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Search Beyond Beds - memory foam, natural latex, and innerspring mattresses.  Also available: pet beds, pillows, and mattress toppers.  

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Comfortable, supportive beds / mattresses are something most of us take for granted. We don't think about how they've evolved over time. Here's an eye-opening lesson on the bed / mattress throughout history and in more modern times. Give your readers something to think about the next time they go to sleep. So lie down and let us tell you a story.

10,000 years ago. In the Neolithic period, people began sleeping on primitive "beds."

3400 BCE. Egyptian pharaohs discover the benefits of raising a pallet off the earth. King Tutankahmen had a bed of ebony and gold. Common people slept on palm bows heaped in the corner of their home.

Roman Empire. First luxury bed. Often decorated with gold, silver or bronze, these beds featured mattresses stuffed with reeds, hay,
wool or feathers.

Roman Empire. Romans discover the waterbed. The sleeper would recline in a cradle of warm water until drowsy, then be lifted onto an adjacent cradle with a mattress, where they would be rocked to sleep.

Renaissance. Mattresses were made of pea shucks or straw, sometimes feathers, stuffed into coarse ticks, then covered with sumptuous velvets, brocades and silks.

16th and 17th centuries. Mattresses were generally stuffed with straw or
down, placed atop a latticework of rope.

The late 18th century. Advent of the cast iron bed and cotton mattresses. Together, they provided a sleeping space that was less attractive to bugs. Until that time, assorted vermin were simply accepted as an accepted component of even the most royal beds.

1865. The first coil spring construction for bedding was patented.

1930's.
Innerspring mattresses and upholstered foundations became serious contenders for the dominant position they now enjoy in the U.S. and Canada.

1940's. Futons introduced to North America.

1950's.
Foam rubber mattresses and pillows appeared on the market.

1960's. Modern waterbed introduced.
Adjustable beds become popular with consumers.

1980's. Airbeds introduced.

1990's. Spacious sleeping is once again on the rise. In 1999, the queen-size mattress became America's most popular choice for mattress size ? for the first time ever ? beating the twin.

2000?s. Choice and comfort are key words in contemporary bedding. In addition to an almost unlimited range of innerspring mattress designs, new types of foam mattress cores (such as
"memory" or visco-elastic foam and refinements to traditional latex) as well as airbeds, waterbeds and high-tech adjustable sleep sets offer consumers attractive, quality alternatives. Pillowtop mattresses, a popular innovation in luxury, offer an extra layer of soft cushioning, and single-sided no-flip mattresses are common.

“Copyright 2005 The Better Sleep Council - All Rights Reserved.” "The Better Sleep Council is devoted to educating the public about the importance of sleep to good health."

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