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[[Image:Carved Oak Elizabethan Bedstead.jpg|thumb|right|Ornate [[Elizabethan]] four-poster bed'']]
[[Image:Carved Oak Elizabethan Bedstead.jpg|thumb|right|Ornate [[Elizabethan]] four-poster bed'']]


A '''four-poster bed''' is a [[Bed (furniture)|bed]] with four vertical columns, one in each corner, that support a [[Tester (four poster bed)|tester]], or upper (usually rectangular) panel. This tester or panel will often have rails to allow curtains to be pulled around the bed. There are a number of [[antique furniture|antique]] four-poster beds extant dating to the 16th century and earlier; many of these early beds are highly ornate and are made from [[oak]]. An example of such an early 16th-century four-poster resides in [[Crathes Castle]], which was made for the original castle owners in the [[Clan Burnett|Burnett of Leys]] family.
A '''four-poster bed''' is a [[Bed (furniture)|bed]] with four vertical columns, one in each corner, that support a [[Tester (four poster bed)|tester]], or upper (usually rectangular) panel, or four round [[Bedknobs and Broomsticks|bedknobs]], one in each corner. This tester or panel will often have rails to allow curtains to be pulled around the bed. There are a number of [[antique furniture|antique]] four-poster beds extant dating to the 16th century and earlier; many of these early beds are highly ornate and are made from [[oak]]. An example of such an early 16th-century four-poster resides in [[Crathes Castle]], which was made for the original castle owners in the [[Clan Burnett|Burnett of Leys]] family.


== Historical ==
== Historical ==

Revision as of 15:46, 5 July 2018

Four-poster bed
Ornate Elizabethan four-poster bed

A four-poster bed is a bed with four vertical columns, one in each corner, that support a tester, or upper (usually rectangular) panel, or four round bedknobs, one in each corner. This tester or panel will often have rails to allow curtains to be pulled around the bed. There are a number of antique four-poster beds extant dating to the 16th century and earlier; many of these early beds are highly ornate and are made from oak. An example of such an early 16th-century four-poster resides in Crathes Castle, which was made for the original castle owners in the Burnett of Leys family.

Historical

Four-poster beds are mentioned in numourous Irish sagas and were recorded in early Irish manuscripts. In the 12th century tale of Acallam na Senóradh, in the wooing of Credhe, Cael ua Nemhnainn cites in a poem "Four posts round every bed there are, of gold and silver laid together cunningly; in each post's head a crystal gem: they make heads not unpleasant [to behold]"[1], when speaking of a fairy-mansion on the Paps of Anu, in Co. Kerry.

  • The dormitories in the Harry Potter series have four-poster beds in.

See also

References

  1. ^ Acallam na Senórach, Colloquy of the Ancients, translated by Standish Hayes O'Grady, pg 23.