1709: The first fulling mill in Dunwich is opened by the Whateley family, with the assistance of Lucas Frye. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
May 1 Jacob Whateley experiences a sudden change, and breaks with both his family and the Believers. A few Believers leave with Jacob and begin studies with him. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
1710: Jerusalem's Lot, a religious community, is founded on the coast of Massachusetts. The people are members of a splinter Puritan group led by the charismatic James Boon. They follow Boon's unorthodox doctrines, and the town's inhabitants are soon quite decadent and deranged. ("Jerusalem's Lot," King)
1712: Abner Exekiel Hoag begins his life as a sailor. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G))
A glasshouse is constructed in Dunwich under the direction of Absalom Whateley. The influx of settlers who have come to work at Dunwich's mills drives Jacob Whateley to live outside the village. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
1713: Abner Exekiel Hoag marries Bathsheba Randall Marsh of the Innsmouth Marshes. ("Dreams from R'lyeh," Carter)
Joseph Curwen donates funds to help rebuild the Great Bridge in Providence. ("The Case of Charles Dexter Ward," Lovecraft)
1716: The wizard Sir Gilbert Morley purchases the Norman castle where Byatis had been chained, and begins giving sacrifices to the creature in exchange for communicating with the other Great Old Ones. ("The Room in the Castle," Campbell; Ramsey Campbell's Goatswood and Less Pleasant Places, Aniolowski and Sumpter, et al. (G))
1719: By this time, Abner Exekiel Hoag has become a ship captain. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G))
1720: Simon Orne's ageless appearance attracts notice in Salem, prompting him to donate his books to the future Miskatonic University Library and move to Europe. ("The Case of Charles Dexter Ward," Lovecraft; (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley))
c. 1721: The Akeley family comes to America.
1722: A raid is made on Kingsport's Congregational Church, to disperse a pagan cult holding ceremonies beneath it. Thirty of the pagans are captured. The raid is led by Mayor Eben Hall. (Kingsport: City in the Mist, Ross (G))
John Bishop builds a house that later becomes the Dunwich meeting-house. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
Absalom Whateley dies. He leaves his works and library to Jeremiah. Jacob demands to know the secret of the gold-making process, but following his father's warning, Jeremiah refuses. He instead gives his brother a share of the mill profits and limited access to Absalom's library. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
1723: Sir Edward Orme disappears in Europe. ("The Watchers Out of Time" [incomplete], Lovecraft and Derleth)
1724: François-Honoré Balfour dies in Ardennes. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G))
Mid-18th Century: Arkham becomes a thriving seaport. One of the more influential sea captains, Jeremiah Orne, donates the books and funds that lead to the foundation of Miskatonic Liberal College.
Richard Billington constructs a stone circle in the woods near Dunwich and engages in apparently dark rites there. After a year or so, Billington disappears, said by a local American Indian tribe to have fallen prey to an entity he had summoned. (The Lurker at the Threshold, Lovecraft and Derleth)
Between 1726 and 1760: During the reign of King George II of England, Sebastian Arkham is granted (by royal decree) the parcel of formerly Native American land upon which he plans to build his home. However, he encounters resistance from the natives, who consider the mountain centerpiece of his land sacred and refuse to leave. ("The Enchanting of Lila Woods," Lustig)
1728: Many flee to Castronegro from the persecution of the Masons in Madrid.
1729: An extremely poor English translation of the Seven Cryptical Books of Hsan appears. This version is disregarded by many scholars.
1731: Eben Hall, now Customs Inspector of Kingsport, attempts to board the Hellene, ship of suspected Kingsport cultist Douglas Corben. Corben resists, and after a brief battle, the Hellene is sunk with all hands aboard. (Kingsport: City in the Mist, Ross (G))
c. 1732: A giant stone cross is erected in the campus of the future Miskatonic University. ("Beyond the Reef," Copper)
1732: Captain Abner Exekiel Hoag becomes one of the first New England traders to trade rum and copra among the Pacific islands, coming into contact with the people of Ponape. (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G))
1734: Captain Abner Exekiel Hoag discovers the work known as the Ponape Scripture on the isle of Ponape. He spends years thereafter attempting to translate it with the help of his half-Polynesian servant. Hoag succeeds, but an ecclesiastical outcry prevents his work from being published until after his death. Despite this, it is secretly circulated in occult circles for many years afterward. ("The Dweller in the Tomb," Carter; "Out of the Ages," Carter; outcry??)
1737: According to some, Cultes des Goules by the Comte d'Erlette is published in Rouen, France.
1738: The "famous wit" Dr. Checkley calls on Joseph Curwen at his home, and leaves in a very disturbed state. ("The Case of Charles Dexter Ward," Lovecraft)
1743: Dunwich's first Congregation is formed by the mill worker families. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
Elder Marsh of Innsmouth funds the construction of a building to store Arkham College's library. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
1745: The Prescott and Dunlock families settle west of Dunwich. They only mix with the secretive townsfolk rarely. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
1746: Benvento Chieti Bordighera, later to be a gifted young composer, is born in Rome.
