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How Did the Bed Develop as Household Furniture

400 bytes added, 20:43, 6 February 2017
Early History
By the Bronze Age (3000 BCE), elites and likely wealth classes, had begun to make specific bed frames, often made of wood (Figure 2). The frames not only made beds portable, but they also allowed beds to become decorative and media of art. Frames began to be decorated or were created from expensive woods. Inlays, ivory, and metal decorations were now found on bed frames in the ancient Near East and Eastern Mediterranean. Pillows also became decorated and covered over with pillow cases made of expensive materials and embroidery. Beds were also sometimes recessed into walls or made from material that folded, a type of cot that could be stored.<ref>For more on early Bronze Age beds, see: Bottéro, J., & Finet, A. (2001). Everyday life in ancient Mesopotamia. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.</ref>
During the Bronze Age, beds began to be symbolically associated with the life cycle. While, on the one hand, beds were the creators of life, such as the marital bed, they were also the final resting place. In underground chambers used for burials for Mediterranean and Near East societies, beds were made and deceases were placed in a sleeping position. In essence, the burial of the dead was seen as one's eternal resting. Even for cultures that burned their dead, such as Indo-Aryan groups, the funeral pyre was often shaped as a type of bed. <ref>For more on the life cycle, beds, burials, and their association with households, see: Robben, A. C. G. M. (Ed.). (2004). <i>Death, mourning, and burial: a cross-cultural reader.</i> Malden, MA: Blackwell Pub.</ref>
In the Roman period, five different types of beds were known. Beds were used for eating, studying, burying the dead, for lovemaking, and normal sleeping. The Romans differentiated these with different words and this may have also meant that different beds were used for each of these activities.<ref>For more on Roman beds, see: Williams, S. J. (2005). <i>Sleep and society: sociological ventures into the (un)known--.</i> Milton Park, Oxfordshire N.Y., NY: Routledge.</ref>
[[File:3105187 4d8a404b.jpeg|thumbnail|FiguSkara Brae in Orkney, UK, showing an early Neolthic house with platforms for beds.]]

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