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On this dais a table ran crossways, at which the
lord and his family with their guests, ate, while a few steps lower, at a
long table running lengthwise of the hall, sat the retainers.
The hall was,
also, the living room for all within the walls of the castle. Sand was
strewn on the stone floor and the dogs of the knights ate what was thrown
to them, gnawing the bones at their leisure. Wonderful tapestries hung
from the walls surrounded this rude scene: woman’s record of man's deeds.
Later, we read of
stairs and of another room known as the Parlor or talking-room, and here
begins the sub-division of homes, which in democratic America has arrived
at a point where more than 200 rooms are often sheltered under one private
roof!
Oak chests
figured prominently among the furnishings of a Gothic home, because the
possessions of those feudal lords, who were constantly at war with one
another, often had to be moved in haste.
As men's lives
became more settled, their possessions gradually multiplied; but even at
the end of the eleventh century bedsteads were provided only for the
nobility, probably on account of expense, as they were very grand affairs,
carved and draped. To that time and later belong the wonderfully carved
presses or wardrobes.
Carved wood
paneling was an important addition to interior decoration during the reign
of Henry III (1216-72).
In the thirteenth
and fourteenth centuries England with Flanders led in the production of
mediaeval art.
Hallmarks of the
Gothic period are animals and reptiles carved to ornament the structural
parts of furniture and to ornament panels. Favorite subjects with the wood
carvers of that time were scenes from the lives of the saints (the Church
dominated the State) and from the romances, chanted by the minstrels.
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