- Glastonbury chair
Glastonbury chair is a 19th century term for an earlier wooden foldingFact|date=April 2008
chair , usually ofoak , possibly based on a chair made for the lastAbbot ofGlastonbury ,England . The Glastonbury chair was known to exist since theEarly Middle Ages , but seems to have disappeared from use in part of theLater Middle Ages ;cite web
url=http://www.albionworks.net/ChairsPage/FoldingChairs.htm
title=Folding chairs: Glastonbury type
quote=Although often referred to as "folding" chairs, these chairs do not actually fold, they dismantle.
publisher=Albion works] it re-emerged in use in Italy by the 15th century AD. It was devised for use in churches beforepew s became common.Fact|date=April 2008It was made originally in Britain from a description brought back from Rome in 1504 by
Abbot Bere toGlastonbury Abbey , and was produced for or by John Arthur Thorne, a monk who was the treasurercite book
title=Oak Furniture: The British Tradition
last=Chinnery |first=Victor
publisher=Antique Collector's Club
location=Woodbridge, Suffolk
date=1979
isbn=0-902028-61-8
pages=p220] and carpenterFact|date=April 2008 at the abbey. The result is thought to have been the first domestic chair seen in Britain.Fact|date=April 2008 Arthur perished onGlastonbury Tor in 1539, hung, drawn and quartered alongside his master, Richard Whiting, the last Abbot of Glastonbury, during the dissolution of the monasteries. The Abbot sat on a Glastonbury chair during his trial atBishop's Palace, Wells , where one of the two original surviving examples (illustrated) can still be seen, together with other chairs of this age and later reproductions.The second chair remained in
St John's Church in Glastonbury until it found its way by an unknown route into the collection ofHorace Walpole 's Gothic pile Strawberry Hill inTwickenham , Middlesex. When the contents were sold at the beginning of the century, the thenvicar of Glastonbury, the Reverend Lionel Lewis, made an impassioned speech telling the bidders the chair belonged in Glastonbury. Nobody bidding against him, Lewis took the chair back to Glastonbury where it is extant in St John's Church.Gordon Browning was the last maker of the Glastonbury chair. A consummate worker in wood, he delighted in telling the story of the history of the chair he exported around the world. Browning had lived in Glastonbury for 80 years by the time of his death, with a brief absence during the Second World War, when he was employed making aircraft frames in
Bristol . His son Clive said, "When my father was asked if he had lived all his life in Glastonbury, he loved to say - not yet."The Glastonbury chair design has become popular with reenactors, owing to its simple construction, wide availability of planscite book
title=Constructing Medieval Furniture
last=Diehl |first=Daniel
date=1997
isbn=0811727955] , and the opportunity for extensive decorative carving. As a result, there are likely more chairs of this pattern in existence now than there ever were in period.ee also
*
Turned chair
*Watchman's chair Reference list
cite book
title=Ink drawing of the Glastonbury chair
author=H. O'Neill
publisher=privately drawn for George Weare Braikenridge, reproduced in Chinnery
location=Bristol
date=1822]cite book
title=Specimens of Early Furniture
last=Shaw |first=Henry
date=1836]
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