HTML

The history of HTML (HyperText Markup Language) is the story of how the internet evolved from a simple document-sharing system for scientists into the multimedia-rich platform we use today.

Here is the timeline of how HTML has developed over the decades.

1. The Origins (1989–1991)

Tim Berners-Lee, a physicist at CERN (European Organization for Nuclear Research), invented the World Wide Web in 1989. His goal was to create a system for researchers to share documents easily.

2. Standardization & The Browser Wars (1993–1997)

As the web grew, different browsers (like Mosaic and later Netscape) began inventing their own proprietary tags. This created chaos, as websites would look different depending on which browser you used.

3. Stability & Separation of Concerns (1999–2000)

By the late 90s, the web was becoming cluttered with design elements mixed into the HTML structure.

4. The Modern Era: HTML5 (2004–Present)

While the W3C focused on XHTML, a group of browser makers (Apple, Mozilla, Opera) formed the WHATWG (Web Hypertext Application Technology Working Group) in 2004 to create a new version of HTML that focused on web applications, not just documents.

Summary Table: Key Versions

VersionYearKey Contribution
HTML Tags1991The original 18 tags by Tim Berners-Lee.
HTML 2.01995First official standard; forms introduced.
HTML 3.21997Tables and visual styling support.
HTML 4.011999Separation of CSS and HTML; stability.
XHTML2000Strict, XML-based syntax.
HTML52014Multimedia, semantics, and mobile responsiveness.