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Wikipedia

Bed

A bed is an item of furniture that is used as a place to sleep, rest, and relax.[1][2]

Bedroom on the Detmold Open-air Museum premises

Most modern beds consist of a soft, cushioned mattress on a bed frame. The mattress rests either on a solid base, often wood slats, or a sprung base. Many beds include a box spring inner-sprung base, which is a large mattress-sized box containing wood and springs that provide additional support and suspension for the mattress. Beds are available in many sizes, ranging from infant-sized bassinets and cribs, to small beds for a single person or adult, to large queen and king-size beds designed for two people. While most beds are single mattresses on a fixed frame, there are other varieties, such as the murphy bed, which folds into a wall, the sofa bed, which folds out of a sofa, the trundle bed, which is stored under a low, twin-sized bed and can be rolled out to create a larger sleeping area, and the bunk bed, which provides two mattresses on two tiers as well as a ladder to access the upper tier. Temporary beds include the inflatable air mattress and the folding camp cot. Some beds contain neither a padded mattress nor a bed frame, such as the hammock. Other beds are made specifically for animals.

Beds may have a headboard for resting against, and may have side rails and footboards. "Headboard only" beds may incorporate a "dust ruffle", "bed skirt", or "valance sheet" to hide the bed frame. To support the head, a pillow made of a soft, padded material is usually placed on the top of the mattress. Some form of covering blanket is often used to insulate the sleeper, often bed sheets, a quilt, or a duvet, collectively referred to as bedding. Bedding is the removable non-furniture portion of a bed, which enables these components to be washed or aired out.

Etymology

 
Modern day beds

In Europe, mattresses were stuffed with straw, chaff, animal hair (for instance horsehair, used for its resilience), coarse wool, or down feathers, and stacked, softest topmost. This pile of mattresses, and the sheets, blanket, and pillows, was what early Europeans called a "bed"; it might be packed away during the day (a usage which survives in words like featherbed). The bedframe, even when present, supported the bed, but was not considered part of it.[3]: 674–5 vol1  Later innovations made bedframes more portable, and increased their importance.[3]: 481vol3 : 674vol1 : 675–6 vol1 

History

Prehistory

In August 2020 scientists reported the discovery of the oldest grass bedding from at least 200,000 years ago, much older than the oldest previously known bedding. They speculate that insect-repellent plants and ash layers, sometimes due to burned older grass beddings, found beneath the bedding have been used for a dirt-free, insulated base and to keep away arthropods.[4][5][6]

Ancient history

 
Tutankhamun's gilded bed from the 14th century BC, a bier from his tomb, fashioned to resemble the goddess Sekhmet, the fierce lioness who was the protector of the kings in life and death, Cairo Museum

Early beds were little more than piles of straw or some other natural material (e.g. a heap of palm leaves, animal skins, or dried bracken).[7] An important change was raising them off the ground, to avoid drafts, dirt, and pests.[citation needed] In the Miocene period, lasting from twenty-three to five million years ago, before the emergence of humans, apes began creating beds composed of a sleeping platform including a wooden pillow.[8]

Sub-Saharan Africa

Bedding dated around to 3600 BC was discovered in Sibudu Cave, South Africa.[9] The bedding consists of sedge and other monocotyledons topped with the leaves of Cryptocarya woodii.[9]

Europe

 
These stone boxes in Skara Brae are thought to have held bedding. The stone-built settlement was inhabited between c. 3180 BC to about c. 2500 BC

Beds found in a preserved northern Scottish village, which were raised boxes made of stone and likely topped with comfortable fillers, were dated to between 3200 BC and 2200 BC.[10]

The Odyssey, an ancient Greek epic poem, describes the bed of its protagonist, Odysseus, and explains that he crafted the bed for himself and his wife, Penelope, out of a huge olive tree trunk that used to grow on the spot.[11] The poem's author, Homer, also mentions the inlaying of the woodwork of the bed with gold, silver, and ivory.[11]

Ancient Roman mattresses were stuffed with reeds, hay, or wool. Feathers were used towards the end of the Republic, when custom demanded luxury. Small cushions were placed at the head and sometimes at the back. The bedsteads were high and could only be ascended by the help of steps. They were often arranged for two people, and had a board or railing at the back, as well as the raised portion at the head. The counterpanes were sometimes very costly, generally purple embroidered with figures in gold; and rich hangings fell to the ground masking the front. The bedsteads themselves were often of bronze inlaid with silver, and Elagabalus had one of solid silver. In the walls of some houses at Pompeii bed niches are found which were probably closed by curtains or sliding partitions. Ancient Romans had various kinds of beds for repose. These included:

  • lectus cubicularis, or chamber bed, for normal sleeping
  • lectus genialis, the marriage bed, it was much decorated, and was placed in the atrium opposite the door
  • lectus discubitorius, or table bed, on which they ate—for they ate while lying on their left sides—there usually being three people to one bed, with the middle place accounted the most honorable position
  • lectus lucubratorius, for studying
  • and a lectus funebris, or emortualis, on which the dead were carried to the pyre[12][13]

The Greeks and Romans were also having their meals in bed. They would recline on one side and reach out to pick up food from a nearby table.[14]

Near East

The Egyptians had high bedsteads which were ascended by steps, with bolsters or pillows, and curtains to hang around.[15] The elite of Egyptian society such as its pharaohs and queens even had beds made of wood, sometimes gilded. Often there was a head-rest as well, semi-cylindrical and made of stone, wood, or metal.[16] Ancient Assyrians, Medes, and Persians had beds of a similar kind, and frequently decorated their furniture with inlays or appliques of metal, mother-of-pearl, and ivory.

