Knole Settee

The original Knole Settee (also known as the Knole Sofa) is a couch chair that was made in the 17th century, probably around 1640.[1] It is housed at Knole in Kent, a house owned by the Sackville-West family since 1605 but now in the care of the National Trust.

It was originally used not as a comfortable sofa but as a formal throne on which the monarch would have sat to receive visitors. It was wide enough that a monarch and consort could be seated side by side.[1]

The design features adjustable side arms and considerable depth of seating, it usually has exposed wooden finials at the rear corner tops, and some exposed wood may be present on the arms. The arms, more correctly sides, are of the same height. The side arms are tied to the sofa back by means of heavy decorative braid, often with an elaborate tassel.

In literature

A number of references to the Knole sofa are found in literature; for example, Derek Marlowe notes the usage in his book Memoirs of a Venus Lackey.[2] In literature, the Knole sofa is sometimes mentioned in the context of a room decorated with fine antique furniture, such as in the novel In High Places,[3] in which the Knole sofa is positioned in a room with a fine Kerman antique carpet.

The name of the sofa is spelled as "Knole" and not "Knoll", and it has no relation to the furniture company called Knoll. The sofa's name derives from Knole House in Sevenoaks, Kent, which is open to the public and run by the National Trust.[4] On display there is the original Knole Sofa, along with other pieces of matching seat furniture.[1]

References

  1. "The so-called 'Knole Sofa'". National Trust Collections. Retrieved 2020-10-29.
  2. Derek Marlowe, Memoirs of a Venus Lackey, Viking Press, 1968.
  3. Arthur Hailey, In High Places, Doubleday Publishing, 1962.
  4. "Knole". National Trust. Retrieved 9 August 2020.


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