Ceremonial The state bed, intended for receiving important visitors and producing heirs before a select public, but not intended for sleeping in, evolved during the second half of the seventeenth century, developing the medieval tradition of receiving visitors in the bedroom, which had become the last and most private room of the standard suite of rooms in a Baroque apartment.
Louis XIV developed the rituals of receptions in his state bedchamber, the
petit lever to which only a handful of his court élite might expect to be invited. The other monarchs of Europe soon imitated his practice; even his staunchest enemy,
William III of England, had his "grooms of the bedchamber", a signal honour. The state bed, a
lit à la duchesse—its canopy supported without visible posts—was delivered for the use of Queen
Marie Leszczyńska at
Versailles, as the centrepiece of a new decor realised for the Queen in 1730–35. Its tester is quickly recognisable as a baldachin, serving its time-honoured function; the bedding might easily be replaced by a gilded throne. The queens of France spent a great deal of time in their
chambre, where they received the ladies of the court at the morning
lever and granted private audiences. By the time Marie Antoinette escaped the mob from this bedroom, such state beds, with the elaborate
etiquette they embodied, were already falling out of use. A state bed with a domed tester designed in 1775–76 by
Robert Adam for Lady Child at
Osterley Park and another domed state bed, delivered by
Thomas Chippendale for Sir Edwin Lascelles at
Harewood House, Yorkshire, in 1773 are two of the last English state beds intended for a main floor State Bedroom in a non-royal residence.
For sleep In Britain, monarchs slept in a state bed in the
Palace of Westminster the night before their coronation. This tradition was started by
William the Conqueror in 1066 and continued until 1821, when
George IV was the last monarch to sleep in the bed. The original state bed was damaged in a fire and replaced in 1859. The new bed remained in the
Speaker's House until the 1940s, when it was moved out as too opulent to be there during the difficult times of the
Second World War. It was probably sold during a government modernisation, somehow appeared in an auction in Northamptonshire, and was bought for a family for £100 in the 1960s. They used it for thirty years, recognising that it was important but not knowing where it came from until an interiors expert at the
Victoria and Albert Museum published an appeal to try to find it. The bed was bought back from the family and returned to Speaker's House after restoration and with new hangings. It can be viewed during tours of the Speaker's House. == St. Peter's Basilica ==