 
Headrest with two images of the god Bes, c. 1539–1190 BC, Brooklyn Museum

The adjacent image showcases a headrest. Headrests like this were used in life to support the head while sleeping. They are also found supporting a mummy's head in the coffin. This headrest perhaps was made specifically for the tomb, since the offering prayer has been inscribed on the supporting column, although the prayer may have been added after the death of the owner.[17]

Medieval history

Medieval Europeans lay on the floor on beds of leaves covered with skins, or in a kind of shallow chest filled with leaves and moss.[citation needed][dubious ] In the early Middle Ages they laid carpets on the floor or on a bench against the wall, placed upon them were mattresses stuffed with feathers, wool, or hair, and used skins as a covering. Curtains were hung from the ceiling or from an iron arm projecting from the wall.[18] They appear to have generally lain naked in bed, wrapping themselves in large linen sheets which were stretched over the cushions.

 
Southampton Medieval Merchant's House bedroom

In the 12th century, luxury increased and bedsteads were made of wood much decorated with inlaid, carved, and painted ornamentation. They also used folding beds, which served as couches by day and had cushions covered with silk laid upon leather. At night a linen sheet was spread and pillows placed, while silk-covered skins served as coverlets. The Carolingian manuscripts show metal bedsteads much higher at the head than at the feet, and this shape continued in use until the 13th century in France, many cushions being added to raise the body to a sloping position. In 12th-century manuscripts, the bedsteads appear much richer, with inlays, carving, and painting, and with embroidered coverlets and mattresses in harmony. Curtains were hung above the bed and a small hanging lamp is often shown.[citation needed]

In the 14th century the woodwork became of less importance, generally being entirely covered by hangings of rich materials. Silk, velvet, and even cloth of gold were frequently used. Inventories from the beginning of the 14th century give details of these hangings lined with fur and richly embroidered. It was then that the Four poster bed (also known as a tester bed) made its first appearance, the bed being slung from the ceiling or fastened to the walls, a form which developed later into a room within a room, shut in by double curtains, sometimes even to exclude all drafts. The space between the bed and the wall was called the ruelle, and very intimate friends were received there. The 14th century was also the time when feather beds became highly prized possessions.[18] Beds in aristocratic residences can be distinguished by enclosed curtains, these beds would have mattresses and pillows that were filled with feathers. Sheets were made of linen and blankets of wool. Rails attached to the beds would be for hanging clothes or to hold candles. In less wealthy houses, the bed would be made of three planks and a mattress made of dried heather or fern, they would sleep with a single sheet and an old blanket.[19]

In the 15th century beds became very large, reaching 7 to 8 feet (2.1 to 2.4 m) by 6 to 7 feet (1.8 to 2.1 m). The mattresses were often filled with pea-shucks, straw, or feathers. At this time great personages were in the habit of carrying most of their property about with them, including beds and bed hangings, and for this reason the bedsteads were for the most part mere frameworks to be covered up; but about the beginning of the 16th century bedsteads were made lighter and more decorative, since the lords remained in the same place for longer periods.[citation needed]

Modern history

In the 17th century, which has been called "the century of magnificent beds", the style à la duchesse, with tester and curtains only at the head, replaced the more enclosed beds in France, though they lasted much longer in England. Louis XIV had an enormous number of sumptuous beds, as many as 413 being described in the inventories of his palaces. Some of them had embroideries enriched with pearls, and figures on a silver or golden ground. The great bed at Versailles had crimson velvet curtains on which "The Triumph of Venus" was embroidered. So much gold was used that the velvet scarcely showed.

 
Napoleon's bed (château de Compiègne)

In the 18th century feather pillows were first used as coverings in Germany, which in the fashions of the bed and the curious etiquette connected with the bedchamber followed France for the most part. The beds were a la duchesse, but in France itself there was great variety both of name and shape. The custom of the "bed of justice" upon which the king of France reclined when he was present in parliament, the princes being seated, the great officials standing, and the lesser officials kneeling, was held to denote the royal power even more than the throne.

Louis XI is credited with its first use and the custom lasted until the end of the monarchy. In the chambre de parade, where the ceremonial bed was placed, certain persons, such as ambassadors or great lords, whom it was desired to honour, were received in a more intimate fashion than the crowd of courtiers. At Versailles women received their friends in their beds, both before and after childbirth, during periods of mourning, and even directly after marriage—in fact in any circumstances which were thought deserving of congratulation or condolence. During the 17th century this curious custom became general, perhaps to avoid the tiresome details of etiquette. Portable beds were used in high society in France until the end of the Ancien Régime. The earliest of which mention has been found belonged to Charles the Bold. They had curtains over a light framework, and were in their way as fine as the stationary beds.

Iron beds appear in the 18th century; the advertisements declare them as free from the insects which sometimes infested wooden bedsteads. Elsewhere, there was also the closed bed with sliding or folding shutters, and in England—where beds were commonly quite simple in form—the four poster was the usual citizen's bed until the middle of the 19th century.

Bed sizes

 
A 10 feet (3.0 m) high ancient bed at the Bangladesh National Museum

Bed sizes vary considerably around the world, with most countries having their own standards and terminology.

Notable examples

 
The Great Bed of Ware, one of the largest beds in the world

One of the largest beds in the world is the Great Bed of Ware, made in about 1580. It is 3.26 metres (10.7 ft) wide, 3.38 metres (11.1 ft) long. The bed is mentioned by Shakespeare in Twelfth Night. It is now in the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) in London. Another bed in the V&A is the Golden Bed created by William Burges in 1879.[20]

In 1882, an Indian Maharajah had a bed made of solid silver. At each corner of the bed there was a life-sized statue of a naked woman holding a fan. When the Maharajah lay on the bed, his weight started a mechanism that made the women wave their fans.[21]

In 1865, a convertible bed in the form of an upright piano was available, which could provide home entertainment while saving space.[22]

Types

 
Lit à la polonaise (Polish style bed),[23] Royal Castle in Warsaw, 18th century.
 
