Events from the 1280s in England.
- 1280
- 1281
- Establishment of Rewley Abbey, Oxford, and Appleby Friary.
- The Council of Lambeth issues the decree Ignorantia sacerdotum lays down the duties of parish priests to teach the laity in religious matters.
- 1282
- 1283
- 25 April – the last independent Welsh stronghold, Castell y Bere, falls to the English.[1]
- 28 June – a parliament of England summoned to assemble at Shrewsbury Abbey to decide the fate of the captured Dafydd ap Gruffydd is the first to include commoners.
- 3 October – the last ruler of an independent Wales, Prince Dafydd ap Gruffydd, is executed in Shrewsbury,[2] the first prominent person in history to be hanged, drawn and quartered (for the newly created crime of high treason).[4]
- 5 November – an official of Exeter Cathedral, Walter Lechlade, is murdered in its close in a conspiracy ordered by the Dean, John Pycot, and the city's mayor, Alured de Porta.[5]
- 1284
- 1285
- 1286
- 1287
- 1288
- 1289
- 1281
- 1282
- 1284
- 1285
- 1286
- 1287
Palmer, Alan; Palmer, Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History. London: Century Ltd. pp. 90–91. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2.