| Evolution of the Modern Mattress from Antiquity
to Today
History has shown, time and time again
that the way we choose to sleep, will, affect our quality of life. We do not sleep on mattresses
by mere coincidence, but rather because of a basic human need to sleep
well. Thousands of years ago, in the Neolithic period, people
had beds made of stone, but still slept on animal skin. Mattresses
appeared around 5,000 years ago, but luxury mattresses began to appear
as early as the decline of the Roman Empire. Velvet and silks
were heavily used in the Renaissance, as well as lattice worked rope
beds. Iron cast beds appeared in the early 19th century, springs
only being introduced after the year 1865. Modern mattresses
with inner spring workings were first commercialized before WW II. In
the late 60’s memory oam was discovered, and by the 80’s
cotton, foam and inner spring mattresses were all readily available
around the world.
12,000 years ago before mattresses,
people slept in caves, on the ground, on stone beds covered with
animal skins while dreaming of touching
the stars. In Scotland, primitive stone beds can be found in
the Neolithic village of Skara Brae, with its advanced stone astronomical
calendar. The development of the first cotton mattresses in Mesopotamia,
Egypt and Babylonia, around 3,000 BC, brought with it a turning point
in mattress evolution until the end of Antiquity around the year 529
AD, with the plunge into the Dark Ages.
In the eastern civilizations of China
and Japan, the futon continued to evolve, as well as the tatami,
but western culture seemed to be
more interested in dry weeds, hay, wool, feathers and reads until the
beginning of the age of rebirth around 1432 AD, with the death of Joan
of Arc. Her sacrifice in “La Place Rouge” in the
city of Rouen, not only echoed through the royal courts of France,
but carried with it the cry for an “age of reason” throughout
the entire known world. The Renaissance revived the passion for
comfort and the value of a good nights sleep.
The passion for dreaming and enlightenment
that fueled the Renaissance, survived all the way up to the 19th
century with such works of art
as the hand carved beds in the fantasy castle Neueschwanstein in Bavaria. But
insect and mite free mattresses as we know them today began to appear
as early as the late 1700’s with the first cast iron beds, with
cotton mattresses. The need for hygiene and comfort led to the
invention of springs. NASA brought about the invention of memory
foam mattresses, which have shown time and time again to be far more
efficient than the conventional spring-cotton design inherited from
the Industrial Revolution.
In a quickly globalizing world, much
can be learned by getting a good nights rest. In the dawn of civilization, humankind first learned
to value their sleep and look to the stars. During the Middle
Ages, western civilization slowly began the rebirth of its dreams,
until 1969 when the first man landed on the moon, and they became reality. Now,
in a rational world, made of glass and plastic towers, the race for
comfort and a good nights sleep, depends on the mattress we use to
face, this basic human need.
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