Patent #322,177, on 14 July 1885 issued to Sarah E. Goode for a cabinet bed
 
Drawing of a candle-lit mourning bed (Trauergerüst) for abbess Franziska Christine von Pfalz-Sulzbach, 1776
 
Chinese style beds

There are many varieties of beds:

  • An adjustable bed is a bed that can be adjusted to a number of different positions. Most hospital beds are adjustable, so that a patient can have different parts of their body elevated for medical reasons. Some people have adjustable beds in private homes. Some adjustable beds are designed for couples; they use two separate mattresses and adjustment mechanisms. This permits one partner to be lying flat to sleep while the other has the head and shoulders elevated to watch television or read. Couple adjustable beds also permit partners with different medical conditions to select a mattress positioning that best suits them.
  • An air bed uses an air-inflated mattress, sometimes connected to an electric air pump and having variable, firmness controls. The portable version of an air bed can also be rolled up and packed; so is meant for travel or temporary guest use.
  • A bassinet is a bed specifically for newborns.
  • A box-bed is a bed having the form of a large box with wooden roof, sides, and ends, opening in front with two sliding panels or shutters; often used in cottages in Scotland: sometimes also applied to a bed arranged to fold up into a box.
  • A brass bed has a frame constructed from brass. A brass-plated bed is a cheaper bed of iron with a thin covering of brass, which with time peels off and the iron is exposed.
  • A bunk bed is two or more beds one atop the other. Bunk beds are used for adults in military barracks and in some ski lodges. Bunk beds are used for children and teens in summer camps. Some inexpensive hostels provide bunk beds for guests. Bunk beds are used for children in private homes.
  • A loft bed is similar to a bunk bed, except there is no lower bunk. This leaves space underneath for storage, other furniture, a desk etc.
  • A captain's bed[24] (also known as a "captain bed", "chest bed", or "cabin bed") is a platform bed with drawers and storage compartments built in underneath.
  • A camp bed (also "cot") is a simple, temporary, portable bed used by armies and by campers. Cots are also used to provide a sleeping surface for refugees and other homeless people during disasters, floods, or other crises.
  • A canopy bed is similar to a four poster bed, but the posts usually extend higher and are adorned or draped with cloth, sometimes completely enclosing the bed. Examples include the lit à la polonaise and the lit a la turque.
  • A curtained bed is a luxury bed with curtains.
  • A daybed is a couch that is used as a seat by day and as a bed by night. Usually it has pop up trundle which is used as bed in the night.
  • A futon is a traditional style of Japanese bed using a mattress on a wooden frame. Futons are also available in a larger Western style which can fold halfway for sitting. Futons were traditionally made with cotton, but in the 2000s, many futons include synthetic foam.
  • A four poster bed is a bed with four posts, one in each corner, that support a tester.
  • A hammock is a piece of suspended fabric or netting, used on ships and in some homes.
  • A hideaway bed, invented by Sarah E. Goode in response to the needs of apartment-dwellers, folds up into another piece of furniture, such as a shelf or desk, when not in use.
  • A hospital bed is specifically designed to facilitate convalescence, traditionally in a hospital or nursing facility, but increasingly in other settings, such as a private residence. Hospital beds are typically adjustable, so that the head or feet can be raised or lowered. Modern hospital beds commonly have wheels to assist in moderate relocation, but they are larger and generally more permanently placed than a trolley (US: gurney). The "hospital bed" is also a common unit of measurement for the capacity of any type of inpatient medical facility, though it is just as common to shorten the term to "bed" in that usage (e.g. The hospital has 250 beds...).
  • An infant bed (also "crib" or "cot") is a small bed specifically for babies and infants.
  • An iron bed, developed in the 1850s, is constructed of iron and steel.
  • A kang bed-stove is a Chinese ceramic room heater used as the platform for a bed.
  • A Charpai is a traditional Punjabi bed made of tied ropes bordered by a wooden frame.
  • A mourning bed ("illustration") is a formal canopied bed, with the deceased, a wax effigy, or symbols of rank.
  • A Murphy bed or wallbed is a bed that can fold up into a wall or cabinet to save space.
  • An Ottoman bed (in the UK) is a type of storage bed in which the storage area is placed underneath the mattress base and accessed by lifting the hinged mattress frame with the help of a spring or hydraulic mechanism.
  • A pallet is a thin, lightweight mattress.
  • A platform bed is a mattress resting on a solid, flat raised surface, either free-standing or part of the structure of the room.
  • A roll-away bed is a bed whose frame folds in half and rolls in order to be more easily stored and moved. This is used in different settings, including hotels for either free or a nominal fee per night, where more people than expected may need to sleep in the same room, e.g. 5 people in a hotel room for 4 (two twin beds).
  • A rope bed has a wooden frame within which crossing ropes, which may support a straw- or down-filled single mattress. See charpai.
  • A slat bed is a flatpack bed with wooden slats for the bedbase.
  • A sofabed ("pull-out" or "pull-out bed") is a folding bed that is stored inside a sofa. Sofa beds are also called "convertibles" and "hideaways."
  • A state bed developed in Early Modern Europe from a hieratic canopy of state.
  • A toddler bed is a small bed for young children.
  • A trundle bed or "truckle bed" is a bed usually stored beneath another bed during the day. They have been in use for centuries. In the modern era they are sometimes referred to as a "sleepover bed" or "daybed with pop up trundle."
  • A vibrating bed (also known as a Magic Fingers bed) is typically a coin-operated novelty found in a vintage (c. 1960s-early 1980s) motel. For a nominal fee, the mattress vibrates for a duration of time. Alternatively it is a modern bed which vibrates by use of an off-centre motor. It is controlled by electronics for varying time and amplitude settings and is used therapeutically to ease back pains or as an erotic aid.
  • A waterbed is a flexible plastic mattress full of water. The plastic container needs a strong frame around it.

Frames

Bed frames, also called bed steads, are made of wood or metal. The frame is made up of head, foot, and side rails. For heavy duty or larger frames (such as for queen- and king-sized beds), the bed frame also includes a center support rail. The rails are assembled to create a box for the mattress or mattress/box spring to sit on.

