The Norton Anthology of Children’s Literature The Norton Anthology of Children’s Literature The Norton Anthology of Children’s Literature The Norton Anthology of Children’s Literature The Norton Anthology of Children’s Literature
The Norton Anthology of Children’s Literature The Norton Anthology of Children’s Literature The Norton Anthology of Children’s Literature The Norton Anthology of Children’s Literature The Norton Anthology of Children’s Literature
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  • 8th century B.C.E.-3rd century C.E. Classical myths from Greece and Rome


  • ca. 700 B.C.E. The Iliad, dealing with the Trojan War, and (probably later) the Odyssey


  • ca. 560 B.C.E. Death of Aesop on the Greek island of Samos.


  • ca. 300 B.C.E. Demetrius of Phalerum, librarian of the great library at Alexandria, assembles a collection, now lost, of two hundred Aesopic fables found there


  • 43 B.C.E.-ca. 420 C.E. Romans conquer Britons; until ca. 420, Britannia is a province of the Roman empire


  • before 50 C.E. Phaedrus, a freed Greek slave in Rome, puts Aesop's fables into Latin verse, adding topical anecdotes and stories of his own


  • 2nd century C.E. Apuleius's Metamorphoses, or The Golden Ass, including "Cupid and Psyche," the source of many later versions of "Beauty and the Beast." Valerius Babrius, another freed Greek slave, renders his own versions of Aesop in Greek verse


  • 307-37 Reign of Constantine the Great leads to adoption of Christianity as the official religion of the Roman empire


  • ca. 450 Withdrawal of Roman legions from Britain; Anglo-Saxon conquest of Britons begins


  • 1066 Norman conquest by William I establishes French-speaking ruling class in England


  • ca. 1135-38 Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain, written in Latin, gives pseudohistorical status to Arthurian and other legends


  • 1337-1452 Hundred Years' War


  • 1326 Gesta Romanorum (Deeds of the Romans), a collection of stories in Latin, compiled by monks


  • ca. 1375-1400 Sir Gawain and the Green Knight


  • 1376 Earliest record of drama performance at York


  • 1455-85 Wars of the Roses


  • ca. 1475 The Babees Book, a courtesy book, or book of manners


  • 1476-77 The Ulm Aesop, the first printed collection of all the known Aesopic fables, compiled in German by Heinrich Steinhöwell


  • 1476 William Caxton sets up first printing press in England


  • ca. 1479 Stans Puer ad Mensam, ascribed to Jon Lydgate, a courtesy book, including table manners, designed as an etiquette book for boys preparing to serve at court; earliest known printing is by Caxton


  • 1483 Caxton publishes an English translation of Jacobus de Voragine's The Golden Legend (Legenda Aurea), which was used in schools and at home to educate children about the lives of saints and ecclesiastical teachings