Ebonized Biedermeier
Antique Early 19th Century Austrian Armchairs
Walnut
20th Century Austrian End Tables
20th Century Austrian End Tables
Antique 19th Century French Gueridon
Wood
Antique 19th Century Chairs
Antique 19th Century Austrian End Tables
Antique 19th Century Commodes and Chests of Drawers
Wood
Antique 19th Century German Dining Room Chairs
Cherry
Antique 19th Century Austrian Commodes and Chests of Drawers
20th Century Austrian Side Chairs
20th Century Swedish Chairs
Antique 1830s Austrian Biedermeier Cabinets
Birch, Wood
Antique 19th Century Austrian Biedermeier Clocks
Antique 19th Century Cabinets
Birch
20th Century Austrian Biedermeier Night Stands
Burl, Wood
20th Century Austrian Biedermeier Night Stands
Burl, Wood
Antique 1830s German Biedermeier Bookcases
Glass, Wood
Antique Early 19th Century Biedermeier Commodes and Chests of Drawers
Walnut
Antique 19th Century Austrian Biedermeier Center Tables
Burl, Wood
Antique 19th Century Austrian Biedermeier Armchairs
Fruitwood, Cherry
Antique 19th Century Biedermeier Center Tables
Wood
Antique 19th Century Austrian Biedermeier Side Chairs
Cherry, Fruitwood
Antique Late 19th Century Swedish Biedermeier Secretaires
Brass
Antique 1820s Swedish Biedermeier Desks and Writing Tables
Wood, Birch
Antique 1820s Swedish Biedermeier Commodes and Chests of Drawers
Birch
Antique Mid-19th Century European Biedermeier Side Chairs
Birch
Antique Early 19th Century Austrian Biedermeier Cabinets
Walnut
Antique Early 19th Century Austrian Biedermeier Side Chairs
Ebony, Maple
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Ebonized Biedermeier For Sale on 1stDibs
How Much is a Ebonized Biedermeier?
A Close Look at Biedermeier Furniture
The authentic Biedermeier furniture on 1stDibs is representative of the first modern European decorative style not dictated by the tastes of the aristocracy. Following the Napoleonic wars, a growing, wealthy urban middle class in the German-speaking states of Central Europe began to demand rights and privileges once granted only to nobles. To avoid trouble, the upwardly striving confined their political discussions to one another’s homes. And so the salon was born.
Cabinetmakers in cities such as Vienna, Berlin and Mainz began to offer goods that reflected the tastes and needs of the new class. The makers of Biedermeier chairs, tables and other furniture used little or no gilding, silver hardware or other lavish ornament. Ebonized trims are common on Biedermeier cabinetry, and neoclassical elements — lyre-shaped chair splats, carved scrollwork, table supports shaped like Greek columns. But the strongest aesthetic statement came from the wood — richly-grained, honey-colored, often book-matched veneers of walnut and fruitwood.
There are two iconic Biedermeier furniture forms, both made to outfit rooms designed for conversation. One is the sofa, deeply upholstered with a strong, architectural wooden frame. The second is the circular pedestal table, which stood at the center of the room, offering a surface on which to place coffee and cake services; or to roll out a map, or sketch out ideas on paper.
“Biedermeier” was originally a derogatory term — it derives from the pen names of two German magazine writers who mocked bourgeois manners. Looking at the elegant and refined antique, new and vintage Biedermeier furniture offered on 1stDibs, that is now an amusing irony.