Types include:

  • platform – typically used without a box spring.
  • captain or storage – has drawers beneath the frame to make use of the space between the floor and the bed frame.
  • waterbed – a heavy-duty frame built specifically to support the weight of the water in the mattress. (Mainly used on larger models)

Although not truly parts of a bed frame, headboards, footboards, and bed rails can be included in the definition. Headboards and footboards can be wood or metal. They can be stained, painted, or covered in fabric or leather.

Bed rails are made of wood or metal and are attached to a headboard and footboard. Wooden slats are placed perpendicular to the bed rails to support the mattress/mattress box spring. Bed rails and frames are often attached to the bed post using knock-down fittings.[25][26] A knock-down fitting enables the bed to be easily dismantled for removal. Primary knock-down fittings for bed rails are as follows:

  • Pin-and-hook fastener. A mortise or slot is cut vertically in the bedpost. Pins are inserted horizontally in the bed post so that the pins perpendicularly intersect the mortise. For example, if one looked in the mortise, one might see part of one horizontal pin at the bottom of the mortise and a part of a second pin toward the top of the mortise. Hooks are installed at the end of the rail. Usually these hooks are part of a plate that is attached to the rail. The hooks then are inserted into the bed post mortise and hook over the pins.
  • Plate-and-hook fastener. Instead of pins inserted horizontally into the bedpost, an eye plate (post plate) is installed on the bedpost. The hooks are installed on the rail, either as surface mount or recessed. Depending on the hardware, the bedpost may require a mortise in order to allow the hooks to fasten to the plate. This is also referred to as a keyhole fastener, especially if the connector is more of a "plug" than a "hook".
  • Bed bolts ("through-bolts"), are a different means of a knock-down connection. A hole is typically drilled through the bedpost. The bolt head is inset and covered with a plug. In the rail, a dowel nut or other type of nut receives the bolt. The springs are made from metal, which are swirled for maximum comfort

Safety rails, or cot sides, can be added to the sides of a bed (normally a child or elderly person's bed) to stop anyone falling out of the sides of the bed.[27] A safety rail is normally a piece of wood that attaches to the side rails, on one or both sides of the bed. They are made so that they can be easily removed when no longer required.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Bed". The Free Dictionary By Farlex. from the original on 27 May 2019. Retrieved 16 May 2012.
  2. ^ "Bed". Merriam-Webster. from the original on 27 March 2019. Retrieved 16 May 2012.
  3. ^ a b Dictionnaire de l'ameublement et de la décoration depuis le XIIIe siècle jusqu'à nos jours, Havard, Henry, 1838-1921
  4. ^ "200,000 years ago, humans preferred to sleep in beds". phys.org. from the original on 19 August 2020. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  5. ^ "The oldest known grass beds from 200,000 years ago included insect repellents". Science News. 13 August 2020. from the original on 18 August 2020. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  6. ^ Wadley, Lyn; Esteban, Irene; Peña, Paloma de la; Wojcieszak, Marine; Stratford, Dominic; Lennox, Sandra; d'Errico, Francesco; Rosso, Daniela Eugenia; Orange, François; Backwell, Lucinda; Sievers, Christine (14 August 2020). "Fire and grass-bedding construction 200 thousand years ago at Border Cave, South Africa". Science. 369 (6505): 863–866. Bibcode:2020Sci...369..863W. doi:10.1126/science.abc7239. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 32792402. S2CID 221113832. from the original on 6 September 2020. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  7. ^ Miller, Scott (14 June 2011). The President and the Assassin: McKinley, Terror, and Empire at the Dawn of the American Century. Random House Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-679-60498-3. from the original on 3 June 2022. Retrieved 3 June 2022.
  8. ^ . National Geographic News. 18 April 2014. Archived from the original on 22 October 2018. Retrieved 30 March 2018.
  9. ^ a b Wadley, Lyn; Sievers, Christine; Bamford, Marion; Goldberg, Paul; Berna, Francesco; Miller, Christopher (9 December 2011). "Middle Stone Age Bedding Construction and Settlement Patterns at Sibudu, South Africa". Science. 334 (6061): 1388–1391. Bibcode:2011Sci...334.1388W. doi:10.1126/science.1213317. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 22158814. S2CID 11063722.
  10. ^ "Skara Brae – The Furniture". orkneyjar.com. from the original on 19 August 2010. Retrieved 10 September 2010.
  11. ^ a b Grethlein, Jonas (12 March 2020). "Odysseus and His Bed: From Significant Objects to Thing Theory in Homer". The Classical Quarterly. 69 (2): 467–482. doi:10.1017/S0009838820000063. S2CID 216372888. from the original on 29 September 2022. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  12. ^ Chambers, Ephraim, ed. (1728). "Bed". Cyclopædia, or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences (1st ed.). James and John Knapton, et al. p. 94.
  13. ^ . History of Science and Technology. Archived from the original on 24 April 2015. Retrieved 25 August 2014.
  14. ^ "13 facts about the history of the bed". from the original on 13 July 2019.
  15. ^ Chisholm, Hugh (1910). The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and General Information. At the University Press.
  16. ^ Smardzewski, Jerzy (18 June 2015). Furniture Design. Springer. ISBN 978-3-319-19533-9. from the original on 3 June 2022. Retrieved 3 June 2022.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
  18. ^ a b . furniturestyles.net. Archived from the original on 27 November 2010. Retrieved 26 November 2010.
  19. ^ Mortimer, Ian (2009). The Time Traveller's Guide to Medieval England: A Handbook for Visitors to the Fourteenth Century. London: Vintage. pp. 160–161, 165. ISBN 9781845950996.
  20. ^ "The Golden Bed". Victoria and Albert Museum. from the original on 29 June 2013. Retrieved 26 May 2013.
  21. ^ Independent (24 September 2015). "India's royal riches: The maharajas' opulent lifestyle". Independent.co.uk. from the original on 30 July 2017. Retrieved 31 July 2017.
  22. ^ Brooklyn Museum. . Archived from the original on 28 October 2011. Retrieved 11 March 2012.
  23. ^ (in English) . getty.edu. Archived from the original on 1 March 2009. Retrieved 26 January 2009.
  24. ^ "Captain's bed". Dictionary.com. from the original on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 26 May 2012.
  25. ^ . whitechapel-ltd.com. Archived from the original on 12 March 2006.
  26. ^ . home-improvement-and-financing.com. Archived from the original on 15 April 2017. Retrieved 15 April 2008.
  27. ^ "Bed Safety Rails". sleepcompare.com. from the original on 16 November 2018. Retrieved 15 November 2018.

