| PROTESTANT. | QUEEN ELIZABETH. "The Elizabethan Period." |
| STUART. ROMAN CATHOLIC. "JACOBEAN." | JAMES I. 1603. CHARLES I. (Puritan Revolution), 1628. |
| PURITAN. | Oliver Cromwell. 1649. Commonwealth. |
| STUART. ROMAN CATHOLIC. "JACOBEAN." | {Charles II. (1660), Restoration. James II. (1686), Deposition and Flight. |
| PROTESTANT. | William—Prince of Orange (Holland), 1688. Who had married the English Princess Mary and was the only available Protestant (1688). |
| PROTESTANT. | Queen Anne (1702-1714). |
CHAPTER XXI
THE MAHOGANY PERIOD
It is interesting to note that the Great Fire of London started the importation of foreign woods from across the Baltic, as great quantities were needed at once for the purpose of rebuilding. These soft woods aroused the invention of the cabinet-makers, and were especially useful for inlaying; so we find in addition to oak, that mahogany, pear and lime woods were used in fine furniture, it being lime-wood that Grinling Gibbons carved when working with Sir Christopher Wren, the famous architect (seventeenth century).
During the early Georgian period the oak carvings were merely poor imitations of Elizabethan and Stuart designs. There seemed to have been no artist wood-carvers with originality, which may have been partly due to a lack of stimulus, as the fashion in the decoration of furniture turned toward inlaying.
THE PERIOD OF WILLIAM III AND QUEEN MARY AND EARLY GEORGIAN
are characterised by turned work, giving way to flattened forms, and the disappearance of the elaborate front stretcher on Charles II chairs.
The coming of mahogany into England and its great popularity there gives its name to that period when Chippendale, Heppelwhite, Sheraton and the Adam Brothers were the great creative cabinet-makers. The entire period is often called CHIPPENDALE, because Chippendale's books on furniture, written to stimulate trade by arousing good taste and educating his public, are considered the best of that time. There were three editions: 1754, 1759, and 1762.