|
(Source:
C.S. Lewis: A Companion & Guide by Walter Hooper; HarperSanFrancisco,
© 1996) |
|
|
1898 |
Clive Staples Lewis was born on November
|
|
1905 |
The Lewis family moved to their new
home, "Little Lea," on the outskirts of |
|
1908 |
Flora Hamilton Lewis died of cancer on
August 23, Albert Lewis's (her husband's) birthday. During this year Albert
Lewis's father and brother also died. In September Lewis was enrolled at |
|
1910 |
Lewis left "Belsen"
in June and, in September, was enrolled as a boarding student at |
|
1911 |
Lewis was sent to |
|
1914 |
In April, Lewis met Arthur Greeves (1895-1966), of whom he said, in 1933,
"After my brother, my oldest and most intimate friend." On
September 19, Lewis commenced private study with W.T. Kirkpatrick, "The
Great Knock," in Great Bookham Surrey, with whom he was to remain until April 1917. William T.
Kirkpatrick (1848-1921) was former Headmaster of Lurgan
College, |
|
1916 |
In February, Lewis first read George
MacDonald's, Phantastes, which powerfully
"baptized his imagination" and impressed him with a deep sense of
the holy. He made his first trip to |
|
1917 |
From April 26 until September, Lewis was
a student at |
|
1918 |
On April 15 Lewis was wounded on |
|
1919 |
The February issue of Reveille contained
"Death in |
|
1920 |
During the summer, Paddy Moore's mother,
Mrs. Janie King Moore (1873-1951) and her daughter, Maureen, moved to |
|
1921 |
W.T. Kirkpatrick died in March. Lewis's
essay "Optimism" won the Chancellor's English Essay Prize in May.
(No copy of "Optimism" has been found as of this date.) |
|
1924 |
From October 1924 until May 1925, Lewis
served as philosophy tutor at |
|
1925 |
On May 20, Lewis was elected a Fellow of
Magdalen College, |
|
1929 |
Lewis became a theist: "In the
Trinity Term of 1929 I gave in, and admitted that God was God, and knelt and
prayed...." Albert Lewis died on
September 24. |
|
1931 |
Lewis became a Christian: One evening in
September, Lewis had a long talk on Christianity with J.R.R. Tolkien (a devout Roman Catholic) and Hugo Dyson. (The
summary of that discussion is recounted for Arthur Greeves
in They Stand Together.) That evening's discussion was important in bringing
about the following day's event that Lewis recorded in Surprised by Joy:
"When we [Warnie and Jack] set out [by
motorcycle to the Whipsnade Zoo] I did not believe
that Jesus Christ was the Son of God, and when we reached the zoo I
did." |
|
1933 |
The fall term marked the beginning of
Lewis's convening of a circle of friends dubbed "The Inklings." For
the next 16 years, on through 1949, they continued to meet in Jack's rooms at
|
|
1935 |
At the suggestion of Prof. F.P. Wilson,
Lewis agreed to write the volume on 16th Century English Literature for the
Oxford History of English Literature series. Published in 1954, it became a classic.
|
|
1937 |
Lewis received the Gollancz
Memorial Prize for Literature in recognition of The Allegory of Love (a study
in medieval tradition). |
|
1939 |
At the outbreak of World War II in
September, Charles Williams moved from |
|
1941 |
From May 2 until November 28, The
Guardian published 31 "Screwtape Letters"
in weekly installments. Lewis was paid |
|
1942 |
The first meeting of the "Socratic
Club" was held in |
|
1943 |
In February, at the |
|
1944 |
On seven consecutive Tuesdays, from
February 22 to April 4 at 10:15 to 10:30 p.m., Lewis gave the pre-recorded
talks known as "Beyond Personality." Taken together, all of Lewis's BBC radio broadcast talks were eventually
published under the title Mere Christianity. From November 10, 1944 to April
14, 1945, The Great Divorce was published in weekly installments
in The Guardian. (The Guardian was a religious newspaper that ceased
publication in 1951; it had no connection with the Manchester Guardian.) |
|
1945 |
Charles Williams, one of Lewis's very
closest of friends, died on May 15. |
|
1946 |
Lewis awarded honorary Doctor of
Divinity by the |
|
1948 |
On February 2, Elizabeth Anscombe, later Professor of Philosophy at |
|
1951 |
Mrs. Moore died on January 12. Since the
previous April, she had been confined to a nursing home in |
|
1952 |
Lewis was awarded the honorary degree of
Doctor of Letters by |
|
1954 |
In June, Lewis accepted the Chair of
Medieval and Renaissance Literature at |
|
1955 |
Lewis assumed his duties at |
|
1956 |
Lewis received the Carnegie Medal in
recognition of The Last Battle. On April 23, he entered into a civil marriage
with Joy Davidman at the Oxford Registry Office for
the purpose of conferring upon her the status of British citizenship in order
to prevent her threatened deportation by British migration authorities. In
December, a bedside marriage was performed in accordance with the rites of
the Church of England in |
|
1958 |
Throughout 1957, Joy had experienced an
extraordinary recovery from her near terminal bout with cancer. In July of
1958, Jack and Joy went to |
|
1959 |
Lewis was awarded the honorary degree of
Doctor of Literature by the |
|
1960 |
Subsequent to learning of the return of
Joy's cancer, Jack and Joy, together with Roger Lancelyn
Green and his wife, Joy, went to |
|
1963 |
Lewis died at the Kilns at 5:30 p.m. on
Friday, November 22-one week before his 65th birthday-the same day on which
President Kennedy was assassinated and Alduous Huxley
died. He had resigned his position at |
©2007 - C.S. Lewis Institute
Adapted from http://www.cslewisinstitute.org/cslewis/chronology.htm
Academic year 2008/2009
© a.r.e.a./Dr.Vicente Forés López
© Gemma Verdú Trescolí
vertres@alumni.uv.es
Universitat de València Press