External links

  •   Quotations related to Beds at Wikiquote

other, uses, disambiguation, item, furniture, that, used, place, sleep, rest, relax, room, detmold, open, museum, premisesmost, modern, beds, consist, soft, cushioned, mattress, frame, mattress, rests, either, solid, base, often, wood, slats, sprung, base, man. For other uses see Bed disambiguation A bed is an item of furniture that is used as a place to sleep rest and relax 1 2 Bedroom on the Detmold Open air Museum premisesMost modern beds consist of a soft cushioned mattress on a bed frame The mattress rests either on a solid base often wood slats or a sprung base Many beds include a box spring inner sprung base which is a large mattress sized box containing wood and springs that provide additional support and suspension for the mattress Beds are available in many sizes ranging from infant sized bassinets and cribs to small beds for a single person or adult to large queen and king size beds designed for two people While most beds are single mattresses on a fixed frame there are other varieties such as the murphy bed which folds into a wall the sofa bed which folds out of a sofa the trundle bed which is stored under a low twin sized bed and can be rolled out to create a larger sleeping area and the bunk bed which provides two mattresses on two tiers as well as a ladder to access the upper tier Temporary beds include the inflatable air mattress and the folding camp cot Some beds contain neither a padded mattress nor a bed frame such as the hammock Other beds are made specifically for animals Beds may have a headboard for resting against and may have side rails and footboards Headboard only beds may incorporate a dust ruffle bed skirt or valance sheet to hide the bed frame To support the head a pillow made of a soft padded material is usually placed on the top of the mattress Some form of covering blanket is often used to insulate the sleeper often bed sheets a quilt or a duvet collectively referred to as bedding Bedding is the removable non furniture portion of a bed which enables these components to be washed or aired out Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Prehistory 2 2 Ancient history 2 2 1 Sub Saharan Africa 2 2 2 Europe 2 2 3 Near East 2 3 Medieval history 2 4 Modern history 3 Bed sizes 4 Notable examples 5 Types 6 Frames 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEtymology nbsp Modern day bedsIn Europe mattresses were stuffed with straw chaff animal hair for instance horsehair used for its resilience coarse wool or down feathers and stacked softest topmost This pile of mattresses and the sheets blanket and pillows was what early Europeans called a bed it might be packed away during the day a usage which survives in words like featherbed The bedframe even when present supported the bed but was not considered part of it 3 674 5 vol1 Later innovations made bedframes more portable and increased their importance 3 481vol3 674vol1 675 6 vol1 HistorySee also Bed base Prehistory In August 2020 scientists reported the discovery of the oldest grass bedding from at least 200 000 years ago much older than the oldest previously known bedding They speculate that insect repellent plants and ash layers sometimes due to burned older grass beddings found beneath the bedding have been used for a dirt free insulated base and to keep away arthropods 4 5 6 Ancient history nbsp Tutankhamun s gilded bed from the 14th century BC a bier from his tomb fashioned to resemble the goddess Sekhmet the fierce lioness who was the protector of the kings in life and death Cairo MuseumEarly beds were little more than piles of straw or some other natural material e g a heap of palm leaves animal skins or dried bracken 7 An important change was raising them off the ground to avoid drafts dirt and pests citation needed In the Miocene period lasting from twenty three to five million years ago before the emergence of humans apes began creating beds composed of a sleeping platform including a wooden pillow 8 Sub Saharan Africa Bedding dated around to 3600 BC was discovered in Sibudu Cave South Africa 9 The bedding consists of sedge and other monocotyledons topped with the leaves of Cryptocarya woodii 9 Europe nbsp These stone boxes in Skara Brae are thought to have held bedding The stone built settlement was inhabited between c 3180 BC to about c 2500 BCBeds found in a preserved northern Scottish village which were raised boxes made of stone and likely topped with comfortable fillers were dated to between 3200 BC and 2200 BC 10 The Odyssey an ancient Greek epic poem describes the bed of its protagonist Odysseus and explains that he crafted the bed for himself and his wife Penelope out of a huge olive tree trunk that used to grow on the spot 11 The poem s author Homer also mentions the inlaying of the woodwork of the bed with gold silver and ivory 11 Ancient Roman mattresses were stuffed with reeds hay or wool Feathers were used towards the end of the Republic when custom demanded luxury Small cushions were placed at the head and sometimes at the back The bedsteads were high and could only be ascended by the help of steps They were often arranged for two people and had a board or railing at the back as well as the raised portion at the head The counterpanes were sometimes very costly generally purple embroidered with figures in gold and rich hangings fell to the ground masking the front The bedsteads themselves were often of bronze inlaid with silver and Elagabalus had one of solid silver In the walls of some houses at Pompeii bed niches are found which were probably closed by curtains or sliding partitions Ancient Romans had various kinds of beds for repose These included lectus cubicularis or chamber bed for normal sleeping lectus genialis the marriage bed it was much decorated and was placed in the atrium opposite the door lectus discubitorius or table bed on which they ate for they ate while lying on their left sides there usually being three people to one bed with the middle place accounted the most honorable position lectus lucubratorius for studying and a lectus funebris or emortualis on which the dead were carried to the pyre 12 13 The Greeks and Romans were also having their meals in bed They would recline on one side and reach out to pick up food from a nearby table 14 Near East The Egyptians had high bedsteads which were ascended by steps with bolsters or pillows and curtains to hang around 15 The elite of Egyptian society such as its pharaohs and queens even had beds made of wood sometimes gilded Often there was a head rest as well semi cylindrical and made of stone wood or metal 16 Ancient Assyrians Medes and Persians had beds of a similar kind and frequently decorated their furniture with inlays or appliques of metal mother of pearl and ivory nbsp Headrest with two images of the god Bes c 1539 1190 BC Brooklyn MuseumThe adjacent image showcases a headrest Headrests like this