Many stars form in regions of enhanced stellar density, wherein the influence of stellar neighbours can have a strong influence on a protoplanetary disc (PPD) population. In particular, far ultraviolet (FUV) flux from massive stars drives thermal winds from the outer edge of PPDs, accelerating disc destruction. In this work, we present a novel technique for constraining the dynamical history of a star forming environment using PPD properties in a strongly FUV irradiated environment. Applying recent models for FUV induced mass loss rates to the PPD population of Cygnus OB2, we constrain how long ago primordial gas was expelled from the region; $ 0.5$ Myr ago if the Shakura & Sunyaev $alpha$-viscosity parameter is $alpha = 10^{-2}$ (corresponding to a viscous timescale of $tau_mathrm{visc} approx 0.5$ Myr for a disc of scale radius $40$ au around a $1, M_odot$ star). This value of $alpha$ is effectively an upper limit, since it assumes efficient extinction of FUV photons throughout the embedded phase. With this gas expulsion timescale we are able to produce a full dynamical model that fits kinematic and morphological data as well as disc fractions. We suggest Cygnus OB2 was originally composed of distinct massive clumps or filaments, each with a stellar mass $sim 10^4 , M_odot$. Finally we predict that in regions of efficient FUV induced mass loss, disc mass $M_mathrm{disc}$ as a function of stellar host mass $m_mathrm{star}$ follows a power law with $M_mathrm{disc} propto m_mathrm{star}^beta$, where $beta gtrsim 2.7$ (depending on disc initial conditions and FUV exposure). This is steeper than observed correlations in regions of moderate FUV flux ($1 < beta <1.9$), and offers a promising diagnostic to establish the influence of external photoevaporation in a given region.