Baroque timeline
Wood-carver Grinling Gibbons arrives from Holland to begin an immensely successful career in England
19-year-old Alessandro Scarlatti has a great success in Rome with Gli Equivoci nel Sembiante, the first of his 115 operas
Domenico Scarlatti gets his first teacher
In his opera La Caduta de' Decemviri, Alessandro Scarlatti introduces a new form of prelude, later known as the Italian overture, which is an important stage in the development of the symphony
In a friendly keyboard contest in Rome between Handel and Domenico Scarlatti, the result is a draw – Handel being the winner on the organ and Scarlatti on the harpsichord
Christopher Wren's new domed St Paul's cathedral is completed in London
The violinist Archangelo Corelli composes his Christmas Concerto, the best known of his influential group of twelve Concerti Grossi
Cosmas Damian Asam begins work on a highly theatrical creation, the Benedictine Abbey of Weltenburg (1714-1735), joined by his younger brother Egid Quirin from 1721
The lighter rococo style, beginning in France, becomes an extension of the baroque
The symphony begins to develop as a musical form, deriving from the overtures of operas
Johann Sebastian Bach compiles the Little Keyboard Book a set of pieces to teach his eldest son, Wilhelm Friedemann Bach
Jean-Antoine Watteau paints the most splendid shop sign in history, for his friend Gersaint
Johann Sebastian Bach writes the six Brandenburg Concertos for his employer at the court of Köthen
J.S. Bach publishes The Well-Tempered Clavier, a collection of 24 Preludes and Fugues
Vivaldi publishes the set of violin concertos known as The Four Seasons
J.S. Bach conducts the first performance of his St Matthew Passion in the St Thomas's church in Leipzig
Handel composes Zadok the Priest for the crowning of George II, and it has been sung at every subsequent British coronation
With the performance of Esther Handel taps a rich new vein, the English oratorio
The Asam brothers build at their own expense the tiny and brilliant baroque church of St John Nepomuk, attached to their own house in Munich
J.S. Bach publishes another set of 24 Preludes and Fugues, as an addition to his previous Well-Tempered Clavier
Frederick the Great begins to build the summer palace of Sans Souci at Potsdam
Shortly before his death (in 1750) J.S. Bach completes his Mass in B Minor, worked on over many years
By the time of his death the prolific output of Domenico Scarlatti includes 555 sonatas, all but a few for his own instrument, the harpsichord