were used in life to support the head while sleeping They are also found supporting a mummy s head in the coffin This headrest perhaps was made specifically for the tomb since the offering prayer has been inscribed on the supporting column although the prayer may have been added after the death of the owner 17 Medieval history Medieval Europeans lay on the floor on beds of leaves covered with skins or in a kind of shallow chest filled with leaves and moss citation needed dubious discuss In the early Middle Ages they laid carpets on the floor or on a bench against the wall placed upon them were mattresses stuffed with feathers wool or hair and used skins as a covering Curtains were hung from the ceiling or from an iron arm projecting from the wall 18 They appear to have generally lain naked in bed wrapping themselves in large linen sheets which were stretched over the cushions nbsp Southampton Medieval Merchant s House bedroomIn the 12th century luxury increased and bedsteads were made of wood much decorated with inlaid carved and painted ornamentation They also used folding beds which served as couches by day and had cushions covered with silk laid upon leather At night a linen sheet was spread and pillows placed while silk covered skins served as coverlets The Carolingian manuscripts show metal bedsteads much higher at the head than at the feet and this shape continued in use until the 13th century in France many cushions being added to raise the body to a sloping position In 12th century manuscripts the bedsteads appear much richer with inlays carving and painting and with embroidered coverlets and mattresses in harmony Curtains were hung above the bed and a small hanging lamp is often shown citation needed In the 14th century the woodwork became of less importance generally being entirely covered by hangings of rich materials Silk velvet and even cloth of gold were frequently used Inventories from the beginning of the 14th century give details of these hangings lined with fur and richly embroidered It was then that the Four poster bed also known as a tester bed made its first appearance the bed being slung from the ceiling or fastened to the walls a form which developed later into a room within a room shut in by double curtains sometimes even to exclude all drafts The space between the bed and the wall was called the ruelle and very intimate friends were received there The 14th century was also the time when feather beds became highly prized possessions 18 Beds in aristocratic residences can be distinguished by enclosed curtains these beds would have mattresses and pillows that were filled with feathers Sheets were made of linen and blankets of wool Rails attached to the beds would be for hanging clothes or to hold candles In less wealthy houses the bed would be made of three planks and a mattress made of dried heather or fern they would sleep with a single sheet and an old blanket 19 In the 15th century beds became very large reaching 7 to 8 feet 2 1 to 2 4 m by 6 to 7 feet 1 8 to 2 1 m The mattresses were often filled with pea shucks straw or feathers At this time great personages were in the habit of carrying most of their property about with them including beds and bed hangings and for this reason the bedsteads were for the most part mere frameworks to be covered up but about the beginning of the 16th century bedsteads were made lighter and more decorative since the lords remained in the same place for longer periods citation needed Modern history In the 17th century which has been called the century of magnificent beds the style a la duchesse with tester and curtains only at the head replaced the more enclosed beds in France though they lasted much longer in England Louis XIV had an enormous number of sumptuous beds as many as 413 being described in the inventories of his palaces Some of them had embroideries enriched with pearls and figures on a silver or golden ground The great bed at Versailles had crimson velvet curtains on which The Triumph of Venus was embroidered So much gold was used that the velvet scarcely showed nbsp Napoleon s bed chateau de Compiegne In the 18th century feather pillows were first used as coverings in Germany which in the fashions of the bed and the curious etiquette connected with the bedchamber followed France for the most part The beds were a la duchesse but in France itself there was great variety both of name and shape The custom of the bed of justice upon which the king of France reclined when he was present in parliament the princes being seated the great officials standing and the lesser officials kneeling was held to denote the royal power even more than the throne Louis XI is credited with its first use and the custom lasted until the end of the monarchy In the chambre de parade where the ceremonial bed was placed certain persons such as ambassadors or great lords whom it was desired to honour were received in a more intimate fashion than the crowd of courtiers At Versailles women received their friends in their beds both before and after childbirth during periods of mourning and even directly after marriage in fact in any circumstances which were thought deserving of congratulation or condolence During the 17th century this curious custom became general perhaps to avoid the tiresome details of etiquette Portable beds were used in high society in France until the end of the Ancien Regime The earliest of which mention has been found belonged to Charles the Bold They had curtains over a light framework and were in their way as fine as the stationary beds Iron beds appear in the 18th century the advertisements declare them as free from the insects which sometimes infested wooden bedsteads Elsewhere there was also the closed bed with sliding or folding shutters and in England where beds were commonly quite simple in form the four poster was the usual citizen s bed until the middle of the 19th century Bed sizes nbsp A 10 feet 3 0 m high ancient bed at the Bangladesh National MuseumMain article Bed size Bed sizes vary considerably around the world with most countries having their own standards and terminology Notable examples nbsp The Great Bed of Ware one of the largest beds in the worldOne of the largest beds in the world is the Great Bed of Ware made in about 1580 It is 3 26 metres 10 7 ft wide 3 38 metres 11 1 ft long The bed is mentioned by Shakespeare in Twelfth Night It is now in the Victoria and Albert Museum V amp A in London Another bed in the V amp A is the Golden Bed created by William Burges in 1879 20 In 1882 an Indian Maharajah had a bed made of solid silver At each corner of the bed there was a life sized statue of a naked woman holding a fan When the Maharajah lay on the bed his weight started a mechanism that made the women wave their fans 21 In 1865 a convertible bed in the form of an upright piano was available which could provide home entertainment while saving space 22 TypesSee