A Tudor Marriage Bed
  • Wednesday 12 July 2023, 6:00pm-7:00pm
  • Baronial Hall
  • £10 +£1 booking fee
Image A Tudor Marriage Bed

Book launch and signing of ‘The Henry VII and Elizabeth of York Marriage Bed: A Masterpiece of Tudor Craftsmanship’.

In celebration of the book release, Chetham’s Library will be hosting a wine reception, followed by talks by Ian Coulson on his rediscovery of the bed and its conservation, and Dr Peter Lindfield FSA (editor of and contributor to the book) on the bed’s iconography and historical significance.

Signed copies of the book available for an additional £28 (RRP £35)

The Henry VII and Elizabeth of York marriage bed, rediscovered in 2010, is an exceptional piece of late medieval English royal furniture: no other equivalent example of secular domestic furniture is known to have survived, and, indeed, precious little woodwork from this period remains outside of ecclesiastical settings. As a tour-de-force of medieval royal woodwork, the bed offers an unprecedented insight into elite domestic furniture from this period.

Since its rediscovery, the bed has been subjected to a wide array of investigation by furniture specialists, medieval historians, design historians and scientists. Emerging from a decade-long multidisciplinary research project, this book is the first sustained account of the bed: it shows how numerous disciplines covering the arts and conservation sciences can be brought together to assess and interpret such rare historic survivals.

The book explores the bed’s form and structure, context, iconography, wood, paint, physical history, provenance, including its curious reproduction by George Shaw in Victorian England, and fragments of the bed survive at Chetham’s Library.

 

We recommend all visitors read our Visitor Information before attending.

A Tudor Marriage Bed
  • Baronial Hall
  • £10 +£1 booking fee

Book launch and signing of ‘The Henry VII and Elizabeth of York Marriage Bed: A Masterpiece of Tudor Craftsmanship’.

In celebration of the book release, Chetham’s Library will be hosting a wine reception, followed by talks by Ian Coulson on his rediscovery of the bed and its conservation, and Dr Peter Lindfield FSA (editor of and contributor to the book) on the bed’s iconography and historical significance.

Signed copies of the book available for an additional £28 (RRP £35)

The Henry VII and Elizabeth of York marriage bed, rediscovered in 2010, is an exceptional piece of late medieval English royal furniture: no other equivalent example of secular domestic furniture is known to have survived, and, indeed, precious little woodwork from this period remains outside of ecclesiastical settings. As a tour-de-force of medieval royal woodwork, the bed offers an unprecedented insight into elite domestic furniture from this period.

Since its rediscovery, the bed has been subjected to a wide array of investigation by furniture specialists, medieval historians, design historians and scientists. Emerging from a decade-long multidisciplinary research project, this book is the first sustained account of the bed: it shows how numerous disciplines covering the arts and conservation sciences can be brought together to assess and interpret such rare historic survivals.

The book explores the bed’s form and structure, context, iconography, wood, paint, physical history, provenance, including its curious reproduction by George Shaw in Victorian England, and fragments of the bed survive at Chetham’s Library.

 

We recommend all visitors read our Visitor Information before attending.

You may also like

  1. image Chetham’s Library Tours
    Chetham's Library

    Chetham’s Library Tours

    Fri 26 April 2024, 11am

    Packed with historical facts and fascinating stories, tours of Chetham’s Library are led by our expert staff and volunteers. Explore...

  2. image INSIDE THE LIBRARY – Lives and Legacies
    Chetham's Library

    INSIDE THE LIBRARY – Lives and Legacies

    Tue 14 May 2024, 3pm

    Our ‘Inside the Library’ sessions give visitors the opportunity to take an inside look at the workings of Chetham’s Library....