Poets Laureate of the United Kingdom
Updated June 14, 2021 |
Infoplease Staff
The National Poets of the UK
The Poet Laureate, a member of the royal household, composes poems for state occasions. Carol Ann Duffy became the first woman in the position's 341-year history when chosen for the post in 2009. The Poet Laureate of Britain is normally appointed for life; however, Andrew Motion, named to the post in 1999, accepted the position for ten years.
Edmund Spenser | 1591–1599 |
Samuel Daniel | 1599–1619 |
Ben Jonson | 1619–1637 |
William Davenant | 1638–1668 |
John Dryden 1 | 1668–1689 |
Thomas Shadwell | 1689–1692 |
Nahum Tate | 1692–1715 |
Nicholas Rowe | 1715–1718 |
Laurence Eusden | 1718–1730 |
Colley Cibber | 1730–1757 |
William Whitehead | 1757–1785 |
Thomas Warton | 1785–1790 |
Henry James Pye | 1790–1813 |
Robert Southey | 1813–1843 |
William Wordsworth | 1843–1850 |
Alfred Lord Tennyson | 1850–1892 |
Alfred Austin | 1896–1913 |
Robert Bridges | 1913–1930 |
John Masefield | 1930–1967 |
Cecil Day-Lewis | 1967–1972 |
Sir John Betjeman | 1972–1984 |
Ted Hughes | 1984–1998 |
Andrew Motion | 1999–2009 |
Carol Ann Duffy | 2009–2019 |
Simon Armitage | 2019- |
1. First to bear the title officially.
Poets Laureate of the United States | Literature and Books | The Largest Libraries in the U.S. |