also Category Beds This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Lit a la polonaise Polish style bed 23 Royal Castle in Warsaw 18th century nbsp Patent 322 177 on 14 July 1885 issued to Sarah E Goode for a cabinet bed nbsp Drawing of a candle lit mourning bed Trauergerust for abbess Franziska Christine von Pfalz Sulzbach 1776 nbsp Chinese style bedsThere are many varieties of beds An adjustable bed is a bed that can be adjusted to a number of different positions Most hospital beds are adjustable so that a patient can have different parts of their body elevated for medical reasons Some people have adjustable beds in private homes Some adjustable beds are designed for couples they use two separate mattresses and adjustment mechanisms This permits one partner to be lying flat to sleep while the other has the head and shoulders elevated to watch television or read Couple adjustable beds also permit partners with different medical conditions to select a mattress positioning that best suits them An air bed uses an air inflated mattress sometimes connected to an electric air pump and having variable firmness controls The portable version of an air bed can also be rolled up and packed so is meant for travel or temporary guest use A bassinet is a bed specifically for newborns A box bed is a bed having the form of a large box with wooden roof sides and ends opening in front with two sliding panels or shutters often used in cottages in Scotland sometimes also applied to a bed arranged to fold up into a box A brass bed has a frame constructed from brass A brass plated bed is a cheaper bed of iron with a thin covering of brass which with time peels off and the iron is exposed A bunk bed is two or more beds one atop the other Bunk beds are used for adults in military barracks and in some ski lodges Bunk beds are used for children and teens in summer camps Some inexpensive hostels provide bunk beds for guests Bunk beds are used for children in private homes A loft bed is similar to a bunk bed except there is no lower bunk This leaves space underneath for storage other furniture a desk etc A captain s bed 24 also known as a captain bed chest bed or cabin bed is a platform bed with drawers and storage compartments built in underneath A camp bed also cot is a simple temporary portable bed used by armies and by campers Cots are also used to provide a sleeping surface for refugees and other homeless people during disasters floods or other crises A canopy bed is similar to a four poster bed but the posts usually extend higher and are adorned or draped with cloth sometimes completely enclosing the bed Examples include the lit a la polonaise and the lit a la turque A curtained bed is a luxury bed with curtains A daybed is a couch that is used as a seat by day and as a bed by night Usually it has pop up trundle which is used as bed in the night A futon is a traditional style of Japanese bed using a mattress on a wooden frame Futons are also available in a larger Western style which can fold halfway for sitting Futons were traditionally made with cotton but in the 2000s many futons include synthetic foam A four poster bed is a bed with four posts one in each corner that support a tester A hammock is a piece of suspended fabric or netting used on ships and in some homes A hideaway bed invented by Sarah E Goode in response to the needs of apartment dwellers folds up into another piece of furniture such as a shelf or desk when not in use A hospital bed is specifically designed to facilitate convalescence traditionally in a hospital or nursing facility but increasingly in other settings such as a private residence Hospital beds are typically adjustable so that the head or feet can be raised or lowered Modern hospital beds commonly have wheels to assist in moderate relocation but they are larger and generally more permanently placed than a trolley US gurney The hospital bed is also a common unit of measurement for the capacity of any type of inpatient medical facility though it is just as common to shorten the term to bed in that usage e g The hospital has 250 beds An infant bed also crib or cot is a small bed specifically for babies and infants An iron bed developed in the 1850s is constructed of iron and steel A kang bed stove is a Chinese ceramic room heater used as the platform for a bed A Charpai is a traditional Punjabi bed made of tied ropes bordered by a wooden frame A mourning bed illustration is a formal canopied bed with the deceased a wax effigy or symbols of rank A Murphy bed or wallbed is a bed that can fold up into a wall or cabinet to save space An Ottoman bed in the UK is a type of storage bed in which the storage area is placed underneath the mattress base and accessed by lifting the hinged mattress frame with the help of a spring or hydraulic mechanism A pallet is a thin lightweight mattress A platform bed is a mattress resting on a solid flat raised surface either free standing or part of the structure of the room A roll away bed is a bed whose frame folds in half and rolls in order to be more easily stored and moved This is used in different settings including hotels for either free or a nominal fee per night where more people than expected may need to sleep in the same room e g 5 people in a hotel room for 4 two twin beds A rope bed has a wooden frame within which crossing ropes which may support a straw or down filled single mattress See charpai A slat bed is a flatpack bed with wooden slats for the bedbase A sofabed pull out or pull out bed is a folding bed that is stored inside a sofa Sofa beds are also called convertibles and hideaways A state bed developed in Early Modern Europe from a hieratic canopy of state A toddler bed is a small bed for young children A trundle bed or truckle bed is a bed usually stored beneath another bed during the day They have been in use for centuries In the modern era they are sometimes referred to as a sleepover bed or daybed with pop up trundle A vibrating bed also known as a Magic Fingers bed is typically a coin operated novelty found in a vintage c 1960s early 1980s motel For a nominal fee the mattress vibrates for a duration of time Alternatively it is a modern bed which vibrates by use of an off centre motor It is controlled by electronics for varying time and amplitude settings and is used therapeutically to ease back pains or as an erotic aid A waterbed is a flexible plastic mattress full of water The plastic container needs a strong frame around it FramesMain article Bed frame Bed frames also called bed steads are made of wood or metal The frame is made up of head foot and side rails For heavy duty or larger frames such as for queen and king sized beds the bed frame also includes a center support rail The rails are assembled to create a box for the mattress or mattress box spring to sit on Types include platform typically used without a box spring captain or storage has drawers beneath the frame