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179:. In a medieval building, the hall was where the fire was kept. As heating technology improved and a desire for privacy grew, tasks moved from the hall to other rooms. First, the master of the house withdrew to private bedrooms and eating areas. Over time servants and children also moved to their own areas, while work projects were also given their own chambers leaving the hall for special functions. With time, its functions as
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A hall is also a building consisting largely of a principal room, that is rented out for meetings and social affairs. It may be privately or government-owned, such as a function hall owned by one company used for weddings and cotillions (organized and run by the same company on a contractual basis)
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was the largest room in castles and large houses, and where the servants usually slept. As more complex house plans developed, the hall remained a large room for dancing and large feasts, often still with servants sleeping there. It was usually immediately inside the main door. In modern
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Some of these institutions are titled "Hall" instead of "College" because at the time of their foundation they were not recognised as colleges (in some cases because their foundation predated the existence of colleges) and did not have the appropriate
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are worn for dinner during the evening, whereas for "informal Hall" they are not. The medieval collegiate dining hall, with a dais for the high table at the upper end and a screen passage at the lower end, is a modified or assimilated form of the
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In architecture, the term "double-loaded" describes corridors that connect to rooms on both sides. Conversely, a single-loaded corridor only has rooms on one side (and possible windows on the other). A blind corridor does not lead anywhere.
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Until the early modern era that majority of the population lived in houses with a single room. In the 17th century, even lower classes began to have a second room, with the main chamber being the hall and the secondary room the parlor. The
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Sturgis, Russell. Sturgis' illustrated dictionary of architecture and building: an unabridged reprint of the 1901-2 edition. VOl. II. Mineola, N.Y.: Dover, 1989. 346-347
263:. In medieval origin, these were the halls in which the members of the university lived together during term time. In many cases, some aspect of this community remains.
136:. The hall was home to the hearth and was where all the residents of the house would eat, work, and sleep. One common example of this form is the
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is the first recorded architect to replace multiple connected rooms with rooms along a corridor each accessed by a separate door.
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leading to the rooms directly and/or indirectly. Where the hall inside the front door of a house is elongated, it may be called a
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This article is about the meeting room. For the corridor, see
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Large room used for meetings, social affairs or events
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23:. For the etymology of "hall", see
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27:. For other uses, see
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29:Hall (disambiguation)
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117:
105:
101:
97:
91:
65:
62:architecture
59:
1691:Home repair
1488:Belt course
1396:Hidden room
1325:Lumber room
1241:Antechamber
1232:Great house
1212:Wine cellar
1183:Root cellar
1136:Boiler room
1117:Crawl space
788:Living room
781:kitchenette
766:Home cinema
751:Family room
746:Dining room
736:Common room
514:Trades hall
470:Dining hall
382:church hall
378:hall church
318:Formal Hall
253:Nassau Hall
208:John Thorpe
173:manor house
110:El Escorial
82:Middle Ages
1701:Tree house
1671:Front yard
1603:Sill plate
1551:Foundation
1493:Bressummer
1406:house plan
1375:Undercroft
1360:State room
1310:Great hall
1279:still room
946:dumbwaiter
931:Cubby-hole
761:Great room
731:Bonus room
600:0618387994
539:References
484:great hall
480:Great room
465:Dance hall
327:Great hall
314:High Table
214:Other uses
177:great hall
150:hall house
148:such as a
134:great hall
86:great hall
1625:Threshold
1508:Colonnade
1453:Townhouse
1391:Furniture
1295:Courtyard
1197:Safe room
1107:Cloakroom
1075:Technical
1065:Vestibule
1050:Staircase
989:Inglenook
962:Fireplace
921:Breezeway
793:Gynaeceum
499:synagogue
495:sanctuary
489:Moot hall
453:Concourse
310:Cambridge
181:dormitory
163:In later
138:longhouse
130:courtyard
94:vestibule
78:mead hall
1735:Category
1666:Driveway
1661:Backyard
1620:Skylight
1583:Plumbing
1578:Ornament
1573:Lighting
1483:Baluster
1471:elements
1443:Detached
1438:Terraced
1290:Orangery
1269:scullery
1246:Ballroom
1222:Workshop
1207:Wardrobe
1195: /
1162: /
1158: /
1134: /
1097:Basement
1029:sleeping
1024:screened
1009:Overhang
953:Entryway
941:Elevator
855:Bathroom
810:man cave
527:See also
475:Firehall
398:theatres
204:enfilade
175:was the
165:medieval
108:used in
106:corredor
102:corridor
70:Iron Age
51:Kairouan
1654:Related
1630:Transom
1522:Cornice
1512:Portico
1503:Chimney
1498:Ceiling
1330:Parlour
1315:Library
1274:spicery
1264:saucery
1259:buttery
1102:Carport
1084:storage
1079:utility
1060:Veranda
1055:Terrace
984:Hallway
916:Balcony
895:Nursery
890:Cabinet
885:Boudoir
867:Bedroom
839:Sunroom
771:Kitchen
402:cinemas
374:Tunisia
261:college
241:endowed
189:parlour
185:kitchen
124:History
118:hallway
98:passage
55:Tunisia
21:Hallway
1718:
1676:Garden
1645:Window
1588:Quoins
1566:Portal
1517:Column
1433:Duplex
1411:styles
1370:Turret
1202:Studio
1178:Pantry
1151:Larder
1141:Garage
1112:Closet
1046:Stairs
1004:Loggia
967:hearth
957:Genkan
911:Atrium
904:Spaces
873:closet
860:toilet
829:Shrine
805:Andron
756:Garret
624:
598:
574:
410:atrium
394:office
306:Oxford
169:castle
156:, and
116:), or
84:, the
1741:Rooms
1635:Vault
1608:Style
1556:Gable
1546:Floor
1526:Eaves
1416:types
1401:House
1384:Other
1355:Solar
1335:Sauna
1234:areas
1173:floor
1092:Attic
1019:Porch
1014:Patio
994:Lanai
974:Foyer
834:Study
798:harem
715:house
711:Rooms
674:Halls
497:of a
416:Types
406:foyer
376:). A
322:gowns
275:are:
49:, in
1696:Shed
1681:Home
1640:Wall
1613:list
1593:Roof
1561:Gate
1536:Door
1531:Dome
1478:Arch
1082:and
1036:Ramp
999:Loft
979:Hall
936:Deck
661:hall
622:ISBN
596:ISBN
572:ISBN
308:and
142:hall
76:, a
66:hall
64:, a
1541:Ell
741:Den
482:or
441:or
372:in
320:",
255:at
171:or
60:In
1737::
1524:/
1510:/
1288:/
1171:/
1077:,
556:^
400:,
356:.
329:.
187:,
183:,
160:.
120:.
100:,
53:,
1048:/
955:/
703:e
696:t
689:v
630:.
580:.
300:.
288:)
38:.
31:.
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