In the 18th century the Low German house was built ever larger, with a length of up to 50 m and width of 15 m. The farmhouse combined all the functions of life on the farm. In this way it was easy for the farmers to manage the whole of his livestock, family and farmhands.
Diele The largest and most important room in the Low German house was the great central threshing floor, the
Diele (Low German:
Deele,
Del). This was usually entered via the great, rounded door at the gable end, known in
Low German as the
Grote Dör,
Groot Dör or
Grotendör ("great door"). The door was also the entrance for harvest wagons leading to the
Diele which was like a cavernous
hall, hence the alternative name for this type of farmhouse, the
Hallenhaus ("hall house"). The
Diele was formed by the space between the two rows of supporting uprights. With its tamped clay floor it was the working room of the farmhouse. It was here that the
harvest was gathered before being stored in the hayloft above. It also provided protection from the weather for activities, such as the drying of farm implements, the breaking of
flax, the
spinning of textiles or the
threshing of grain. Celebrations, too, were held in the hall and recently deceased members of the family were laid out here. To both sides of the
Diele were the half-open stalls or stables (
Kübbungen) for cattle or horses, as well as chambers for the
maids and
farmhands.
Poultry would be kept near the entrance way at the edges of the hall. From the outset pigs were banished to separate sheds outside the building due to their smell. Only when living quarters and the
Diele area were fully separated from one another could pigs also be encountered in the hall. The
Diele opened out into the open eating and kitchen area, the so-called
Flett.
Flett Originally, at the end of the
Diele near the back of the farmhouse, was the
Flett, an
open kitchen and dining area that took up the entire width of the house. The open fireplace, about 1.5 metres across, was located in the middle of the
Flett and was ringed with
fieldstones. It was not like a hearth in other regions. Many types of cooking were not possible in this environment (*). Pots had to be high enough, in effect
cauldrons, and were hung over the fire with pothooks attached to a wooden frame (
Rahmen) hanging over the fireplace, often decorated with horses heads. At night an iron grid was pulled over the fire to prevent sparks, a practice known by the English term
curfew. Well-to-do families had a candle arch (
Schwibbogen) of masonry instead of a wooden frame. Smoke escaped through an opening in the roof on the gable, the
Uhlenloch (also
Eulenloch, literally: "owl hole"). The open fireplace meant that such buildings were considered as a particular fire risk by early
fire insurance firms. The open fire also provided some heat to the stalls and living quarters of the
Hallenhaus. In this way, hay stored in the loft could be dried out and protected from
vermin by the smoke. When the farmer's family and farm hands gathered for meal times, the best places were between the fireplace and the rooms. Because there was no partition between
Diele and loft, winter temperatures in the
Flett never rose above 12 °C. A subsequent improvement was the extraction of smoke through a
flue. Still later, a proper hearth would be added with a stone chimney. This made cooking easier and meant that the house was now free of smoke. On the down side, the hearth was no longer really a source of light and there was less energy for heating the house. Later still, one of the larger rooms would be built as a parlour with a separate
stove heated from the
Diele. When the division of rooms was fundamentally changed in the 19th century, a separate kitchen was established in the living accommodation at the back of the farmhouse. So the farmhouse, which had been divided longitudinally for such a long time, now had its different functions arranged transversely across the building. (*) Bread was baked outside the farmhouse Hauses in an earth or stone oven. In northwest Germany this only had one chamber. It was first heated, then the embers were raked out and the loaves pushed inside, in order to be baked by the heat stored in the sides of the oven.
Living quarters Originally there were only open living areas at the back of the farmhouse on both sides of the fireplace. Here there were tables, chairs and wall beds and, of course, open contact with the animals. Not until after the
Thirty Years War when the demand for living comfort grew, were separate rooms built at the back of the farmhouse, each the length of a bay (ca. 2.5 m) i.e. the space between the interior posts. This living space was called a
Kammerfach from
Kammer (room or chamber) and
Fach (bay). One subsequent change was the addition of a
cellar under the
Kammerfach, but it was not very deep. The separate living quarters were raised above the level of the main hall as if on a plinth and in the larger four-post farmhouses (
Vierständerhäuser) sometimes formed a sort of gallery. == Decoration ==