to make use of the space between the floor and the bed frame waterbed a heavy duty frame built specifically to support the weight of the water in the mattress Mainly used on larger models Although not truly parts of a bed frame headboards footboards and bed rails can be included in the definition Headboards and footboards can be wood or metal They can be stained painted or covered in fabric or leather Bed rails are made of wood or metal and are attached to a headboard and footboard Wooden slats are placed perpendicular to the bed rails to support the mattress mattress box spring Bed rails and frames are often attached to the bed post using knock down fittings 25 26 A knock down fitting enables the bed to be easily dismantled for removal Primary knock down fittings for bed rails are as follows Pin and hook fastener A mortise or slot is cut vertically in the bedpost Pins are inserted horizontally in the bed post so that the pins perpendicularly intersect the mortise For example if one looked in the mortise one might see part of one horizontal pin at the bottom of the mortise and a part of a second pin toward the top of the mortise Hooks are installed at the end of the rail Usually these hooks are part of a plate that is attached to the rail The hooks then are inserted into the bed post mortise and hook over the pins Plate and hook fastener Instead of pins inserted horizontally into the bedpost an eye plate post plate is installed on the bedpost The hooks are installed on the rail either as surface mount or recessed Depending on the hardware the bedpost may require a mortise in order to allow the hooks to fasten to the plate This is also referred to as a keyhole fastener especially if the connector is more of a plug than a hook Bed bolts through bolts are a different means of a knock down connection A hole is typically drilled through the bedpost The bolt head is inset and covered with a plug In the rail a dowel nut or other type of nut receives the bolt The springs are made from metal which are swirled for maximum comfortSafety rails or cot sides can be added to the sides of a bed normally a child or elderly person s bed to stop anyone falling out of the sides of the bed 27 A safety rail is normally a piece of wood that attaches to the side rails on one or both sides of the bed They are made so that they can be easily removed when no longer required See alsoBed In Co sleeping Sleeping bagReferences Bed The Free Dictionary By Farlex Archived from the original on 27 May 2019 Retrieved 16 May 2012 Bed Merriam Webster Archived from the original on 27 March 2019 Retrieved 16 May 2012 a b Dictionnaire de l ameublement et de la decoration depuis le XIIIe siecle jusqu a nos jours Havard Henry 1838 1921 200 000 years ago humans preferred to sleep in beds phys org Archived from the original on 19 August 2020 Retrieved 6 September 2020 The oldest known grass beds from 200 000 years ago included insect repellents Science News 13 August 2020 Archived from the original on 18 August 2020 Retrieved 6 September 2020 Wadley Lyn Esteban Irene Pena Paloma de la Wojcieszak Marine Stratford Dominic Lennox Sandra d Errico Francesco Rosso Daniela Eugenia Orange Francois Backwell Lucinda Sievers Christine 14 August 2020 Fire and grass bedding construction 200 thousand years ago at Border Cave South Africa Science 369 6505 863 866 Bibcode 2020Sci 369 863W doi 10 1126 science abc7239 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 32792402 S2CID 221113832 Archived from the original on 6 September 2020 Retrieved 6 September 2020 Miller Scott 14 June 2011 The President and the Assassin McKinley Terror and Empire at the Dawn of the American Century Random House Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 679 60498 3 Archived from the original on 3 June 2022 Retrieved 3 June 2022 Chimpanzees Make Beds That Offer Them Best Night s Sleep National Geographic News 18 April 2014 Archived from the original on 22 October 2018 Retrieved 30 March 2018 a b Wadley Lyn Sievers Christine Bamford Marion Goldberg Paul Berna Francesco Miller Christopher 9 December 2011 Middle Stone Age Bedding Construction and Settlement Patterns at Sibudu South Africa Science 334 6061 1388 1391 Bibcode 2011Sci 334 1388W doi 10 1126 science 1213317 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 22158814 S2CID 11063722 Skara Brae The Furniture orkneyjar com Archived from the original on 19 August 2010 Retrieved 10 September 2010 a b Grethlein Jonas 12 March 2020 Odysseus and His Bed From Significant Objects to Thing Theory in Homer The Classical Quarterly 69 2 467 482 doi 10 1017 S0009838820000063 S2CID 216372888 Archived from the original on 29 September 2022 Retrieved 1 January 2021 Chambers Ephraim ed 1728 Bed Cyclopaedia or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences 1st ed James and John Knapton et al p 94 BED History of Science and Technology Archived from the original on 24 April 2015 Retrieved 25 August 2014 13 facts about the history of the bed Archived from the original on 13 July 2019 Chisholm Hugh 1910 The Encyclopaedia Britannica A Dictionary of Arts Sciences Literature and General Information At the University Press Smardzewski Jerzy 18 June 2015 Furniture Design Springer ISBN 978 3 319 19533 9 Archived from the original on 3 June 2022 Retrieved 3 June 2022 Headrest with Two Images of the God Bes Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 8 July 2014 a b Medieval Furniture amp Home Decor furniturestyles net Archived from the original on 27 November 2010 Retrieved 26 November 2010 Mortimer Ian 2009 The Time Traveller s Guide to Medieval England A Handbook for Visitors to the Fourteenth Century London Vintage pp 160 161 165 ISBN 9781845950996 The Golden Bed Victoria and Albert Museum Archived from the original on 29 June 2013 Retrieved 26 May 2013 Independent 24 September 2015 India s royal riches The maharajas opulent lifestyle Independent co uk Archived from the original on 30 July 2017 Retrieved 31 July 2017 Brooklyn Museum Decorative Arts Convertible Bed in Form of Upright Piano Archived from the original on 28 October 2011 Retrieved 11 March 2012 in English Bed Lit a la Polonaise getty edu Archived from the original on 1 March 2009 Retrieved 26 January 2009 Captain s bed Dictionary com Archived from the original on 7 April 2014 Retrieved 26 May 2012 Historical Guide Bed Hardware whitechapel ltd com Archived from the original on 12 March 2006 Bed Rail Fastener Options home improvement and financing com Archived from the original on 15 April 2017 Retrieved 15 April 2008 Bed Safety Rails sleepcompare com Archived from the original on 16 November 2018 Retrieved 15 November 2018 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Beds nbsp Quotations related to Beds at Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bed amp oldid 1188552633, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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