John Merritt, an elderly and learned Englishman, visits Joseph Curwen. After seeing Curwen's farmhouse library, Merritt wants no more to do with him. ("The Case of Charles Dexter Ward," Lovecraft)
John Bishop dies. He gives his property to his son Isaiah, and the secret of making gold to his other son Gabriel. Gabriel, a follower of Jacob Whateley, moves out of town to settle near Jacob's farm. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
Construction begins on the Congregational Church in Dunwich. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
The van der Heyl family leaves Albany, New York after being suspected of witchcraft. ("The Diary of Alonzo Typer," Lovecraft and William Lumley)
1747: The Congregational Church is completed. Reverend Abijah Hoadley preaches against the rumblings in the hills around Dunwich, decrying them as the work of the Devil. Soon after, Hoadley disappears, and the Congregation drifts apart. ("The Devil's Hop Yard," Lupoff; "The Dunwich Horror," Lovecraft; Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
1748: A larger grist mill is built by the Whateleys in Dunwich. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
Sir Gilbert Morley seals Byatis' prison one final time and soon disappears. He leaves his diary behind, but his castle home is torn down. ("The Room of the Castle," Campbell; Ramsey Campbell's Goatswood and Less Pleasant Places, Aniolowski and Sumpter, et al. (G))
c. 1750: A cult devoted to Tulzscha, based in Kingsport, Massachusetts, is disbanded.
1750: Jedediah Orne, a son of Simon Orne who looks exactly like his father, returns to Salem and claims his father's estate. ("The Case of Charles Dexter Ward," Lovecraft)
1752: Peter Osborn borrows money from Jeremiah Whateley and founds a general store in the abandoned Congregational Church. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
Jacob Whateley's eldest granddaughter disappears. Following that, Jacob and Jeremiah meet by chance and have a rather nasty argument in front of the general store. Jeremiah accuses Jacob of having a part in his granddaughter's vanishing and forbids him further access to Absalom's library. Three weeks later, Jeremiah dies in an apparent accident while retrieving books borrowed by Jacob. The surviving brother purchases Absalom's library some weeks later from Jeremiah's widow. The Widow Whateley is ruled unfit to manage her husband's properties, which are inherited by her sons. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
Rumors of unnatural activities at the Whateley farm, and the participation of Gabriel Bishop's family, leads to the Believers' ceasing all contact with them. Several visitors come to Jacob's farm, including one Sermon Bishop. Bishop disappears en route to home.
1753: Jacob Whateley dies. Whether it is really of natural causes as claimed by his family is uncertain. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
The British Museum is founded, thanks in part to three libraries donated for the use of the English people. Among the books is one of the 15th-century German-printed Latin Necronomicons. (Factual; Call of Cthulhu 5th Ed., Petersen and Willis et al (G))
1758: March and April Two regiments of Royal soldiers pass through Providence. While they are stopped there, a few of their troops disappear without a trace. Joseph Curwen is suspected to be involved. ("The Case of Charles Dexter Ward," Lovecraft)
c. 1760: The van der Heyls build a family home near Attica, New York, around which the village of Chorazin grows. ("The Diary of Alonzo Typer," Lovecraft and William Lumley)
1761: Joseph Curwen has a new home built. He also donates funds ("The Case of Charles Dexter Ward," Lovecraft)
1762: Sebastian Arkham hires mercenaries that, six years later, finally clear his chosen lands and allow him to begin building Arkham House. ("The Enchanting of Lila Woods," Lustig)
1763: March 7 Joseph Curwen marries Eliza Tillinghast. ("The Case of Charles Dexter Ward," Lovecraft)
Between 1765 and 1821: The Dena family builds a house in San Pedro during the Spanish era of California. The building is later home to the infamous Morella Godolfo, and eventually, to the artist Graham Dean. ("The Black Kiss," Bloch and Kuttner)
1765: According to some, Arkham College is reinvigorated thanks to a bequest from Jedediah Orne. After this it is renamed to Miskatonic College.
Sir Wade Jermyn, an early explorer of the Congo, is committed to a madhouse in Huntingdon. Before this time or by the end of the year, his work Observations on Several Parts of Africa is published. ("Arthur Jermyn," Lovecraft; (Keeper's Compendium, Herber et al (G)))
May 7 Joseph and Eliza Curwen's daughter, Ann, is born. ("The Case of Charles Dexter Ward," Lovecraft)
1768: Benvento Chieti Bordighera writes the opera Massa di Requiem per Shuggay. (Call of Cthulhu 5th Ed., Petersen and Willis et al (G); ???)
Sir Wade Jermyn dies in the Huntingdon asylum. ("Arthur Jermyn," Lovecraft)
1769: Pope Clement XIII bans Massa di Requiem per Shuggay after its first incomplete performance. (Delta Green: Countdown, Detwiller, Glancy, and Tynes, et al (G)))
According to some, Joseph Curwen donates funds to support Arkham College's library. (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley)
1770: Benvento Bordighera is imprisoned for heresy. (Delta Green: Countdown, Detwiller, Glancy, and Tynes, et al (G)))
It becomes obvious to many important figures in Providence that Joseph Curwen is involved in some kind of illegal acts. ("The Case of Charles Dexter Ward," Lovecraft)
1771: Benvento Bordighera is executed. (Delta Green: Countdown, Detwiller, Glancy, and Tynes, et al (G)))
Jedediah Orne vanishes following an action undertaken by some prominent people of Massachusetts. ("The Case of Charles Dexter Ward," Lovecraft)
April 12 A raid is initiated on Joseph Curwen's Pawtuxet farm. In the aftermath, Curwen is never seen again. Curwen's copy of the Necronomicon- unique in having the title "Qanoon-é-Islam" on its cover- is spirited away. ("The Case of Charles Dexter Ward," Lovecraft; spirited away?)
