sideboards (furniture)

  1. Home
  2. top of the aat hierarchies
  3. Objects Facet
  4. Furnishings and Equipment (hierarchy name)
  5. Furnishings (hierarchy name)
  6. furnishings (works)
  7. [furnishings by form or function]
  8. furniture
  9. [furniture by form or function]
  10. [storage and display furniture]
  11. case furniture
  12. sideboards
Scope note
In modern usage, a general term for case furniture of various designs, sometimes on legs, with cupboard space beneath and placed along the wall of a dining room for serving, storage, and displaying plate and other precious tableware. However, in early usage may refer to a table, as the term derives from pieces that were often simply a board on legs placed near the dining table. By the 17th century sideboards were being designed with a cupboard or drawers beneath a flat table surface. The top was higher than a standard table, allowing the plate on display to be seen easily, as well as making the food more conveniently accessible to a standing person. Victorian sideboards often had levels or shelves above the primary surface, in order to create more space for displaying tableware. "Dressers (cupboards)" may be similar in design and function, but were typically found in kitchens rather than dining rooms. In modern usage, for side tables used along the walls of dining rooms, use "sideboard tables" or the broader term "serving tables."
sideboards
Accepted term: 18-Nov-2024