Dutch And Flemish Furniture

NO special inducement need be held out to an educated Englishman at the present day to take an interest in a particular field of the arts and crafts of the Low Countries. Long before the nobles of Flanders, France and England were associated in attempts to free the holy places from the pollution of infidel possession, the dwellers on the opposite coasts of England, Normandy and the Netherlands had been bound together by many dynastic and trade bonds. As we follow the course of history, we find that the interests of the English and the Flemings were inextricably connected ; and there was a constant stream of the manufactures of the Low Countries pouring into English ports. The English supplied much of the raw material upon which the Flemings depended for subsistence. In mediaeval days the inhabitants of the Low Countries could always be forced by English statecraft to help the Plantagenet kings in their continental intrigues by the mere cutting off of the supply of wool.

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Table of Contents:

Copyright

DUTC HAND FLEMISH FURNITURE

PREFACE

CONTENTS

ILLUSTRATIONS

CHAPTER I. THE MIDDLE AGES

CHAPTER II. THE BURGUNDIAN PERIOD

CHAPTER III. THE RENAISSANCE: PART I

CHAPTER IV. THE RENAISSANCE: PART II

CHAPTER V. SEVENTEENTH CENTURY (FLEMISH)

CHAPTER VI. SEVENTEENTH CENTURY (DUTCH)

CHAPTER VII. THE IMPORTANCE OF PORCELAIN

CHAPTER VIII. THE DUTCH HOME

CHAPTER IX. DUTCH FURNITURE UNDER FRENCH AND ORIENTAL INFLUENCE.

CHAPTER X. FURNITURE OF THE EIGHTEENTH AND NINETEENTH CENTURIES