Choose Your Language  English  German  Italian  French
 

 

Coffee Table by The Shakers

Coffee Table by The Shakers
Table in lacquered wood, cherry or black.
Product-id.:TS 532-2
Delivery time:

table color:


 
incl. tax (17.5%)
 
 
Add to bag

Information to Coffee Table by The Shakers

Table in lacquered wood, cherry or black.


Measurement:  L. 53, H. 64, P. 43 cm


All prices include shipping charges from Italy to your country.
as of orders between 1.500,- and 2.000,- Euro (depending on your country), otherwise,
the shipping charge is between 12 and 20 % plus basis charges.
- the entire cost of your selection will be indicated after you complete your order.

Italy's Top- brands directly from the manufacturer - Made in Italy


 
Gallery

Help us to enlarge our/your picture gallery and send us pictures showing your

Bauhaus furnitures, which you bought at our shop.

By publishing of your pictures, you will get a coupon for your next shopping
at classic-design24.com

 

The Shakers.jpg

Shakers

The first Shaker settlement was established near Albany, New York in 1776.
Called the United Society of Believers in Christ's Second Appearing, the original
group of eight was inspired by mystic and founder Ann Lee to leave Manchester,
England for the new land. These "Shaking Quakers" arrived in New York City in
1774. They believed that a life of celibacy, confession of sin, and hard labor was
the only way to total redemption. Their unsettling style of worship - singing,
shouting and violent trembling in their fervor and communication with God - was
scorned and considered profane by the traditional Christian religions of the time.
By 1780, many converts came into the sect and communities were being settled
and organized throughout the Northeast. Mother Ann's much quoted: "Put your
hands to work and hearts to God," was the essence of Shaker living and religion.
They sought to live separately from the "world's people," to produce all the goods
needed for their own purposes and to produce income for the purchase of land.
Many talents and occupations contributed to a legacy of fine craft and ingenuity,
best known are the simple yet beautiful Shaker-made furnishings and tools.
Following the Mother Ann's death in 1784, Elders structured communities into a
successful economic system. The best qualified ("If you improve in one talent,
God will give you more.") man or woman (the 1787 appointment of Lucy Wright
as leader of the women's group of Shakers gave the sisters equal rights with their
brethren) within the order was given responsibility for each type of work. Their
well-made products, high ideals (having given up marriage, family, private property
and personal desires for the welfare of all) earned the appreciation of surrounding
towns and neighbors. "All things made for sale ought to be well done, and suitable
for their use." -Joseph Meacham Just prior to the Civil War the sect numbered six
thousand believers, the peak of its growth. Today, only a few Shaker sisters remain
at the Sabbathday Lake, Maine. Sister Ethel Hudson died at the age of 96 at her
home at Canterbury Shaker Village in 1992. Canterbury Shakers founded the
museum to preserve and interpret Shaker history and ideals. An example of Shaker
ingenuity was the Village's revolving oven, designed by Eldress Emeline Hart.
Used to cook the community's renowned baked beans, the oven had four
compartments, each with its own door. It was capable of cooking many quarts of
beans. Northern communities like Canterbury Shaker Village had extensive "sugar
bushes" or groves of maple trees. From the sap-made-syrup, maple sugar cakes
were molded in tins, sometimes with local butternut added. The Village was also
known for its extensive fruit orchards, the beehives needed to fertilize the trees and,
as a by-product, the honey the apiary produced. Mary Whitcher, of Canterbury,
authored Shaker literatures' earliest cookbook: MARY WHITCHER'S SHAKER
HOUSE-KEEPER (Published in Boston, 1882). She was the first to give "bills of
fare" or menus for each day of the week. The 150 recipes utilized a variety of fresh
and nutritiously grown food. The book was not sold, but given to those interested in
the medicines produced by the Shakers and advertised within.

Top-Seller