1772: A now widowed Eliza Curwen changes her last name, and that of her daughter, back to Tillinghast. She donates what remains of Joseph Curwen's books to the future Miskatonic University. ("The Case of Charles Dexter Ward," Lovecraft; (Ex Libris Miskatonici, Stanley))
Between 1775 and 1778: During the American Revolution, many of Kingsport's merchants act as privateers for the Colonies. These activities lead to a short-term British blockade of the town. Citizens of Innsmouth also aid the Revolution, either by joining the military or providing ships. (Kingsport: City in the Mist, Ross (G); Escape from Innsmouth, Ross (G))
Late 18th Century: Abner Exekiel Hoag's translation of the Ponape Scripture is published. (Call of Cthulhu 5th Ed., Petersen and Willis (G))
1775: June 21 Junípero Serra of the Mission San Xavier buries a trio of bells, given to the Mission by the Mutsune tribe in an attempt to destroy the colonists. ("Bells of Horror," Kuttner)
1776: According to some, the Salem Academy moves to Arkham and is renamed to the Miskatonic Liberal Seminary.
1778: The British blockade of Kingsport's harbor is broken by the townspeople, inspired by a man named Argus Blaine. (Kingsport: City in the Mist, Ross (G))
c. 1780: The Oklahoman American Indian Grey Eagle is born; he will live for around 150 years or more. ("The Mound," Bishop and Lovecraft)
1780: Philip Jermyn, son of Sir Wade Jermyn, marries the daughter of his gamekeeper. He becomes a sailor and leaves his home, just before the birth of his son Robert. Philip later disappears off the Congo Coast. ("Arthur Jermyn," Lovecraft)
1781: James Sheffield translates Chronike von Nath into English, retitling it The Chronicles of Nath. ("Music of the Stars," Rimel)
An ancestor of Randolph Carter disappears mysteriously from a grove of trees near the Carter property near Arkham. ("Through the Gates of the Silver Key," Lovecraft and E. Hoffman Price)
c. 1783: Soon after the end of the Revolutionary War, Miskatonic is presented the former Arkham town common in recognition of its achievements.
1783: The pamphlet On the Sending Out of the Soul circulates through the Salem occult community. ("Hydra," Kuttner)
1785: Welcome Potter, great-great-grandfather of Charles Dexter Ward, marries Ann Tillinghast, daughter of Joseph Curwen. ("The Case of Charles Dexter Ward," Lovecraft)
1787: Reverend Jeptha Hoag holds a fiery sermon preaching against evil forces in Dunwich. Like Abijah Hoadley before him, Hoag disappears, within a month of the sermon. ("The Watchers Out of Time" [incomplete], Lovecraft and Derleth)
Around Candlemas, a Goodwife Doten of Duxbury encounters a horrible creature with the face of Robert Billington. The creature is captured by locals. (The Lurker at the Threshold, Lovecraft and Derleth)
c. 1788: Over twenty years after its construction begun, Arkham House is completed. ("The Enchanting of Lila Woods," Lustig)
1788: The Whateley glasshouse closes from lack of business. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
June 5 The beast with Robert Billington's face is burned by order of Duxbury's local High-Sheriff. (The Lurker at the Threshold, Lovecraft and Derleth)
1789: September 16 James Boon acquires a (probably) unique version of De Vermis Mysteriis, and incorporates it into his services. ("Jerusalem's Lot," King)
October 31 After attempting a ceremony described within De Vermis Mysteriis, the inhabitants of Jerusalem's Lot disappear without a trace. ("Jerusalem's Lot," King)
c. 1790: The Severnford island witch cult is disbanded. Individuals continue to visit the island through the next two centuries, some of which are prey to bizarre attacks; the island becomes a cneter of strange events. ("The Stone on the Island," Campbell)
A group of people come to the lake containing Glaaki's meteor from nearby Goatswood. Led by Thomas Lee, the cult builds houses there so they can be near their god. ("The Inhabitant of the Lake," Campbell)
1791: George Whateley constructs a new sawmill on the North Fork Miskatonic. (Return to Dunwich, Herber (G))
1792: L'Histoire des Planetes, by Laurent de Longnez, is written. (It may be a French translation of Ketzer's Die Geschichte den Planeten.) ("The Recurring Doom," Joshi)
c. 1793: The d'Erlettes flee France and settle in Bavaria at the time of the French Revolution. They change the family name to Derleth. (Factual)
1793: Juan Gonzalles, a Spanish explorer, visits the Temple of the Toad in the jungle