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Bed warmer

Household item From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bed warmer
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A bed warmer or warming pan was a common household item in countries with cold winters, especially in Europe.[citation needed] It consisted of a metal container, usually fitted with a handle and shaped somewhat like a modern frying pan, with a solid or finely perforated lid. The pan would be filled with embers and placed under the covers of a bed, to warm it up or dry it out before use.[1][2]

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Bed warmer from the Netherlands
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English stoneware bed warmer and stopper
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Electrical bed warmer (with a shielded electric bulb) in India, 1979

Besides the risk of fire, it was recognized that the fumes from the embers were noxious. A doctor advised his readers in a publication of about 1790 to avoid bed warmers, or, if needed, replace the embers with hot sand.[3]

An alternative to the bed warmer was the "bed wagon" (French: moine, Italian: monaco, both meaning "monk"). It consisted of a large wooden frame enclosing a bucket of embers, possibly with an iron tray and an iron roof-plate to protect the bed covers from direct heat.[1][4]

Bed warmers were commonly used from the mid-17th to early-20th century. They fell out of fashion with the rise of other methods of warming homes and beds.

Pottery filled with hot water also was used.[citation needed] With the advent of rubber, the hot water bottle became dominant. In the early 20th century, electric blankets began to replace the bed warmer.[5]

An alternative kind of bedwarmer in the mid-20th century in the UK was a 36 cm (14 in) pressed steel "flying saucer" or lozenge-shaped device made by Belling (established 1912),[6] powered using an internal 40 W incandescent light bulb as a heat source.[7]

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See also

  • Hot water bottle – a bottle filled with hot water and sealed with a stopper, used to provide warmth, typically while in bed
  • Electric blanket – a blanket that contains integrated electrical heating
  • James Francis Edward Stuart – the "Old Pretender", also nicknamed the Warming Pan Baby, rumoured to have been smuggled into the queen's bedchamber in a warming pan

References

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