25 June – astrologer Francis Coxe is pilloried at Cheapside in London, and makes a public confession of his involvement in "sinistral and divelysh artes".[3]
First publication (anonymously in London) of William Baldwin's Beware the Cat (written 1553), an early example of extended fiction (and specifically of horror fiction) in English. This edition appears to have been suppressed and no copies survive.[5]
11 April – Treaty of Troyes: England receives monetary compensation for renouncing its claims to Calais.
30 April – consecration of new St Michael the Archangel parish church at Woodham Walter in Essex, probably the first new post-Reformation Church of England place of worship.[10]
Autumn – probable completion of the Exeter Canal, the first in England, and with the first use of a pound lock in England (engineer: John Trew from Glamorgan).[14]
1567
2 January – Parliament dissolved as Queen Elizabeth refuses to name a successor.
John Brayne builds the Red Lion theatre just east of the City of London, a playhouse for touring productions and the first known to be purpose-built in the British Isles since Roman times. However, there is little evidence that the theatre survives beyond this summer's season.[15]
Jean Carré arrives in England from Antwerp and obtains a royal monopoly for the production of window glass on condition that the techniques would be taught to native Englishmen.[16][17]
26 September – Spain seizes English ships off the coast of Mexico and confiscates their cargo.
October – The Bishops' Bible (The Holie Bible) is published, a translation into English under the authority of the Church of England.
December – English seize bullion from Spanish ships at Plymouth.
1569
11 January - 6 May – the first known lottery in England is drawn outside St Paul's Cathedral in the City of London.[20] Each share costs ten shillings, the first prize is £5000, and proceeds are used to repair harbours and for other public works.
First publication of Henry de Bracton's De legibus & consuetudinibus Angliæ ("On the Laws and Customs of England", left unfinished at Bracton's death c.1268).
Book: The London Encyclopaedia. Ben. Weinreb. Hibbert. Christopher. Macmillan. 1995. 0-333-57688-8. 287.
BBC History Magazine12:6 (June 2011) p.13.
Web site: Timeline Of Merchant Taylors' Company . The Merchant Taylors' Company . 2021-02-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070610120254/http://www.merchanttaylors.co.uk/company/history.html . 2007-06-10 . dead.
Book: Ringler, William A.. Flachmann, Michael. Preface. Beware the Cat. San Marino, CA. Huntington Library. 1988.
Web site: Gorboduc, or the Tragedy of Ferrex and Porrox. 2007-11-14. https://web.archive.org/web/20070917205947/http://www.innertemple.org.uk/archive/gorboduc.html. 2007-09-17. dead.
Web site: History . St. Michael the Archangel, Woodham Walter . 2004 . 2015-01-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150105001604/http://www.stmichaelsww.org.uk/4.html . 2015-01-05 . live .
Book: Bowsher. Julian. Miller. Pat. The Rose and the Globe – Playhouses of Shakespeare's Bankside, Southwark. 2010. Museum of London. 978-1-901992-85-4. 19.
Holmes. P. J.. Mary Stewart in England. The Innes Review. 1987. 38. 38. 195–218. 10.3366/inr.1987.38.38.195. 2023-12-05.
Web site: January 11th. Chambers' Book of Days. 2007-12-13. https://web.archive.org/web/20071218104118/http://www.thebookofdays.com/months/jan/11.htm. 18 December 2007.
Book: Palmer. Alan. Palmer. Veronica. 1992. The Chronology of British History. Century Ltd. London. 153–156. 0-7126-5616-2.