Events from the 1410s in England.
- 1410
- Owain Glyndŵr continues his rebellion against England,[1] although a costly English raid into rebel-held Shropshire is believed to have led to the capture of a number of rebel leaders.
- 1411
- 1412
- May – England allies with the Armagnac party in return for help in regaining control of Aquitaine.[1]
- Owain Glyndŵr cuts through the King's men and captures, later ransoming, a leading Welsh supporter of King Henry's, Dafydd Gam, in an ambush in Brecon. However, this is the last time that Owain is seen by his enemies.
- 1413
- 21 March – Henry V becomes King following the death of his father Henry IV[2] in the "Jerusalem" chamber of Westminster Abbey.
- 9 April – coronation of King Henry V[1] at Westminster Abbey in a snowstorm.
- December – body of Richard II of England re-interred at Westminster Abbey as a gesture of reconciliation.[1]
- 1414
- 1415
- 1416
- 1 May – Hundred Years' War: French fleet blockades Harfleur.[1]
- 15 August – Hundred Years' War: Harfleur relieved, following a naval battle in the estuary of the Seine.[1]
- 1417
- 23 July – Hundred Years' War: Henry V leads an army of 12,000 men on a new invasion of Normandy.[1]
- 12 August – Henry V begins writing his official correspondence in English, marking the beginning of its restoration as the official language of Government in England.[1]
- 8 September – Hundred Years' War: English capture Caen.[1]
- 14 December – Lollard leader John Oldcastle captured and executed.[1]
- John Capgrave writes Chronicle, a history of England since the creation.[1][3]
- 1418
- 1419
- 1410
- 1411
- 1412
- 1413
- 1414
- 1415
- 1417
- 4 September – Robert Hallam, Bishop of Salisbury (year of birth unknown)
- 14 December – John Oldcastle, Lollard leader (year of birth unknown)
- 1418
- 1419