A
state room in a large European
mansion is usually one of a suite of very grand
rooms which were designed to impress. The term was most widely used
in the 17th and 18th centuries. They were the most lavishly
decorated in the house and contained the finest works of
art. State rooms are usually only found in the houses of
the upper echelons of the
aristocracy,
those who were likely to entertain a
head
of state. They were generally to accommodate and entertain
distinguished guests, especially a
monarch
and or a royal
consort, or other high
ranking aristocrats and state officials, hence the name. In their
original form a set of state rooms made up a
state
apartment which always included a bedroom.
England
In
England
in particular state rooms in country houses were seldom used. The
owner of the house and his family actually lived in the "second
best" apartments in the house.
There was usually an odd number of state
rooms for the following reason: At the centre of the facade, the largest and most lavish room, (for
example at Wilton
House
the famed Double Cube Room), or as at Blenheim Palace
(left) this was a
gathering place for the court of the honoured guest. Leading
symmetrically from the centre room on either side were often one or
two suites of smaller, but still very grand state rooms, often in
enfilade, for the sole use
of the occupant of the final room at each end of the facade - the
state
bedroom. Unlike the main reception
rooms of later houses, state apartments were not freely open to all
the guests in the house. Admittance to the state apartment was a
privilege, and the further one penetrated (there were many
variations, but an apartment might include for example an
ante-room; withdrawing room; bedroom; dressing room; and closet)
the greater the honour.
Changes from the early 18th century
From the early 18th century, as aristocratic lifestyles slowly
became less formal, there was a move on the one hand to increase
the number of shared living rooms in a large house and to give them
more specialised functions (music rooms and billiard rooms for
example) and on the other hand to make bedroom suites more private.
In houses from earlier than around 1720 which survived without
major structural alteration, the state rooms sometimes became a
meaningless succession of drawing rooms and the original intention
was lost.
This is certainly true at Wilton House,
Blenheim
Palace
, and Castle Howard
. On the other hand there were a few houses,
and royal
palaces, most of them exceptionally
large, which were laid out in such a way that the state rooms could
be left in their original form, while other rooms were converted to
meet the new needs of the 18th and 19th centuries, or where funds
were available to simply add on extra wings to meet the new
requirements.
Examples of such residences with surviving
state suites which have never really changed their function include
Chatsworth
House
, and Boughton House
.
The term "state" continued to be used in the names of individual
rooms in some post 1720 houses (eg state dining room; state
bedroom), but by then the original concept of a self contained
state apartment for an honoured personage was lost, and the term
"state" can be taken more accurately to mean "best".
On board a ship
On board a
ship the term 'state room' defines a
superior
first class cabin.
References